Showing posts with label northern ireland conflict. Show all posts
Showing posts with label northern ireland conflict. Show all posts

Northern Ireland History-Northern Ireland Troubles 2000 - The New Milennium

Northern Ireland History - 2000 

The beginning of a new Millenium and one hoped a new era, or in the case of Northern Ireland, maybe not?  After all this was Northern Ireland and so the Assembly functioned for a whole ten weeks when it was suspended.  Trimble had given a senior official a pre-dated letter of resignation which would take place if decommissioning was not seen to be forthcoming.  This along with the sight of Martin McGuinness now being responsible for the education of all the children in Northern Ireland was a stark culture shock for the Unionist politicians and indeed for the Unionist people as a whole.  As early as January 2000 a report was released on policing that had been commissioned as part of the Good Friday Agreement.

Northern Ireland History 2000 - The Patten Proposal

Chris Patten produced a blueprint for police reform that was particularly unsavoury for the Unionist politicians to savour.  One of the first proposals was the then name should change from the Royal Ulster Constabulary (RUC) to the Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI).  Unionists supported the police force so strongly that they believed it to be their police force and such changes they found to be completely unacceptable.  The Unionists saw this as an affront to the dedicated members of the RUC and for those that had given up their life for their country.  All of these combined changes and still no sign of decommissioning made for a very unsettling time for Unionism and after just 72 days, Mandelson was forced to suspend the Northern Ireland Assembly.  Direct Rule from Wesminster London was once again applied to Northern Ireland.  It was the classic two steps forwards and one giant step backwards.

Northern Ireland History 2000 - Johnny Mad Dog Adair

At this time Johnny “Mad Dog” Adair was rising to prominence as the West Belfast UDA military commander and this appeared to alienate many Protestants.  Support for the march appeared to slowly but steadily ebb away and the protests fizzled out.  In August of 2000 there were bitter disputes in West Belfast between the UDA under Adair and the UVF.  Three people died and 200 families had to be re-housed as this bitter in-fighting continued.  In total for 2000, eleven Protestants died all killed by loyalist paramilitaries in this bitter dispute.  The INLA also contnued to pursue the path of violence and they launched a mortar attack on the offices of M16 in London.

After this suspension there followed the usual tit for tat political fighting with each side blaming the other for the suspension and many recriminations.  The IRA in May issued a statement that they would put its guns completely and verifiably beyond use and allow arms dumps to be inspected by independent people.  This was instantly rejected by Ian Paisley and other anti-agreement Unionists and Trimble asked the members of his own party to take a vote as to whether or not they should return to the Assembly based on this commitment by the IRA.  He won his vote by 459 votes to 403 and this was enough to have the Assembly back by the end of May 2000.  Cyril Ramaphosa former Secretary General of the African National Congress and former Finnish President Martti Ahtisaari confirmed that they had visited and seen IRA weapon dumps and so the Assembly continued.  July however was just around the corner and Drumcree which had seen peaceful protest raised its head once again.

The local Orange Lodge in Portadown called on its supporters to once again take to the streets of Northern Ireland to protest against the refusal of their march to take place down the Garvaghy Road.  Days of dispruption and road blocks followed bringing many districts and towns to a complete standstill.  I once again returned to my two hour drive home rather than my usualy fifteen minute one.  You could literally have cut the tension with a knife.  As the 12th July approached it did become clear that there was no full approval from the Protestant people for this and this was confirmed when Harold Gracey the Portadown Orange leader refused to condemn the ongoing violence. 

The Ulster Unionist Party then lost a crucial by-election of what was considered one of their safe seats to the hard wing Ian Paisley.  This increased the pressure on David Trimble and the members of the UUP stepped up the pressure to have Sinn Fein excluded from the NI Assembly.  Another trying year for Northern Ireland History.

Northern Ireland History - Northern Ireland Troubles 1997-1999

Northern Ireland History 1997-1999

Northern Ireland Conflict 1997 - 1999

Stephen Restorick was killed by an IRA sniper, the last British soldier to die in the 1990s.  As a general election was about to take place in Britain, the attacks from the IRA continued and this included the abandonment of the famous steeplechase, The Grand National at Aintree, Liverpool due to a bomb hoax.  So too did the violence from the loyalist side where Robert Hamill was beaten and kicked to death in the town of Portadown.  Some three weeks after that an RUC man, Gregory Taylor was killed in a similar manner by loyalists.  A Catholic teenager, Bernadette Martin was shot as she slept at home with her Protestant boyfriend and so the violence continued.

