T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1204.1 | Bowed in Shame. | DBOT07::RUSSELL | | Thu Mar 25 1993 13:44 | 9 |
| Joe,
ditto,
Tadhg.
Btw....surely it's gone beyond us merely saying that the IRA dont have
our support. Time to show them how little support they have. Time
for talking is long gone....
|
1204.2 | Also Bowed in Shame | MACNAS::BHARMON | KEEP GOING NO MATTER WHAT | Thu Mar 25 1993 14:14 | 13 |
| Joe, Tadgh,
Fully agree with everything you say.
The 12 year old boy, whose face was blown off died today.
What can a person say, but God help those poor families of these
innocent children, who died so tragically.
Bernie
|
1204.3 | Grief | ABACUS::PRIESTLEY | | Thu Mar 25 1993 18:45 | 13 |
| And the blood flows on in an endless stream,
Spilled in the name of "god" and "country".
A red river in a streetside gutter,
Shed in the name of the "righteous cause."
"God is on our side." goes the cry,
And the hammer rings once more;
Sinking deeper into the ageless wood,
And the King, once more, dies.
Peace be with us all.
Andrew
|
1204.4 | BLOODY AND FOUL DEEDS | MACNAS::SMORAN | | Fri Mar 26 1993 00:25 | 34 |
| Last Saturday another blow was struck for a united Ireland when an
active service unit of the I.R.A. placed a number of bombs in a
shopping centre in the Lancashire city of Warrington. In the great and
herioc tradition of Pearse and Connolly, one of the bombs succeeded in
killing a representative of British Imperialism, a three year old named
Jonathan Ball, as well as destroying most of the face of another enemy
of Irish nationalism, a twelveyear old boy named Timothy Parry, who
died yesterday R.I.P.
Senior tacticians of the I.R.A. demonstrated considerable ingenuity in
planting their bombs on the day before Mother's Day, when the Golden
Square shopping centre was full of children purchasing Mother's Day
Cards. The strategic placement of the bombs was another triumph for
I.R.A. planning, in that the explosion of the first bomb sent
panic-stricken citizens of Warrington running in the direction of the
second bomb, thus ensuring that maximum devastation would be caused,
with the reasonable assumption that loss of life would occur in
corresponding ratio. Although there were many casulties, it must be
counted as something of a disappointment that only the death was that
of a three year old.
Once again the I.R.A. has demonstrated its absolute commitment to a
united Ireland. These unselfish and heroic individuals are not dismayed
by the lack of support they have in this country, but continue their
campaign on our behalf in spite of protests and even outright
condemnation of their activities. They fully anticipate that their
lastest blow for freedom will arouse the kind of ignorant criticism
that met, for example, the Enniskillen Bomb. But experience has taught
them that within a few weeks people will have started to forget
Jonathan Ball and Timothy Parry.
And they can begin planning their next successful blow for Irish
freedom. Brave lads, sure, they know best, don't they?
|
1204.5 | Hello??? | DBOT07::RUSSELL | | Fri Mar 26 1993 11:33 | 7 |
| This note has been open for several days.
The silence from certain quarters is deafening........
Tadhg.
|
1204.6 | | BLKPUD::WILLIAMSH | | Fri Mar 26 1993 13:58 | 16 |
| I've just been to the town centre this lunchtime.
In the middle of the street where the litter bins containing the bombs used
to be, outside McDonald's, there are thousands of bunches of flowers
carpeting the whole surround. Even though there were hundreds of shoppers
around, it was very quiet. Many had stopped to read the cards on the
flowers and were deep in thought.
Many of my Colleagues had lucky escapes, each has his story to tell,
including one CSC specialist who was in Pizzaland, not 200 yards away.
I myself was working in this office only three miles away.
It certainly brings it home to you......
Huw.
|
1204.7 | | KOALA::HOLOHAN | | Fri Mar 26 1993 14:45 | 27 |
|
I heard that John Major made a very touching speach
on thursday to the house of Commons. He took it upon
himself to extend sympathy of the house to the families
of those killed or injured as a result of the Warrington
blast.
No mention was made of the families of those killed
and injured in Castlerock. This must have slipped his
mind, as I'm sure he believes the lives of six Irishmen
are at least as important as the lives of someone who
is British, it must have just been an oversight.
Well at least the British have been collecting in
London to sign a sympathy card for these and other
Irish folks who have been murdered by either (British
forces or the information British forces have passed to
British paramilitaries), what, you mean they haven't.
Well not to worry, I'm sure it was just an oversight.
Now the Catholic teenager murdered last night, will
probably get a touching response from the British
government. I'm sure they'll be sending someone to
the murdered men's, and this young man's funerals.
The fact that they haven't mentioned it yet, must have
been another little oversight.
Mark
|
1204.8 | WHY? | SOLVIT::GAYNOR | | Fri Mar 26 1993 16:45 | 58 |
|
I do not hold myself to be an expert on the problems of Northern
Ireland but I do have some opinions on whats wrong. I agree with the
notes describing the utter horror of the Warrington bombing. I have
children myself and am glad they can live in a 'safe' environment. I
also agree that I feel the House of Commons puts more value on lives in
Britain than in Northern Ireland. It seems that as long as the
violence is 'contained' in N. Ireland (and outside their
constituencies) that its in some way acceptable. Of course this is the
IRA motive in bombing English cities, to draw attention back to the
situation and to put pressure on the politicians.
