SAOIRSE32

20/9/2008

Mural with a difference

News Letter
20 September 2008

MOST of Belfast’s murals are famous for depicting Ulster’s political divisions, both past and present, but one unveiled in the city yesterday represented something quite different.

A mobile mural revealed at Nubia Youth Club on the Donegall Road has been designed and painted by community groups from two different parts of Ireland.

It depicts the various aspects of life in Belfast and Cork from a cultural, sporting, musical and geographical view and is now going to be used in local schools as a tool through which people can discuss cultural identity, history and diversity.

The Northern Ireland football team, including Belfast-born soccer hero George Best, is depicted alongside images highlighting the southern city’s passion for Gaelic football and hurling.

One of the groups involved in the project is based on Belfast’s Donegall Road at the Southcity Resource and Development Centre.

The project sought to break down barriers and promote understanding and respect for difference.

Ex-Sinn Fein figure’s son charged with possessing dissident IRA explosives, planning terrorism

By SHAWN POGATCHNIK, Associated Press

Orlando Sentinel

September 19, 2008

DUBLIN, Ireland (AP) _ The son of a one-time local leader in the Sinn Fein party was charged in Northern Ireland on Friday with possessing explosives, ammunition and other illegal equipment while allegedly planning dissident Irish Republican Army attacks.

Police arrested Turlough McAllister, 33, on Sunday at an apartment in the central square of Crossmaglen, the main Northern Ireland town in South Armagh, a border region long dubbed “bandit country” because of its reputation as an IRA power base.

Authorities said they found explosives, ammunition, a scanner used for monitoring police communications and a weapons manual.

McAllister’s arrest came the day after police discovered a 100-pound bomb hidden in a roadside hedge in the South Armagh village of Jonesborough. The explosives were packed inside a beer keg.

After four days’ interrogation, McAllister appeared under heavy police guard Friday in Newry Magistrates Court, but made no plea or bail application. He was ordered held pending his next court appearance Oct. 22.

He is the son of Jim McAllister, who for decades was the top official of the IRA-linked Sinn Fein in South Armagh. The elder McAllister quit the party several years ago to protest its decision to pursue IRA cease-fires and participate in a Northern Ireland government.

Jim McAllister, who attended Friday’s hearing but declined to comment, earlier accused members of the mainstream IRA of setting up his son and “trying to cast mud on my name.”

The father has been campaigning against IRA intimidation in South Armagh. He helped organize a pressure group seeking justice for the family of Paul Quinn, a 21-year-old truck driver allegedly beaten to death by current or former IRA members last year in an apparent dispute over fuel smuggling.

North’s sports minister refuses Celtic invitation

Breaking News.ie
19/09/2008

The North’s DUP sports minister has refused an invitation to visit Celtic Football Club, accusing the club of not doing enough to stop sectarian singing.

Gregory Campbell said Glasgow Rangers had taken steps to stop their fans singing sectarian songs but Celtic had not done enough.

Mr Campbell, acting in his role as an MP only and not as sports minister, had earlier written to Celtic to complain about being abused by fans during a ferry crossing to Scotland to attend a Rangers game.

The letter was addressed to the former Northern Secretary, and chairman of Celtic, John Reid.

Mr Campbell has declined an invitation to Parkhead saying it would send out the wrong message, but denied he was setting pre-conditions.

New US working visa for Irish

Breaking News.ie
19/09/2008

A new one-year working visa arrangement is being put in place between Ireland and the US.

The ‘J-Visa’ will be available to any Irish person with a secondary school education or a qualification in a trade.

The new visa would allow people travel and work in the US in a similar manner to the existing J1 Visa.

Recipients would be allowed stay in the US for one year some of the details of the visa have not yet been decided however such as the upper age limit for those who qualify.

Around 20,000 visas are expected to be issued annually and the arrangement would also allow American citizens come and work in Ireland for a year.

Orde ’should stick to policing’

BBC
20 Sept 2007

Northern Ireland’s chief constable should stay out of politics, according to First Minister Peter Robinson.

Sir Hugh Orde said the Executive’s failure to meet in three months left a vacuum which dissident republicans were exploiting with attacks on police.

It was to meet on Thursday but this was blocked by Sinn Féin who are frustrated at the continued failure to devolve justice powers.