The Conservative government were defeated in the British general election and they were replaced with Tony Blair and the new Labour Party.  Local council elections also saw significant changes in the voting patterns with nationalists gaining the most advantage.  A defining change took place with a weakening of the Conservative and Unionist vote and a change to labour and a nationalist vote.  After this election five of Northern Ireland’s eighteeen seats were now held by Nationalists and Gerry Adams and Martin McGuinness of Sinn Fein were both now MPs.  In Northern Ireland the Unionists also lost control of four councils, including Belfast City Council.  In particular Sinn Fein’s vote appeared to be growing with many voting for the first time, mainly due to the ongoing issues at Drumcree church.  It was evident that there was a clear movement of voters to Sinn Fein and that the marching of Orangemen and the actions by the RUC had shifted the nationalist mindset.

Tony Blair had been elected as British Prime Minister and most importantly with a huge majority in the British House of Commons.  This meant that he did not depend on any smaller parties to get legislation or policy through parliament and could therefore act on any policy he wished to pursue.  Blair chose to put Northern Ireland very high on his agenda and within weeks he visited Belfast and announced the direct opening of talks with Sinn Fein.  He also appointed the first female Secretary of State for Northern Ireland, Mo Mowlam.  She was known to be a direct talker and someone who had the common touch, and she certainly had a reputation for being blunt and getting the job done.

Despite talks commencing the IRA killed two RUC men who were on a foot patrol in Lurgan, a town close to where the Drumcree marches were.  As it was approaching the marching season, any chance of political resolution seemed ever more distant. Blair, although clearly annoyed and disappointed persisted and London and Dublin came to an agreement that Sinn Fein could enter talks without the pre-condition of decommissioning.  This was a high risk strategy and Sinn Fein was told that should there be an IRA ceasefire they would be permitted into talks. 

The main risk came from the Ulster Unionist Party in that they could also walk away from any proposed talks should this be the case.  The more hard line Unionist groups including Ian Paisley and his DUP party had already stated they would not be part of any such talks and so Blair’s move was to be a huge gamble.  The gamble however worked and the IRA did call a ceasefire, though it was treated with some suspicion as the bombs at Canary Wharf in London had demonstrated how quickly any ceasefire could quickly end.  David Trimble was now they key person and all attention switched to him.  Would he and his UUP agree to enter talks without any decommissioning haven taken place?  He had always made his stated objective that he would not so if he changed his mind it would require not only a change of policy but require him to take a huge political risk and be the subject of much criticism.  To the surprise of many he did agree having consulted widely and he entered the talks with the other smaller Unionist parties, many of whom were represented by ex-prisoners.  I remember watching David Trimble and the pressure placed on him by either side was tremendous.

The talks inched along without Ian Paisley as he had withdrawn his party and continued to warn people how dangerous these talks could be for the Unionist people.  Blair again visited Belfast to try and speed up the process and he shook hands with Gerry Adams, the first hand shake there had been between a British Prime Minister and a republican leader since the 1920s. 

This handshake may seem to many to be a very small thing but it was highly symbolic and caused much debate and discussion at the time.   In the background of all this there still remained some violence as the INLA and the LVF were not on ceasefire.  Mainly due to the Drumcree issue the Loyalist Volunteer Force (LVF) had come to some prominence under the leadership of Billy Wright whose nickname was King Rat.  However this rise in fame also meant he was at high risk of being killed.  He was arrested by the RUC and imprisoned for intimidation and when he was in jail, he was murdered by an INLA prisoner who had somehow managed to have a gun smuggled into the prison.  This ensured that as it was on the 27th December that 1998 would begin with some type of continued violence.

1998 began with a wave of loyalist violence and many Catholic civillians were shot to avenge the killing of Billy Wright.  UDA prisoners being held in the Maze prison where Wright was shot withdrew their support for the peace process and to the shock of many; Mo Mowlam went to visit them inside the prison walls.  

Her unprecedented move did work though and they did renew their support for the process, though outside the killings continued.  Many people condemned Mo Mowlam for doing this but she was a determined woman and prepared to take risks to keep the process moving.  
These killings along with actions from both the Real IRA and the Continuity IRA ensured that Northern Ireland remained in a state of fear and wariness.  To increaase the tension the RUC announced that they believed the IRA and the UDA had been involved in some of the killings and as a result both the Ulster Democratic Party (UDP) and Sinn Fein were temporarily excluded from the peace talks.  In March 1998 LVF gunmen turned a machine gun onto a bar in the small village of Poyntzpass where two best friends where then killed.  One was a Catholic called Philip Allen and his best friend a Protestant called Damien Trainor.  Despite the attacks and the continuing violence, somehow the talks kept going inch by slow inch.