All the comdemnations in the world, be they from the Pope, John Major,
Ian Paisley or Albert Reynolds don't make the slightest impact. They
are merely preaching to the choir. If you took 20% of the emotion in
these speeches and applied it to the true causes of the problems, not
the symptoms, I think we may see some progress.
I believe the true causes to be unemployment, discrimination in hiring
and housing policies, segregation, and a general feeling that inequality
and injustice are the basis to the system. Civil rights groups did try to
address these issues peacefully and strive for change, only to be
beaten, shot at and largely ignored by the world.
If the problems are to be solved we must again focus on these issues.
You will not solve the problems by shoot-to-kill policies, beating
confessions out of suspects, or planting bombs. If the IRA/UFF were to
announce a one year cease-fire do you think the politicians would
double their efforts to cease injustice? Or would the opinion be
'thank God thats over'. I think the latter. When civil rights groups
try and make progress in N. Ireland all the politicians seem to
distance themselves from their efforts. If progress is made will all
the people who make public statements today stay the course?
America today seems to be undergoing more racial tension than seen for
many years. Great progress was made on civil rights here in the
sixties (when they failed in N. Ireland). But it seems to me that once
minorities were allowed to sit where they wanted and drink from 'whites
only' fountains, that people forgot about the issue and did not stay
the course. So today we see race riots in Miami and LA.
I don't know the answers. Like many I see no end in sight. However I
do believe that merely stopping the violence will not make the causes
go away, and sooner or later they will come back. Is it necessary to
stop the IRA before we resolve the underlying issues that created them?
I myself hope for a united Ireland. I would prefer to see it occur after
a peaceful solution, that provides justice to all, is found. It seems
the politicians cannot get there by themselves. How many of us have
written to our representatives (either in the US, UK or Ireland) to
express our dismay that the situation has been allowed to drag on so
long. Rather than writing in Notes perhaps that is where we should be
writing.
Longer than I thought, but my 2 cents for what it worth.
Rick
|
1204.9 | savages | ABACUS::PRIESTLEY | | Fri Mar 26 1993 17:48 | 32 |
| What is responsible for these murders and the attempted murders of many
other innocent civilians, unless perhaps you have good information
regarding the presence or a platoon of British Army or Unionist
Paramilitaries in place of all the shoppers in that shopping center, is
barbarism. People and I do use the term loosely, who hate so much that
it has reduced them to sub animalism are responsible for this act.
There may, and to be fair, is a reason for contention in NI, but there
is no reason to direct weapons in such a way as to insure that
non-combatants will be injured and killed. There is no justification
for this. Redirecting the world's attention to the actions of the
British Government and Unionist paramilitaries is also inappropriate
behavior as well since the issue is that the IRA intentionally
targetted bombs, in a manner intended to provide maximum casualties, at
a population that offered no threat to them and was likely to contain a
large percentage of children. This last is the most unpardonable sin
of all. This was not the act of heroic revolutionaries, soldiers in a
righteous war, or any other sort of rebel with a cause; it was the act
of terrorist barbarians who when caught, and proven guilty beyond a
reasonable doubt, in a fair and legal trial, should be punished to the
full extent of the law. If the IRA wants to draw attention to its
cause it is succeeding, but I dont think that it is helping them very
much since they have painted themselves as cowardly savages.
Andrew
If the IRA wants to fight a war, they should choose military targets
and they should not complain when they get shot back at. And if they
hide in the general civilian populace in this war, they have to know
that they are endangering that populace in the process and perhaps
endangering their support. Wake up and join the human race.
|
1204.10 | ''cause and effect'' | DBOT07::RUSSELL | | Mon Mar 29 1993 11:28 | 45 |
| Indeed,
So now, we are being presented with the Provos as the defenders of all
those poor nationalists who are unemployed (unemployment is more
endemic in Dublin than Belfast) discriminated against ( ask someone
who lives in Ballymun in Dublin what its like to be discriminated
against)..what a sick joke....support your local provo...Nirvana for all
the masses from the end of a barrel. Also compare the Social Welfare
Schemes in the two "Irelands" and guess who comes off miles ahead.
If we are going to talk about 'Cause & Effect' we could be here for the
*Next* 23 years. This logic of tit for tat reprisal attacks is a never
ending circle.
the problem now is that the organisations that claim to be trying
to seek solutions (from the Barrel of a gun) are actually THE PROBLEM.
The have built such a wall of fear , hatred and mistrust that each
community feels the need to hold on to these 'defenders'...and so it
goes on.
To break this circle requires something much more radical. The
paramilitaries will not stop on their own, they are caught up in the
whirl of violence too much.
I have heard worse solutions than Internment....but then we'd have the
whingers out moaning about intrusion on Civil Rights. WHat about
Those kids rights in Warrington? What about the Civil Rights of
all the people of this Island? Basic Civil rights like being able to
walk the streets??
The Provos have done so much damage. I realise there are the UFF
genocidal attacks on Catholics. However , these have mainly been going
on since 1990. Between about 1976 and 1989, the Provos held the ground
on shooting , bombing , murder. To get back to "Cause and Effect", do
you not think the reason why the UFF is on the move now was CAUSED by
the Provos, and their bloody murder.
The PROVOS **ARE** the real problem now. When they stop, or are
stopped, there will be some hope for Ireland.
regards, and PEACE to humans of Good Will everywhere.
Tadhg
|
1204.11 | Who decides who is a "known" terrorist???. | MACNAS::JDOOLEY | One of the Galway 780 | Mon Mar 29 1993 13:36 | 15 |
| Internment is a bit like recession. It seem a good idea until you
personally are involved and then it becomes like a depression.
