SAOIRSE32

14/1/2006

Blaze destroys Belfast store

Belfast Telegraph

PSNI in fire probe

By Lisa Smyth
14 January 2006

A suspicious fire which destroyed an east Belfast shop was today being investigated by police.

Emergency services were alerted to the blaze at The Bargain Store on the Woodstock Road at about 5.15am.

There was also a fire in west Belfast overnight, which led to nine elderly nuns being evacuated at Our Lady’s Nursing home on the Ard-Na-Va Road, off the Falls Road.

In the east Belfast blaze, firefighters arrived at the scene to find a well established fire in the three-storey shop premises.

At the scene the owner of the shop was too distraught to speak and stood sobbing as the fire was tackled.

Fire Service divisional officer Ken Leatham confirmed the blaze is being treated as suspicious.

“It is very early to say for definite but that is what we believe at the moment and we have asked the PSNI to help investigate,” he said.

“When we got here we found extensive fire to the front and rear of the premises.

“The difficulty with fighting the fire at the front of the shop was that it was protected by roller shutters so we had to call a specialist appliance from our central station for appropriate cutting equipment to gain access to the shop.”

The west Belfast blaze was described by firefighters as small, but one that could have been serious. Four appliances took 90 minutes to bring it under control.

The fire, which is under investigation, began in a shed.

Remarks by Gerry Kelly to all-Ireland conference on policing and justice

Sinn Féin

Published: 14 January, 2006

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The following is the full text of a speech delivered by the Sinn Féin party spokesperson on Policing and Justice Gerry Kelly to an internal party conference on developing an all-Ireland vision for policing and justice held in the Balmoral Hotel in Belfast today:

Ba mhaith liom failte a chur roimh gach duine anseo inniu.

I would like to welcome everyone here today to this conference, hosted by Cuige na Se Chondae and supported by our European Department.

Let me begin by thanking the speakers who have come along here to address this conference on the subject of ‘Developing an All-Ireland vision for Policing and Justice’. Sinn Fein has invited those speakers to engage with us as practitioners or experts in their own fields.

Republicans don’t pretend to have a monopoly on ideas in relation to justice and policing. Neither can we ignore the experience of the community from which we come and whom we serve. As an Irish republican party with a national and democratic agenda, Sinn Fein welcomes new ideas and is eager for new challenges. Ours is the battle of ideas and the politics of change.

Ultimately, as a political party, Sinn Fein will form its own view on these matters. As party members, you will be the people upon whom that responsibility will finally rest.

And it is of course important that you do that on the basis of the maximum information, a full discussion and in the context of overall strategy considerations.

Leading the all-Ireland agenda

Sinn Fein’s Ard Fheis last year agreed that party policy in relation to justice and policing should be developed. The purpose of this event today is to discuss this and build on the work done since. It is about envisioning the kind of agenda, in relation to justice, which will better serve communities throughout the 32 counties. And the reason we need to do that is very simple:

No other political party on this island is an all-Ireland party.

No other party has an agenda to build an Ireland of equals.

No other political party will champion the rights of the poor and the oppressed better than Sinn Fein.

No other party will confront the inefficiency and corruption of aspects of the justice and policing systems on this island, better than Sinn Fein.

No other party will agitate and articulate at grassroots level in every part of this country for accountable, representative, community-based, civic policing and justice programmes better than Sinn Fein.

The fact is that the overwhelming majority of nationalists in the north and people throughout this island are looking to this party for leadership on policing and justice. They expect us to do our best to secure acceptable civic policing. Today’s event is evidence of our determination to give leadership and achieve acceptable arrangements for policing and justice.

A truly new beginning

Republicans will not be badgered or forced into accepting less than the new beginning to policing promised in the Good Friday Agreement. This is a fundamental requirement. This Agreement addressed the issue of policing for a very good reason.

The RUC was never a police service. It was a unionist paramilitary militia, which engaged in the most disgraceful sectarianism and abuse of human rights, including torture and murder.

Those who were at the heart of this malign force – the RUC Special Branch – are still active within the PSNI. Their planned overthrow of a democratically elected Assembly three years ago is the evidence of this writ large. They are opposed to change of all kinds and not just the change in policing.