Unionists did develop relationships with both the Irish government and the nationalist SDLP but they did not formally talk with Sinn Fein.  Despite this and with the constant interjection of Tony Blair and Mo Mowlam coupled with the experinced negotiating skills of George Mitchell it somehow started to come together.  Mitchell had been appointed Chairman of the talks and was a close political friend of Bill Clinton.  On the 10th April 1998 an agreement was reached and is now known as the “Good Friday Agreement”.  

All households in Northern Ireland were sent a copy of this thirty page document and I have often wondered how many people have ever read it.This historical agreement was a complex and lengthy document but its single purpose was to convince all parties that their needs could be accomodated in a climate of peace and reconciliation.  In many ways it was similar to the Sunningdale Agrrement of 1973 and was an inclusive political document, but the main difference was that this agreement contained a complicated mix which would interlock all relationships, north, south, east and west.

The agreement did cater for the principle of self-determination so crucial to Sinn Fein but crucially it also included the principle of consent, in that nothing could or would change, unless the majority of people in N.Ireland wished it to be so.  Articles 2&3 of the Irish constitution were changed to remove the claim to the territory of N.Ireland and a new 108 member Assembly would be formed to which Westminster would devolve powers to.  

This new assembly would have a First Minister who would be a Unionist and a Deputy First Minister who would be a Nationalist, and it would be a joint post meaning that both would have to agree on important decisions. The actual rule for determining the First Minister position was the party who held the most seats and it was known at that time, it would be a Unionist and likely to be David Trimble. There would then be ten departmental ministries which would be allocated by party strength by an agreed formula and all of these would be protected by a number of safeguards, in that joint community support would be required to make any changes or to pass any policy decisions.

The Assembly would also be linked with London, Dublin, Scotland and Wales in a new constitutional architecture and a British-Irish council established to underpin and support this.  Various bodies would be set up to oversee policing, human rights, equality and also the controversial agreement of early prisoner release for paramilitaries on both sides of the political divide.  Paramilitaries that were represented also agreed to decommission over a two-year period.  There was a lot of information within the detailed document and also various gaps which would need to be looked at again in the future, but for many it was an historical agreement and offered at that time, a genuine sense of hope and a means of going forwards instead of looking backwards.

The Agreement now had to be ratified both north and south of the border and nationalists were clearly eager to do just that.  The difficulty would be in convincing the Unionist population in the North of Ireland.  David Trimble was being attacked by other hard line unionists such as Paisley and in fact from within his own party.  It was similar in many ways to the predicament of Terence O’Neill in the many years before him when he tried to convince the unionist popluation that some movement oon change was required.  

After the referendum the unionist support was around 50:50 and in N.Ireland as a whole 71 percent of people voted in favour of the Good Friday Agreement with almost 100 per cent nationalist support.  South of the border the agreement was overwhelmingly supported though the actual turn out was much lower than in the North of Ireland.  The one key thing from all of this voting is that Unionism was completely split in two between those wanting progress through the agreement and those absolutely opposed to it, and led by Ian Paisley.  It had been a very close call but it was just enough to make progress.

When the elections took place in June a solid pro-agreement majority was elected and Trimble was elected as First Minister with Seamus Mallon of the SDLP as Deputy First Minister.  The euphoria of the Agreement and elections were short lived as the marching season was once again upon the people of N.Ireland and Drumcree loomed on the horizon once again.  As before the march was banned and as before up went the barricades and in scenes familiar to the population the rioting started once again.  It was yet again a time of very high tension and danger for the people of Northern Ireland.  The Orange Order came under a lot of criticism at that time for not doing enough or saying enough to stop the levels of violence that had spread throughout the country.

A petrol bombing incident in the early hours of the 12th July led to terrible tragedy.  Three small boys died when a loyalist petrol bomb was thrown into their house in the County Antrim town of Ballymoney.  The Quinn children had a Catholic mother and a Protestant father and now three dead children.  The disturbances at Drumcree which had dominated July in the country quickly petered out as news of this tragedy spread across the media.  There was great sadness and quietness across Northern Ireland with many now considering the futility of what had happened and more importantly why it had happened.  This event was tragic and I believe for once that despite the horrendous attrocities that people had witnessed in the past, the death of three small children was a huge cost to pay for the sake of a road in Portadown.  When you have children of your own and you realise how precious they are it strikes hom all the harder.