One wit once defined a recession as an economic situation where a lot
of people are jobless. A depression is when a lot of people, including
you, are jobless......
Internment was tried before in NI and led to a huge revival of activity
in the IRA, the hunger strikes etc. It is not a good idea because it
leaves the State and the administration of justice open to question and
in doubt.
I personally wouldn't like to live uder the threat of long-term
internment. Remember the old saying:- "Trade freedom for security; lose
both."
Things would want to be pretty chaotic before I'd give that kind of
power to the Army or the Guards ( Irish police...).
|
1204.12 | | GSFSYS::MACDONALD | | Mon Mar 29 1993 14:11 | 12 |
|
I don't claim to know enough about the issues and situation
in Ireland to have a valid opinion, but taken by itself without
regard to the political, historical, or economic context there
was simply no sense to the bombing at Warrington. It was the act
of sick, demented, persons. I wouldn't insult primitive peoples
by calling it barbaric. At least barbarians don't know any better.
The scum who did this are shameless, spineless, cowards without
any excuse whatsoever. They deserve to be hunted down, tried,
and either executed or put away forever.
Steve
|
1204.13 | ref .04 | MACNAS::SMORAN | | Mon Mar 29 1993 14:59 | 7 |
| In ref to .4, in case anybody reading this note, thinks it glorifies
the I.R.A. then i am sorry, because I was trying to show just how
twisted their minds are and I totally abhor what they did. I think if
you read the notes carefully you will see what I was trying to get at.
Stephen
|
1204.14 | closer, but not quite there yet. | ABACUS::PRIESTLEY | | Mon Mar 29 1993 17:51 | 41 |
| Well in a statement this weekend, the IRA declared that it would eschew
civilian targets for military and political targets in the future. i
am skeptical of this as the IRA and all the Paramilitaries of whatever
affiliation, have shown interesting justifications for classifying
non-military targets as military or political. The next thing they
need to do is adopt a recognizable uniform, stop hiding amongst the
innocent civilians of NI, and start conforming to the protocols of war
as laid out in the Hague and Geneva Conventions. The IRA is unlikely
to go this far however since it will expose them to accurate reprisals
by the British Military and police and will remove the main source of
outrage in the NI mind, the fact that in order to get at the IRA, the
British Army and Police must work their way through the shield of
civilians that the IRA hides behind, inevitably and tragically, causing
undue harm to those the IRA uses as a shield. Much of this suffering
would stop if the IRA would grow some guts and try to stand on their
own in the open light of day without a wall of hostages in front of
them. I don't think that the IRA will go for this idea since it will
show how really weak they are and how little support they truly have.
It is far easier to mount a sustained terrorist campaign than it is to
mount a sustained and successful war. In a terrorist campaign, you can
often force the opposition to set fuel to your fire, as the IRA has
done, by placing innocents in the line of fire. In a real war, you
have to stand up and win or lose based on your own skills and
resources as well as the actual support you have from the populace you
say you represent. I do not think the IRA would last very long.
Andrew
A better way to solve this would be for the IRA to renounce all violent
activities and disband. Then to start a legitimate political party and
address the issues of NI in Parliament, where voices can be heard.
Much of the silliness of NI reps not taking their seats in protest is
counterproductive since they tend to remove themselves from a position
where they could have some real influence over time. Violence is a
self-perpetuating cycle, it will not end until someone has the guts to
put their opinions to the popular test. If the majority agrees with
you by way of a vote, then fine, if not, you are then faced with the
possibility that your interpretation of what should be is not what the
rest of the populace wants.
|
1204.15 | We live in a sick society | TALLIS::DARCY | | Mon Mar 29 1993 19:45 | 6 |
| I find it amazing how people rate killings as if it were some sort
of event. Whether or not the victim is a 4 year old boy or an 90
year old grandmother, and whether the method is an indiscriminate
IRA bombing or a British soldier shooting a civilian in the back
- it is all morally wrong. I wish everyone would refute all violence
with the same vigor as the tragic events in Warrington.
|
1204.16 | | SUBURB::FRENCHS | Semper in excernere | Tue Mar 30 1993 10:29 | 8 |
| I heard that there are only about 150 actual members of the IRA. Ie.
those that could be used on 'active service'. I wonder how accurate this
is.
It would make a small army indeed if they put on a uniform, other than
a black balaclava seen at funerals.
Simon
|
1204.17 | Man's blind indifference to his fellow man | MACNAS::MHUGHES | | Tue Mar 30 1993 16:14 | 50 |
1204.18 | Some EC help here... | TALLIS::DARCY | | Tue Mar 30 1993 18:09 | 20 |
| I would advocate dialogue before stopping war. Counter-terror will
continue unabated, victory is not clear by either side, and prolonging
the conflict bogs down England and Ireland in many areas (economic,
tourism, security, human rights, and human life). I wonder what it
will take to bring both sides to the table.
Aside from that I really don't understand why NI can't be granted
semi-independence, having local representatives, yet report to some
EC body, say in Brussels. And where foreign affairs are
handled by a joint Irish/Britain body. That removes a basic
source of friction in NI today, the British Army. Replace it
with a unbiased EC army, made up of a combined Northern Irish, Irish,
British, and other Europeans. It makes common sense.
The British have had their chance in governing the province - it hasn't
worked out. I'm not anti-British. But I am for trying some other
solution to reduce the violence both in England and Ireland. There's no
need for it in today's day & age...