Because of this and as a means to confront and face it down Sinn Féin is determined to achieve the reconstruction of the power sharing Assembly and all Ireland institutions required by the Good Friday Agreement. The historic decisions taken by the IRA in recent months, the ending of its armed campaign and the putting of arms beyond use have removed any excuse or pretext for further delay. Sinn Fein has made it clear to the two governments that the institutions need to be restored. The British and Irish Governments have said that they intend making a serious effort to resurrect the political institutions. We are also committed to achieving and being part of the new policing dispensation. No half measures or three quarter measures will do.

Looking forward

In December 2004 – just over a year ago we had agreement on a sequence of events including the transfer of powers on policing and justice from London to Belfast. But it fell apart because the DUP reneged at the last moment.

Essentially we agreed that in the context of:

Agreement between the parties on the departmental model and the powers to be transferred;

The enactment by the British government of the legislation to give full expression to this transfer of powers; and

A DUP commitment to a short timeframe for the actual transfer of powers on policing and justice.

Then the party president would propose to the Ard Comhairle that it calls a special Ard Fheis to decide Sinn Féins position on new policing arrangements.

That situation has not changed. It is not Sinn Féin but others who are delaying progress.

Nationalists want a policing service

It has been opportunistically and cynically argued by Sinn Féin’s opponents that our position on policing is assisting criminality. Remember former SDLP Chief Seamus Mallon? Last year he said, “The people of West Belfast, West Tyrone and South Armagh do not want policing because if you have policing, you don’t have criminality”.

What nonsense

There is no “rampant crime” in nationalist or republican communities. On the contrary the nationalist and republican people are good, decent people who despite not having had a proper police service for generations have a deep sense of justice, are civic-minded and are eager to embrace proper policing and justice systems.

No one wants a new beginning to policing and justice more than the nationalist and republican people of West Belfast, West Tyrone and South Armagh. I commend all of those who work on the ground to create safer communities through anti-car crime schemes; youth outreach programmes, and especially, Community Restorative Justice projects. They are doing a great service to working class areas.

On restorative justice, since it is being attacked in the media let me make a few points:

1/ restorative justice as a concept is of a global nature. It operates and is working in many societies. Australia and New Zealand to name but two.

2/ republicans do not seek the ownership of the restorative justice concept in an Irish context

3/ restorative justice is not an alternative nor has it ever masqueraded as an alternative to acceptable and accountable policing arrangements

That said, Sinn Fein has been and remains supportive of efforts by the community to establish and operate restorative projects across the north. Equally, there are those in the unionist community who are striving to develop a restorative vision within their own community. Sinn Fein commends all those genuinely working to promote restorative justice at community level. The further development of the Irish model of restorative justice is something which deserves informed debate on a national basis.

Meanwhile, we must acknowledge that there is a real anxiety about the extent and effects of criminality in Irish society today which, we ignore at our peril. We must continue discussions with our communities on how to respond to the challenges and the harm associated with criminality and anti-social activity.

Political policing

As I said earlier political policing continues apace within the PSNI.

Since last summer alone, the evidence of political policing has been irrefutable. This includes the political policing of loyalist marches; the revelations about former RUC members stealing information and thwarting murder investigations; the discovery that files on dozens of republicans including Sinn Fein elected representatives are kept in the PSNI’s Castlereagh barracks; the fact that these files had been passed onto unionist paramilitaries; politically motivated houseraids in Tyrone, Belfast and Down; trumped up charges and media misinformation orchestrated by sections of the PSNI; the high-profile arrest and false accusations against Sinn Fein MLA Francie Brolly; and the PSNI raid on the Casement Park home of the County Antrim GAA.

Let’s be clear about their agenda. Our political enemies, in the institutions of this state, do not want a Shinner about the place. They don’t want the Good Friday Agreement. They don’t want change. They don’t want acceptable policing institutions and practices which would see Sinn Féin in there policing the police; all of this is anathema to our political enemies. This is the objective of political policing; the self-perpetuation of their power and their failures.