Mr Robinson said dissidents were active while Stormont was running smoothly.

“I suspect after our present difficulties are resolved, the dissidents will still be active,” the DUP leader told the BBC.

“I think he (Sir Hugh) is probably being encouraged to stray into the political realm, but he would be better not doing so.

“Perhaps the chief constable’s attention should be on dealing with the dissidents rather than politics.”

Talks are ongoing between the parties to break the deadlock.

Call to end west Belfast attacks

BBC
19 Sept 2008

A spate of so-called punishment attacks in west Belfast has been condemned by community groups and politicians.

The Colin Neighbourhood partnership said dissident republicans carried out the assaults, in response to anti-social activity.

The group is being supported by Sinn Fein, the SDLP and local clergy.

“We want to engage with the justice agencies and bring proper justice to the community,” said Michael George of the Colin Neighbourhood partnership.

Fr John Forsythe said the beatings were not the proper response to anti-social behaviour.

“The police, the judiciary and the community should work together in combating it and addressing the causes of anti-social behaviour in terms of boredom and vandalism. “

Bank heist accused was ‘bricking it’ during raid

By Ashleigh McDonald
Belfast Telegraph
Thursday, 18 September 2008

The west Belfast man accused of robbing the Northern Bank of £26.5m told police he was “bricking” himself when a gun was pointed at him in the back of a car while his family was being held hostage.

Christopher Owen Ward from Colinmill in Poleglass was employed as a supervisor with the bank when its headquarters at Donegall Square in Belfast was robbed on December 20, 2004.

Ward – whose family was held by a gang for a 24-hour period during which the robbery was carried out – was questioned by police at length in the days following the heist.

The 26-year-old told an officer that three men called at the family home on the evening of December 19. Ward said he was ordered by the men to pack his uniform into a sports bag before being led to a waiting car.

He said that after telling his family to co-operate with the intruders orders, he got into the waiting car and was told to lie in the back of the vehicle where the driver pointed a “small gun” at him.

In a recorded interview, played to Belfast Crown Court, Ward told a police officer: “He (the driver) pointed the gun at me and said ‘don’t f*** about’.

“He called me by my name. I was bricking myself. I just shut my eyes and turned my head towards the back seat. I just lay there and said nothing.”

Yesterday’s hearing marked the third day recorded police interviews with Ward have been played to court.

At one point, Mr Justice McLaughlin asked if the video could be fast-forwarded as he was finding it hard to stay awake.

Saying he was glad the case wasn’t being heard before a jury as it would be hard to keep 12 jurors from “drifting in to dreamland”, the judge added: “It’s about the most boring video I have ever watched.”

Ward has been charged with robbing the bank and of holding his boss Kevin McMullan and his wife Kyran hostage on a date between December 18 and 21, 2004.

He denies all three charges.

At hearing

David McKitterick: When digging up the past only harms the future

**I almost didn’t post this article because it so angered me, but I felt people had a right to have it available so they can see what utter BS people sling around. To me, it’s the same as a woman and mother deciding to keep to herself the fact that her husband is molesting and raping the kids when she is out of the house or asleep because she wants for the family to stay together and she knows if such an ugly truth is acknowledged that the family will be broken apart.

Independent.co.uk
Friday, 19 September 2008

The Omagh familes have no absolute right to a final say on what should happen in the justice system

Of course the people who lost loved ones in the Omagh bombing should have the right to find out what happened on that sunny summer day in 1998 when a Real IRA bomb ripped apart their families and their lives. Of course they should be able to discover the whole truth; the guilty should be put behind bars; there should come a day when it can credibly be said that justice has been done.

The history and the circumstances of Northern Ireland mean, however, that these things are unlikely to happen. It is too complex for that, involving too many intricate issues of politics and security. For just as there are few moral absolutes in Northern Ireland, so the Omagh families have no absolute right to have the final say on what should happen in the justice system.

This is a difficult and painful thing to articulate, given the terrible suffering these people continue to endure. Omagh is regarded as a special case: the authorities, for example, helped fund the civil case now making its way through the courts. The call of some families is that this should be followed by a full-scale independent judicial inquiry to examine every aspect of that day.