/g
|
1204.19 | | GSFSYS::MACDONALD | | Wed Mar 31 1993 15:12 | 14 |
|
Using terrorist acts to solve a political issue will not work.
It's a chicken and egg problem. As long as the IRA continues
acts like the Warrington bombing, then the focus of the British
government will be on the terrorist acts themselves and not on
resolving the political problem in Ireland. Which will lead, of
course, to more terrorist acts, which will be the focus of time
and energy which, of course, will ...
Any fool can see the pattern if s/he wants to.
Steve
|
1204.20 | | WREATH::DROTTER | | Tue Apr 06 1993 13:30 | 93 |
| From the Op-Ed page of the New York Times, (4/5/93).
IRELAND'S TROUBLED SLEEP
By Andrew O'Hehir (senior editor of San Francisco Weekly)
San Francisco -- Twenty thousand people thronged central
Dublin two Sundays ago, calling on the Irish Republican Army
to "Stop the Bloody Murder." They congregated in silence to
hear Sinead O'Connor, the pop star who tore up a photo of the
Pope on "Saturday Night Live," sing the Roman Catholic hymn,
"Make Me a Channel of Your Peace." The rally made for
compelling drama on TV news and on the front pages of
American papers. But like many Irish-Americans, I was
ambivalent. The media's fixation on the event reinforced
misguided conventional wisdom about the Irish conflict.
The rally represented a repudiation of the shadowy
organization that claims to represent the Irish soul, that
proclaims its legacy of bloodshed and martyrdom to be
entwined with the deepest Irish sense of self.
But the I.R.A.'s claim, I'm afraid, is not easily dismissed.
The group is best understood as the product of two forces:
centuries of British colonial oppression and Irish denial of
the meaning of that experience.
Respectable Irish opinion has long opposed the I.R.A.
campaign of violence aimed at ending British rule in Northern
Ireland. However, the relationship between the Irish and the
I.R.A. is a complicated psychological transaction that can't
be addressed by speeches or captured in opinion polls. Many
who oppose I.R.A. terrorism privately admit to half-buried
feelings of anti-British resentment and to a grudging
admiration for the group's resolute defiance.
In this light, the guerillas' brutal acts can be seen as the
stirrings of a dark medieval unconsciousness behind the
facade of contemporary respectability. As long as Ireland
refuses to confront the post-colonial trauma that distorts
virtually all aspects of its social, cultural and political
life, this dysfunctional pattern is unlikely to end. The
country's headlong rush to "modernize" has largely been an
effort to replace its past with an anesthetic sameness of
European capitalism. History, to misquote Joyce, is the
nightmare from which Ireland is pretending to waken.
In the American media's presentation, the rally bore none of
this agonized complexity. Instead, the rally and the bomb
attack that killed two English children last month have been
used to support a particular political view of the conflict:
Those who oppose British rule are fanatics rejected by their
own people. And British policy in Northern Ireland is
inherently reasonable.
For years, this has been the general tone of American
newspaper editorials and foreign policy, which has adhered to
an uncritical special relationship with Britain. Appropriate
noises are often made about ending anti-Catholic
discrimination in Northern Ireland, but evidence of British
injustice and human rights violations are treated as
anomalies, never as symptoms of widespread and systematic
abuse. Protests in Dublin in response to the killing of
unarmed I.R.A. suspects by British forces, for instance,
haven't made the front pages of U.S. newspapers.
The media's bias stems more from ignorance and hazy
Anglophilia than from conspiratorial intent. The result is
nonetheless to promote an agenda that has less to do with
furthering peace in Northern Ireland than with salving
wounded British pride.
Rational British policy would dictate jettisoning Northern
Ireland. But nations rarely act on a rational basis alone.
Perhaps abandoning the final lump of empire is too bitter a
pill for the British Establishment to swallow. Instead,
Britain attempts to keep violence at "acceptable" levels and
presides over a "peace process" in which the principal
antagonist -- the I.R.A. -- is not invited. When such peace
talks inevitably fail, Britain throws up its hands and hints
at the ancient notion that the Irish cannot govern themselves.
This perennial impasse has motivated the I.R.A. -- never
known for its strategic thinking -- to launch a counter-
productive campaign on the mainland, which has only stiffened
British resolve to stay the course, undefinable though that
may be.
Irish indignation at I.R.A. atrocities is heartfelt. And
Ireland must face its history of violence and victimhood if
Catholic-Protestant peace is ever to be possible. But that
process must not obscure a central fact: British policy
created and feeds the cycle of hatred and killing in which
the Irish and British remain trapped.
[end of article]
|
1204.21 | Little gain in fair employment in NI | TALLIS::DARCY | | Tue Apr 06 1993 14:06 | 8 |
1204.22 | | BONKIN::BOYLE | Tony. Melbourne, Australia | Tue Apr 06 1993 23:00 | 9 |
| re.20
An excellent article. The author shows a greater understanding of the
situation than a lot of Irish and English people.
Please keep the next few entries free so that the usual people can come
in and accuse the author of being an IRA supporter and/or a regular
contributor to NORAID.
|
1204.23 | | AYOV26::RENNISONM | MARK RENNISON | Wed Apr 07 1993 11:21 | 10 |
|
What the author in .20 is saying is that he knows better than the Irish
who took part in the procession.
Incidently, "Make Me A Channel Of Your Peace" is not a "Catholic hymn".
It is, in fact, a piece written by St. Francis of Assissi (sp?) and is
sung by Protestants as well.