Our political opponents who accepted too little, jumped too soon and endorsed the existing policing arrangements must carry some of the blame. In four years on the Policing Board, they have failed to hold the political detectives publicly to account and failed to end collusion and political policing. Instead, SDLP MPs have gone to Westminster and voted to reintroduce 28-day detention orders, taking us back to the days of the old Special Powers Act so opposed by the Civil Rights Movement.

In reality, they are now part of the police establishment. In that role and in an effort to save political face, they also stand against further change on policing and justice because they believe it will further compromise the positions they took up.

In the poisoned atmosphere created by political policing which I have just listed; the question is; is it possible to achieve a new policing dispensation. The answer to that is yes.

Let me repeat what I said at last years Ard Fheis. The job given to the negotiations team is to achieve a new beginning to policing and justice. We won the argument that the status quo on policing and justice had failed.

We have made significant progress especially through new legislation. Even when the SDLP and Irish government jumped ship, Sinn Féin was able to achieve more necessary change.

We won the argument for further amending legislation.

Next steps

It is not an impossible task and republicans need to be acutely aware that if and when the Sinn Fein Leadership achieves the objectives set in this area then this in turn will present further challenges for all activists. There is a public commitment if we reach that point to then put proposals to our membership and nationalism as a whole. While we are not at that point yet, activists need to realise that we can achieve it and with achievement there comes further responsibility.

I make no apologises for fighting for an all Ireland justice system as I make no apologises in continuing the struggle for a United Ireland. Equally, in the interim, we need to achieve a new beginning to policing and justice in the North, in the present, which will impact on the everyday lives of people and also impact on the all Ireland policing and justice systems.

Negotiations herald change. Change brings turmoil and soul searching. It also means breaking moulds. If we accept that the political changes over the last decade have caused massive upheaval for the Unionist and British system which has misruled the North for so many years let us also accept that Republicans have had to face and deal with the challenges the political and emotional rollercoaster of change brings.

Nobody said it would be easy. Here is the challenge facing us. As political activists we must think strategically, debate strategically and decide what is best for our party, for the cause we represent and most importantly for the people we represent. We must do that in partnership and in dialogue with our community.

Policing and justice cannot be viewed in isolation from other key issues such as the stability of the interdependent institutions, equality and human rights, demilitarisation, the ending of discrimination, collusion and so on. But we will pursue proper policing and justice with all our energy.

Last December in theory at least, we were within months of having a decisive debate on this issue. Delegates were encouraged to go back to their areas and open up the debate within Sinn Fein and their communities. I repeat that call today. Keep that discussion going.

Our opposition to the present policing arrangements is not a matter of timing. It is not merely a question of tactics. It is a matter of integrity, entitlements and our inalienable rights. At the core of our position is the establishment of a threshold which enables the creation of democratically accountable representative civic policing and the consignment of political policing to the dustbin of history along with the other failures of the past.

That is why Sinn Fein has made this issue a core part of negotiations. In those negotiations, the key outstanding matter is the transfer of powers on policing and justice away from London and out of the hands of British securocrats, into restored local Assembly and all-Ireland institutions. Next month, the British government is pledged to publish enabling legislation and a detailed consultation paper on transfer of powers. Both governments know that this will not be enough on its own to honour the commitments given. The devil as they say is in the detail. That will be where the battle will become most fierce. Because this is not some sham fight or academic debate about the number of clauses in a piece of legislation or the sequence in which they run. This is about giving expression in law to the transfer of powers – taking powers – away from London and out of the hands of the British securocrats. It is about sovereignty, accountability and political change.

All-Ireland issues

It is perhaps inevitable that the key focus publicly is on policing in the North. However, our work today is about developing an all Ireland vision for the future. In that respect, there are many questions to be answered.

Are the people of Ireland North and South well-served by those in government today, those with responsibility for policing and justice?

Is the huge industry created by the policing and justice system meeting the needs of local communities? What are the social and economic benefits of this system for those in deprived and marginalised communities?

How do we ensure that the price for safety and security is not our liberty and rights? In whose interest are these decisions made? And with European directives on some of these areas affecting our laws too, how can we influence such decisions?