Omagh originally seemed a particularly stark example of a despicable terrorist attack which claimed many innocent lives. The murderers are as guilty as ever but a series of official reports, and now this week’s Panorama programme, have turned up much disturbing material.

Gordon Brown’s establishment of a review of the Panorama revelations was a sure sign that security agencies have a case to answer. It may also have been a device to ward off the calls for a full public inquiry. Governments have a reflex against setting up such inquiries, not least because, in cases like this, it is pretty obvious they will turn up damaging revelations about a secret world which functioned with little accountability.

Here there are additional arguments against doing so, principally based on the awful example of the Bloody Sunday inquiry. When Tony Blair set that up – in 1998, the year of Omagh – no one knew it would become the largest and most complex public inquiry in British legal history. Its report may or may not be ready by the end of this year. It heard nearly a thousand witnesses who uttered more than 14 million words. It has cost almost £200m.

Yet its findings, whatever they may be, are unlikely to satisfy all the Bloody Sunday families. Those who firmly believe a deliberate massacre was planned and carried out will probably denounce the report as just another cover-up.

The duration and cost of the Londonderry inquiry means that no one believes its like will ever be seen again. The law has already been changed to impose much stricter limits, including rigorous restrictions on what intelligence material can be scrutinised.

A number of inquiries are already going on under these new rules. The case against further Bloody Sunday-type exercises has been made largely in terms of time and money, but the issue raises deeper issues about Northern Ireland’s future as well as its past.

The question of how to deal with the troubled past has for 10 years and more been grappled with at conferences and seminars, in books and papers. An official committee is currently at work, but after all this time there is absolutely no public consensus on how to proceed.

Some say the time has come to draw a line under the past; others that this would simply cause deep wounds to fester and worsen rather than heal. There are many possibilities short of full-scale proceedings: Martin McGuinness of Sinn Fein, for example, has remarked that that an apology about Bloody Sunday would have been sufficient.

The debate on all this involves not just officialdom but also relatives of some of the 3,700 Troubles casualties, for there are up to a hundred victims’ organisations, many of them holding strong views.

In the past year, however, a new factor has come into play. The cause of justice and the rights of the bereaved are hugely important, but there is a new context, that of the fledgling powersharing government in Belfast. This is where moral absolutes clash with realpolitik. The debate on the past now takes place not in a vacuum but against the backdrop of a political institution which, as yesterday’s deadlock in Belfast showed, is struggling to achieve stability.

Omagh may well hold more secrets that could undermine the new political system. The Omagh people want their rights, and few would want to deny them these. But the challenge is how to reconcile these with the rights of a wider society which longs for political equilibrium and lasting peace. Given the agonising choice, it would probably prefer to protect its future rather than unearth more of its troubled, and troubling, past.

Flag flies at Donaldson murder site

BY CRONAN SCANLON
http://www.nwipp-Donegal News
18 Sept 2008

MYSTERY surrounds the erection of a flag-pole and tricolour at the cottage near Glenties where senior Sinn Féin member and British spy Denis Donaldson was murdered two and a half years ago.

As recently as last month, the flag was raised outside the isolated cottage at Cloghercor on the back road between Glenties and Doochary. Mr Donaldson (56) was hit by four shotgun blasts there on Monday, April 3, 2006. No group ever claimed responsibility for his murder.

Meanwhile, the Donaldson family solicitor confirmed to the Donegal news that the cottage was recently sold to an unnamed buyer. Mr Donaldson had been living in the run-down cottage which had neither electricity nor running water.

He had been Sinn Féin’s head of administration at Stormont before his 2002 arrest over alleged spying led to its collapse.

However, Mr Donaldson and two others were acquitted of charges in December 2005 “in the public interest”.

He was expelled from Sinn Féin the following week after admitting he was a paid British spy for 20 years. Shortly afterwards, he moved out of his Belfast home, and had been living in the cottage.

Mr Ciaran Shiels, of Belfast legal firm Madden and Finucane, confirmed this week that the family no longer owned the property. He added that neither the family nor himself were aware that the flag had been erected at the house.

“That’s the first I heard of that, it seems like an odd thing to do,” Mr Shiels said.

He said the family did not wish to speak to the press about the murder or any aspect of Mr Donaldson’s life.

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