Mark
|
1204.24 | | BRAT::PRIESTLEY | | Wed Apr 07 1993 22:33 | 41 |
| Actually, for once, I am not in bitter contention with Mr. Drotter, the
author does show some rationality as regards this issue. He does not
come right out and try to justify the actions of the IRA, he even comes
out and admits that they are counter-productive (at least to some
extent). The failure of his argument is a classic one however, and
simple, he blames the actions of one group of individuals upon another
group. By the reasoning I perceive in his article, the IRA conduct
their misguided and destructive operations because the British are
making them do it. It is the classic pseudo-psychological
responsibility dodge, "it is not his fault, the poor boy has been
forced to it by his environment." Bulls**t. Everyone has a choice
and can control their actions. Everyone has the choice to confront
their feelings and their enemies rationally and responsibly, or
irrationaly and childishly. The IRA does not confront the situation
rationally, they choose to act destructively instead of constructively
and because they do, they fall under the pall of the ancient adage, "he
who lives by the sword, dies by the sword." Unfortunately, because the
IRA hides amongst civilians and claim to speak for all Irish
nationalists, they draw the reprocussions of their actions down on
people who would rather be left out of it. Frankly, the most rational
thing to do here would probably be finding a leader for the Irish
nationalists like Martin Luther King who accomplished great things
without shedding blood, a man who did not try to kill his enemies, but
to embrace them and teach them. MLK was one of the most positive
role models I can think of and should be taken at the heart of any
movement for civil rights.
One quibble with the author of the article in discussion, it is not
obvious that the most rational thing for Britain to do would be to
jettison Northern Ireland since it is populated by citizens of the
United Kingdom. Also, considering the hardship that would spring up in
the absence of the British economy propping up NI's, the sudden failure
of services, and the sudden loss of stability would lead to troubles
much worse than exist now. I have no argument with phasing NI to home
rule, even into union with the Republic of Ireland, but not without
addressing the issue in terms of how it would affect the whole
population, not just the nationalists and as long as it is done
carefully so that economic collapse is not the result, or civil war.
Yugoslavia lost the direction of the Soviet Union and is now in the
midst of one of the most bitter civil wars in history, the same could
happen in NI.
|
1204.25 | Sea-change needed. | MACNAS::MHUGHES | | Thu Apr 08 1993 08:32 | 37 |
| Leaprechauns see the logic.
Re. 24
Yugoslavia was dumped by the USSR so now they are killing each other.
NI would be the same if the UK did likewise.
It takes two to tango. Yugoslavia is over because it was never an
entity in the first place. It has been a shifting sand dune of nations
going back to the time of the greek republics and beyond. All
stability in that region has been imposed by force from without.
We now observe the futility of all that "imposed" stability on our TV
screens each evening. Despite the horror of the balkans I somehow see
a more lasting settlement emerging out of this in the next year or so.
Its a brutal way to negotiate however.
NI has only become a divided community in the last 150 years or so and
that has been due entirely to UK policy in Ireland. The sins of the
past should be consigned to history but they won't. 100 Irish children
have been killed "accidently" by British forces in the last 25 years.
There have been few remembrances for those families either, and I am
absolutely sure that their grief is no greater or smaller than that of
the other families who have suffered.
This is an Irish problem first and foremost. The UK must stop
pretending that its trying to solve it in a British context. There is
a British dimension and it must be considered in the context of an
Irish solution in an Irish setting, not visa versa. The UK should
declare its interest in that and stop protecting the Unionist veto on
everything by declaring that part of Ireland is British forever in the
face of the overwhelming wishes of the vast majority of the Irish
people.
Snake hopes that some good can come from Warrington and other
developments.
|
1204.26 | And their tango needs adjustment... | TALLIS::DARCY | | Thu Apr 08 1993 15:12 | 18 |
| Mr. Priestley,
One could argue very easily that the British operations in Ireland
are similarly as misguided and destructive as the IRA's. Britain is
maintaining an army to protect and prop up a government which practices
open discrimination in the areas of jobs, housing, and education
(churches involved in this latter one too).
In any case if these discriminatory practices were not present, you
would find less support for the IRA. Read my previous note about Shorts
and you will find that the British committment to fair employment in NI
is poor at best.
Role models are important. There would be more role models for
Catholics in NI if there were less discrimination. The cycle of violence
and despair *can* be broken with a little effort...
/George
|
1204.27 | | GSFSYS::MACDONALD | | Fri Apr 09 1993 15:30 | 23 |
|
Re: .20
> In the American media's presentation, the rally bore none of
>this agonized complexity. Instead, the rally and the bomb
>attack that killed two English children last month have been
>used to support a particular political view of the conflict:
>Those who oppose British rule are fanatics rejected by their
>own people. And British policy in Northern Ireland is
>inherently reasonable.
An interesting article but I had a distinctly different view of
the US media coverage. I came away with no sense that there was
an intention to paint the British government as blameless in the
whole affair.
My perception of the rally from that newscast was that the rally was
not about politics per se, but was simply a plea to stop using violence
as a method to achieve political aims.
Steve
|
1204.28 | Higher ground.... Happy Easter | BRAT::PRIESTLEY | | Fri Apr 09 1993 23:07 | 31 |
| The argument could be made that Britain has not been blameless and made
well, but that is not really my point; my point is that some people
seem terribly willing to tsk, tsk, tsk at the IRA's atrocities saying,
"Sure it was a terrible thing the lads have done, but they couldn't help
themselves, could they? What with all the oppression thats been brought
down on 'em by the evil British Imperialists, they can hardly help
themselves for they've gone half-mad with anger." Too much people
have said "They can't help themselves." Too much people use the excuse
that others drive them to their crimes. People make choices for
themselves for good or ill and must learn to live with those decisions.