Is there justice in the courts? Or is there inherent chauvinism, racism and sectarianism in the administration of justice on this island?

What about those who are imprisoned? Is it right to imprison people seeking asylum? Is it just to keep men and women locked up for 23 hours a day?

Has the more humane regime in jails won by the sacrifice of republican POW’s been replaced by oppressive regimes.

And who polices the Gardai? Why has the police ombudsman in the South not got equal powers to that of the ombudsman in the North?

What lessons have been learned from the McBrearty family and others.

There are questions about the future development of policing and justice on this island which we must consider as a party, and as a society. These questions are not limited to the negotiations for transfer of powers on policing and justice.

This is a critical year in the peace process and political process.

Whatever happens in negotiations, key issues such as policing and justice cannot be put on the shelf to be dusted down when we achieve a united Ireland. People want us to deal with the everyday issues as well as the big picture. Today is about developing an all Ireland vision for justice and policing let us look at this nationally and locally in the big picture and the small picture.

Have a good conference.

Go raibh maith agaibh

Nuns escape harm in convent blaze

BBC


The fire-damaged roof of the covent in west Belfast

Nine nuns have escaped injury after a fire, believed to have been started deliberately, damaged a convent in west Belfast.

The fire started in a storage shed next to the Sisters of Mercy Convent on the Ardnavagh Road in Beechmount at 2150 GMT on Friday.

It then spread to the convent and badly damaged the roof and the kitchen.

The nuns, including a 98-year-old, were badly shocked but not injured. No one needed to be moved from the convent.

UVF terrorist is elected to British Legion committee

Belfast Telegraph

By Lisa Smyth
14 January 2006

There was uproar last night after it emerged that a convicted UVF terrorist has been elected as a committee member of a Co Derry branch of the Royal British Legion.

An enraged member of the legion - the UK’s leading charity providing financial, social and emotional support to the millions who have served and are currently serving in the armed forces - contacted the Belfast Telegraph to complain that Russell Watton had been elected to the position of assistant secretary of the Coleraine branch.

“I think it’s an absolute disgrace. I’ve been a member for years, but I’ll not be back,” said the man, who did not want to be identified.

In June 1977, Watton was sentenced to life imprisonment after pleading guilty to wounding three men with intent during a gun attack on a bar in Dunloy.

A spokesman for the Royal British Legion refused to say whether Watton was a member of the organisation, and added: “We do not comment on anonymous claims. If anyone is unhappy about membership, they should be coming to us and not the Press.”

But when contacted by the Belfast Telegraph, Watton confirmed his position as assistant secretary of the Coleraine branch.

He said: “Whoever complained has little to do with their time. I was in trouble 30 years ago, and there are other ex-prisoners in the legion.

“I have been a member for 12 or 13 years and this year I was asked to stand, and I won a democratic vote, 36 votes to 24.

“I am married with a child and a mortgage like everyone else and I’m trying to move on, but I’m never going to get away from it.”

However, East Derry MLA John Dallat has called for Watton to be immediately ousted from the organisation.

“He should never have been allowed in the door, never mind be allowed to take up a high-profile position,” said Mr Dallat.

“This type of disclosure runs totally against the efforts of people who want to develop the British Legion as unconnected to elements which badly tarnished its image in the past, in particular, I am thinking of when UFF killer Torrens Knight wore a poppy when coming out of court.

“To find a high-profile terrorist of this kind is not only a member of the legion, but occupies a position on the committee, is something that needs to be addressed as it certainly makes it difficult for Catholics to embrace the efforts of the legion to portray itself as politically neutral.”

Passing sentence on Watton in 1977, Judge Higgins described his UVF group as a “nest of terrorists” who had been responsible for grave and wicked crimes during 1975 and 1976, including the burning of Catholic-owned premises, the armed robbery of two post offices and bomb attacks on three bars.

The judge also said that Watton was responsible for planning the offences and involving others in them.

New route on way for the Belfast marathon

Belfast Telegraph

By Marie Foy
14 January 2006

A decision to re-route this year’s 25th Belfast marathon was last night welcomed by a veteran runner.

The marathon organising committee has said it has reviewed last year’s circuit after complaints from both participants and the public.

The details of the new route will be unveiled at the start of February.

Some runners disliked the final section of the 2005 event, which took them through the Harbour Estate where there were hardly any spectators to lift their flagging spirits.

Others complained that there were dangerous stretches, such as a cycle lane from Newtownabbey, and that the Duncrue Street section was barren and desolate.

The marathon’s 26.2 mile route had been changed to follow a faster course, and to avoid traffic.

David Seaton, technical director of the marathon, commented:”We have taken on board what people have said and have tried to tailor a course to suit their needs.

“Some were unhappy there were long stretches of the race which they felt weren’t densely populated.

“We are attempting to make it more of a community route.

“It means the course will be hillier, through more built-up areas. We hope the public will find it an interesting route,” he added.

Belfast councillor Robin Newton, a former marathon runner and chairman of the community and leisure services committee, said: “I am glad they are looking at a changing the course again because of some of the problems that arose last year.

“We have to remember that those who have trained hard all year deserve to be respected and the course should suit their needs as best it can.

“A marathon is always difficult and when you reach the final stage you need encouragement.”

SF angry at Irish fugitives move

BBC

Sinn Fein has criticised the Irish government for putting on hold its plans to pardon IRA fugitives.

It comes after the British government scrapped its controversial on-the-run proposals.

Irish President Mary McAleese had been expected to pardon around six IRA members wanted for crimes south of the border.

However, the plan has been suspended by the Irish Foreign Minister, Dermot Ahern.

Speaking on Inside Politics, Sinn Fein’s Gerry Kelly, who was himself on the run in the 1980s, said Dublin had no requirement to follow the example set by London.

“The fact was that in the south there is a much smaller number that would be involved,” he said.

“But it was still an anomaly which came from the Good Friday Agreement and could have been sorted out.”

“The fact that the British have acted in bad faith should be no reason for the Irish government to join them in terms of them refusing to go ahead with this process.”

‘Restoring devolution’

On Wednesday, NI Secretary Peter Hain said the British government was withdrawing the controversial proposals on paramilitary fugitives.

The legislation would have seen those accused of paramilitary crimes before 1998 appear in front of a special tribunal, then be freed on licence.

Mr Hain told Parliament the legislation was necessary but Sinn Fein’s rejection of it made it unworkable.

He also said he wanted to hold talks on restoring devolution in February.

But he said the issue of dealing with those accused of paramilitary crime who were “on-the-run” would not go away.

Second council row involving GAA

BBC


The site which the council is to hand over to a GAA club

Unionist and nationalist councillors in Derry are involved in a row over the Gaelic Athletic Association (GAA) for the second time in a week.

The council has discussed giving seven acres of land to GAA club Doire Trasna in the Waterside on a 99-year lease for a nominal fee.

Earlier this month, it agreed to give land to Sean Dolan GAA club in Creggan.

Unionists have criticised the moves, saying the GAA has been given land worth £300,000 in recent days.

The full city council still has to vote on the decision, but the result is being seen as a formality.

‘Contribution’

Doire Trasna spokesman Joe McWilliams said: “We basically are going to carry out something which the council should be doing.

“It’s going to cost us to develop it somewhere in the region of half a million pounds of which, in that context, the council contribution of £70,000 is a very small amount of the overall cost.”

Doire Trasna currently uses council grounds which it shares with other sports. Gaelic matches are played across two soccer pitches.

Unionists, however, have questioned whether it is fair that two GAA clubs have been given land in just over a week.

‘Nominal rent’

DUP MP Gregory Campbell said: “You can’t simply have a Christmas Day giveaway every week, which is what it is turning into.

“Within two weeks, we have two Gaelic clubs, both in Derry, both getting effectively free gratis, either land or land at a nominal rent, and other sporting disciplines have major applications in before the council that have not yet been decided upon.”

Sinn Fein councillor Paul Fleming denied that the council was giving the GAA preferential treatment.

“It (the land) has been given to two clubs to facilitate sporting facilities for hundreds and hundreds of young people in this city,” he said.






















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