A person chooses to act in evil or in good, if the person truly has the
common good in mind, they will always strive to stand the higher
ground, If the person's motives are clouded by the less than noble,
then they will act in a fashion intended to grab attention,
grandstanding, ranting, raving, and doing whatever it takes to get
attention for themselves rather than taking productive steps toward
resolution, regardless of danger. To stand with arms held out wide,
hands empty of weapons, despite the animosity of others is ultimate
courage, Martin Luther King taught that and so did one other whose
death is commemorated today. No the British are no innocent lambs,
but neither are the IRA and no amount of "the devil made me do it,"
protestations are going to change that. There have been those whose
words could have commanded terrible strife or instant death to nations
or even worlds, but they withheld and stayed on the path of peace,
because that was the right way. There are two I have in mind and both
died for their beliefs, but the contributions of both have lived on in
the first case for two thousand years, in the second, for twenty-four.
Think on it.
Andrew
|
1204.29 | | BONKIN::BOYLE | Tony. Melbourne, Australia | Sun Apr 11 1993 12:39 | 5 |
| Speaking of international media coverage....Aussie TV covered the service
in Warrington that the Irish president attended. They didn't mention if
the Queen was going to pay a visit to Castlerock for a similar service
for the men killed in the same week.
|
1204.30 | Derry Film | TALLIS::DARCY | | Wed Apr 14 1993 16:36 | 3 |
| Anyone in the US see the film about Derry on PBS last night? I believe
it was entitled "2 Sons of Derry" - and described how 2 men (Paddy and
Glenn) tried to bring jobs to the youth of Derry.
|
1204.31 | the logic of a small step... | RUNWAY::FARRINGTON | furious music ...from an open door | Fri Apr 16 1993 18:00 | 30 |
| It is indeed sad to note that after all these years, and so many
inclusively bitter moments, we are still at odds over "the size of
the table". I had the very personal, and highly disturbing experience
of witnessing a similar form of "diplomacy" at work during the
end stages of the Vietnam conflict. The correctness, or timing of
a specific 'political initiative' made my friends, or enemies no
less dead. Perhaps the most dificult phase of negotiation is that
which presumes a degree of mutual integrity, respect, and honesty.
This may well be why, historically, such 'tender ministrations' are
rarely left to the combattants. The blunt truth of N.I. is that
until such time as the 'actual' participants come to terms with the
necessity of engaging each other in dialogue, we will all be beset
with the repetitive drumbeat of continued violence, regardless of
origin, or strategy. It is not enought to agree to "talks about
more talks". It is not enough to practise the "politics of exclusion".
It is not enough to insist upon the "absolutism of the Unionist Veto".
These are all nothing more that feeble excuses, crafted only to prevent
any real conflict resolution. You MUST speak to your primary, specific
antagonist. Anything less is, at best self-delusion, and at worst
outright deceit. Put down your rocks, put down your placards, put
down your slogans...and for everyone's sake...speak to each other.
It is long past time for HMG to behave in a fashion unlike that
of a parent attempting to punish a wayward child. Without respect,
there can be no dialogue. Without direct dialogue, there can be
NO peace. Remember, it is not necessary to grant approval in order
to respect the absolute necessity of their participation.
\kevin
|
1204.32 | nIP tHIs iN thE bUd!!! | CSLALL::KSULLIVAN | | Fri Apr 16 1993 19:00 | 5 |
| Hey Kevin, you've been around here long enough to know the rules.....
making sense is just unacceptable. Now cut it out!!!
Howard M.
|
1204.33 | | GSFSYS::MACDONALD | | Mon Apr 19 1993 13:27 | 13 |
|
Re: .31
You are, of course, correct, but taking direct action like speaking
to your antgonist might put an end to the conflict. It is a mistake
to assume that any and all persons making statements about wanting to
end the violence, really want to. They may well be employing lip
service to one goal as part of a strategy for pursuing a very different
one.
fwiw,
Steve
|
1204.34 | The Nazi's are still among us... | MASALA::LDICKHOFF | IOMTT 40000 bikers on a rock | Tue Apr 20 1993 13:00 | 30 |
| Fwiw,
Have been read only untill now, but over the weekend I was in Holland
and read a newspaper article on N.I. The journalist had travelled to
N.I. and spoke to various victims. It shocked me, to read that
'anti-social' behavior -as defined by the terrorists on both sides-
====
such as petty theft, joy-riding, hitting a member carries the sentence of
knee-capping.
A minor was convicted for stealing lead/copper pipes by a court. On
leaving the court he was approached and told "we'll call round when you
turn 16". On the evening of his birthday he was taken out and shot in
the knees and one ankle. He recovered from that, so he was 'done'
again.
Men and woman are told to be somewhere at the certain time to get
knee-capped; they show up because they know the sentence might
otherwise be more severe.
The doctors in N.I. are the worlds leading experts on these injuries.
Often, the ambulance services are called 'in advance' (it takes some
10-15 minutes to arrive). In one incident, the ambulance was too early;
it got flagged down and told to wait a second. The ambulance men could
here the shots and were waived though.
It is done by both sides and it is *SICK*!
Fwiw, just wanted to express my DISGUST.
Leon
|
1204.35 | | GSFSYS::MACDONALD | | Tue Apr 20 1993 18:06 | 11 |
|
Re: .34
This just goes to show that being the watch-dogs of what is right and
just is just an excuse that they use to justify these acts and serves
to hide the real reason why they do it. They do it because they like
it. You are right. They are sick acts being committed by sick people
for sick reasons.
Steve
|
1204.36 | Dublin "Peace" rally | KOALA::HOLOHAN | | Thu Apr 22 1993 13:41 | 76 |
|
RALLY CROWD 'SPAT' ON PICTURE OF TEENAGE PLASTIC BULLET VICTIM
by Conor Macauley
Irish Times, Belfast. March 31, 1993
Relatives of children killed by the security forces in Northern
Ireland were abused and spat upon at a peace rally in Dublin, it
emerged yesterday.
A dozen people, whose sons and daughters have died at the hands
of the RUC and British soldiers went to Sunday's peace protest
outside the GPO.
But s they and about 20 supporters joined the 10,000 strong
demonstration some of the crowd accused them of being IRA
sympathizers whose presence defiled the rally.
They were jostled and a placard bearing the picture of plastic
bullet victim Julie Livingstone--a 14 year old girl killed in
1981--was spat on.
Mrs. Kathleen Duffy, whose son Seamus was killed by a plastic
bullet in 1989, said they had been treated with 'contempt'. "We
were abused. We were treated with contempt. They asked us why we
were there on their day; they said we had no right to be there;
they shouted at us that we were IRA; they spat on Julie
Livingstone's photograph."
"Thanks be to God we went with dignity, and we walked away with
dignity."
In a statement issued last night, rally organizer Susan McHugh
expressed 'regret' at any 'unfriendliness' shown towards any
individuals or groups.
The families confirmed that one of the organizers left the
platform on Saturday to apologise. Street traders had given
flowers for their children's graves, they said.
The protest was organized in the wake of the IRA bombing in
Warrington which killed four year old Jonathan Ball and Timothy
Parry (12). It called for and end to violence in the names of the
121 children killed in the trouble to date.
The Relatives for justice group, representing the families, asked
permission on Saturday for the parents to address the rally.
Spokeswoman Ann Bradley said it was refused on the grounds that
it might be seen as political and cause embarrassment to the
British government. Kathleen Duffy, the other relatives and Ann
Bradley all stressed that they were apolitical and opposed to all
murders.
They have sent sympathy letters to the Warrington bomb victims'
parents.
Mrs. Duffy said that while a lot of reactions had been adverse.
some had been sympathetic and emotional. But she said she could
not comprehend how somebody attending a peace rally could 'spit
on a fellow Irish person.'
While she supported the rally's sentiments, she said she could
not understand why, with chidden dying regularly in Northern
Ireland, it had taken the murder of two English children to
mobilize Irish public opinion.
*******************************************************************************
Mark Holohan, DEC, USA "Character is what you are in the dark" - BB
holohan@mark.enet.dec.com
The opinions expressed are not necessarily the opinions of
Digital Equipment Corporation.
*******************************************************************************
|
1204.37 | | BONKIN::BOYLE | Tony. Melbourne, Australia | Thu Apr 22 1993 23:17 | 14 |
| -1
>Ireland, it had taken the murder of two English children to
>mobilize Irish public opinion.
The only other time I've seen people in Dublin care enough about what
happens in NE Ireland was Bloody Sunday. Since then they just shrug
their shoulders and seem to say "Not our problem" whenever someone gets
killed. They don't care as long as it's contained within the 6
counties. It's only when the 'trouble' spills across to England that
people sit up and take notice. I think the problem is that to a lot of
people in the Republic the problems in NI are only as real as the
problems in, say, Bosnia, i.e. they know it's happening - but it's
happening to someone else a long, long way away !
|
1204.38 | | SUBURB::FRENCHS | Semper in excernere | Fri Apr 23 1993 12:23 | 6 |
| Re Spitting on picture, abuse etc.
This is going to help the peace along isn't it. Let us hope that this
is a once off incedent.
Simon
|
1204.39 | Relatives in Peace Rally Assault followup | KOALA::HOLOHAN | | Wed Jun 02 1993 19:44 | 68 |
|
Pulled from usenet: Entered by Eugene McElroy
Relatives in Peace Rally Assault 'Moved' By Support
(From the Irish People, May 29, 1993)
Eighty thousand signatures have been collected in southern
Ireland is support of a group who were abused and spat upon
at a Dublin peace rally. Books of condolences were opened after
the group from northern Ireland, whose children had been killed
by British forces, were jostled by a section of the 10,000
strong crowd.
The rally, organized by Dubliner Susan McHugh in the wake of
the IRA's Warrington attack, heard calls for an end to the
violence in the names of the 121 child victims of the troubles.
As the 10,000 strong crowd was addressed outside the GPO, however, some
bystanders turned on the families, accusing them
of being IRA sympathizers whose presence defiled the march.
The relatives were assaulted, and a placard bearing a picture
of plastic-bullet victim Julie Livingston--a 14 year old girl
killed in 1981--was spat on. Ms. McHugh later expressed regret
at the incident.
Persons disgusted by the reception of the relatives of victims
of British violence in the north had set up the books of
condolences outside the GPO the following week. The 80,000
signatures were collected in six days. Anne Bradley of Relatives
for Justice, one of those abuses at the rally, said that she
was "moved and surprised" at the support. "I want to say on
behalf of all the people of the North that I know for a fact
that these signatures will really be appreciated and accepted,
especially by the mothers who were rejected, because the incident made them
feel as if their children didn't count.
Now I realize that it was a very, very small minority of people
who spat on us and turned their backs on us."
The signatures will now be sent to the families of six Catholics
murdered in Northern Ireland within four days of the
Warrington attack, but whose deaths were ignored.
At a press conference in Belfast, Nora Comiskey, who helped
collect the signatures, accused some persons of having
a 'hypocritical' attitude to deaths in the North. "If one
person is killed in England it would seem that thirty people
would have to be killed in northeast Ireland to cause as
much sympathy. We thought the reception the relatives
received was dreadful."
Bernadette Ni Rodaigh commented, "People were quite right to
have sympathy for the victims in Warrington, but I felt
that people were unaware of what was happening a few miles
up the road from Dublin. I decided to stand at the GPO to
show that we cared for the people of our country as well
as for the victims in another country."
*******************************************************************************
Mark Holohan, DEC, USA "Character is what you are in the dark" - BB
holohan@mark.enet.dec.com
The opinions expressed are not necessarily the opinions of
Digital Equipment Corporation.
*******************************************************************************
|
1204.40 | Creating a massacre | KOALA::HOLOHAN | | Wed Jun 23 1993 16:52 | 23 |
|
Creating a Massacre (The Nation, May 1993)
World reaction to Bloody Sunday, when British paratroopers murdered 13
civilians in Derry, forced the British to create and "IRA" massacre to
counterbalance their bad press. And so we had "Bloody Friday", 21 July
1972, when nine people were killed and some 130 injured by bombs for
which the IRA accepted responsibility. The British claimed no warnings
had been given. This was challenged in a London Sunday Times article,
7/30/72, entitled "Mystery of Bloody Friday's Lost Warnings." The
Public Protection Agency, the Samaritans and the Irish News confirmed
that they had received warnings and had passed them on to the army.
Conflicting claims were made after the Warrington bombs, police saying
that only one vague warning had been given, and the IRA claiming that
coded warnings giving the exact locations and allowing 30 minutes for
clearing the target areas had been sent to two independent sources. One
must assume that all such calls are taped. The truth can be ascertained
if the Samaritans made the tape of the warning they received available
for checking by a competent neutral source.
|
1204.41 | | VYGER::RENNISONM | So Tough | Fri Jun 25 1993 11:42 | 11 |
| My mother-in-law is a Samaritan volunteer. They do *not* tape-record
telephone conversations. This is because they wish people to feel that they
are speaking in the strictest confidence with absolutely to fear of
repercussion.
As an aside - even if the IRA had given a warning - does that excuse
their actions and make them any less evil ? I don't think so.
Mark
|
1204.42 | | KOALA::HOLOHAN | | Fri Jun 25 1993 14:10 | 15 |
|
re. .41
Given the facts that the British authorities have
been caught in the past lying about the warnings,
do you think it's possible they sat on this one?
I guess we'll never know.
As an aside - if the IRA had given an appropriate
warning, does that excuse the British police for
their non-action on the warning, or make the British
authorities any less evil? I don't think so.
Cut's both ways doesn't it.
Mark
|
1204.43 | | VYGER::RENNISONM | So Tough | Fri Jun 25 1993 14:32 | 12 |
| S'funny. I could have sworn I asked a question there.
If indeed tha UK authorities sat on the warning, then yes they are both
evil and stupid. Evil cos it results in the IRA causing even more
heartbreak. and stupid because the IRA are, quite rightly, considered scum
anyway. Letting them claim another innocent victim doesn't lower their ratings
simply because they cannot get any lower.
I've answered your question Mark - you try mine now.
Cheers....Mark R.
|
1204.44 | | PLAYER::BROWNL | The match has gone out | Tue Jun 29 1993 13:25 | 4 |
| If the IRA were that concerned that their warnings are known about,
they'd warn a third party too, like say, a TV station.
Laurie.
|
1204.45 | | CHEFS::HOUSEB | | Wed Jun 30 1993 09:41 | 19 |
| Let me see if I am following this line of reasoning correctly, is this
what you are trying to say:
IRA plant bomb
IRA phone warning - this means they have done nothing wrong because
they have let somebody know that a bomb will be going off. If someone
gets killed by the bomb it is not the IRA's fault because they
telephoned through a warning.
Warning is vague/warning is accurate (nobody in this notesfile knows
the truth about the warning), police fail to clear the area before the
bomb explodes. All casualties are the fault of the police.
What a load of IRA propaganda.
The bottom line is : If anybody plants a bomb and it injures or kills
anybody it is solely the fault of the people who planted the bomb.
Brian
|
1204.46 | | CHEFS::HOUSEB | | Wed Jun 30 1993 09:43 | 4 |
| My previous entry was a reply to .42
Brian
|
1204.47 | | BONKIN::BOYLE | Tony. Melbourne, Australia | Thu Jul 01 1993 12:32 | 7 |
| .45> anybody it is solely the fault of the people who planted the bom
======
So you're saying that if the police know of an impending bombing and
don't alert civilians then it's ok.
|
1204.48 | | CHEFS::HOUSEB | | Thu Jul 01 1993 15:06 | 8 |
| No, it is wrong of the police not to alert people IF they know
something.
However it is solely the fault of the people who planted the bomb if it
explodes and injures or kills people. If they didn't plant the bomb
nobody would be hurt.
Brian
|
1204.49 | | SAC::EDMUNDS | imagine someone still working there | Sun Jul 04 1993 08:47 | 8
|