Like many things however this tragedy was followed a month later when the Real IRA planted a bomb in the centre of Omagh in County Tyrone on a busy shopping Saturday.  Twenty-nine people lay dead on the streets of Omagh blown apart by a 500 lb bomb.  To this day many consider this to be the single worse incident in The Troubles and a country once again mourned.  

Many were filled with despair and for some, filled with anger.  A misleading phone call had actually caused the police to direct shoppers towards the device rather than away from it and those killed by ts impact included Protestants, Catholics and two Spanish visitors.  Two unborn twins also lay dead in a mother’s womb and those that were killed included sons, fathers, daughters, mothers, grand-mothers, young and old.  Witnesses talked of parts of bodies floating in the street carried on their way to a gulley by a burst water pipe.  I was driving myself on a short weekend break in Galway had had driven close to Omagh earlier that morning.  When I heard and saw this on the news I was devastated.  I knew people who lived in Omagh and my first thoughts turned to them.  When I found out they had not been affected then my thoughts turned to the families now ripped apart by grief.

Not only were the local people shocked and the hardened people of Northern Ireland shocked but the world was shocked at the brutality of what had happened.  Tony Blair and the USA President Bill Clinton visited Omagh along with many other people and books of condolencies were opened and signed throughout the land.  I made my own signature at the City Hall in Belfast, more to send my condolences to the people of Omagh rather than in any hope this would be the last such act of inhumanity.

The following month brought more political activity with Trimble meeting Adams behind closed doors and as this was happening both David Trimble and John Hume were awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.  Even after the loss of the three young lives in Ballymoney and the devestation of Omagh, the violence did not stop as the people moved into 1999.  Republicans in Armagh killed Eamon Collins who had at one time been an IRA member but had started to be critical of that organisation.  

A solicitor called Rosemary Nelson was killed by loyalists as she had represented nationalists and also been the legal representative for the Catholic residents of the Garvaghy Road at the centre of the Drumcree dispute.  Political progress moved slowly as trust proved to be an issue.  Unionists had high on their agenda the issue of decommissioning, whereas nationalists wished to see political movement on other issues promising that decommissioning would surely follow.  

Despite the personal intervention of Tony Blair and Bertie Ahern the Irish Taoisach it was not proving possible to devolve any powers to the Assembly due to the stumbling block of decommissioning.  One major source of relief that year was however when the Orange Order decided on a peaceful protest about not being allowed to march at Drumcree rather than the widespeard disruption which had been caused in previous years.  There was a palpable sigh of relief across the silent mouths of the people of Northern Ireland that year.

Over the coming months may called into question the validity of the IRA ceasefire.  Mo Mowlam had come close to asserting the ceasefire was not for real when a man was shot in West Belfast and an attempt had been discovered to smuggle in arms from America.  Shortly after this Mowlam was recalled to Westminster and replaced by Peter Mandelson as Secretary of State.  Mowlam had not been happy about that decision and it was felt she was recalled as she tended to lean towards nationalism which had been made public by Trimble and other Unionists.  George Mitchell also returned at this time and some ten weeks later an Executive was formed when Trimble agreed to form a government despite not a single weapon having been decommissioned.  Under a mathematical formula known as the D’Hondt principle Sinn Fein would get two of the top ten seats at the Assembly and Martin McGuinness became the Education Minister.  Ian Paisley and his party did take their seats at the Assembly but refused to attend any meetings of the Executive.
Northern Ireland History in the period of 1997-1999 was a time of some confusion as we moved towards the new milennium and the hopes for peace.

Northern Ireland History - Northern Ireland Troubles 1994-96 Drumcree

Northern Ireland Conflict 1994

The months dragged slowly by and despite much scepticism the ceasfire held and in October the loyalist paramilitary groups also declared a ceasefire.  It differed to the IRA ceasefire as it also included an apology to the victims of the families over the past 25 years.  These loyalist paramiltaries now began to move to the political world with the UVF being represented by the Progressive Unionist Party (PUP) under the leadership of David Ervine and Billy Hutchinson.  This new party and most of their nominated spokes persons were ex-prisoners, and most had served prison sentences.  At a time when it was uncertain how loyalist paramilitaries would react and behave, they showed a rather progressive leadership, having had similar backgrounds to many republicans, although from opposite sides of the divide.  Probably the one thing that they shared in common was their social working class.

Ian Paisley did however remain a dissenting voice stating that Ulster faced a crisis as he believed the Ulster Protestants had been betrayed by London and others were now speaking and negotiating with Sinn Fein and Republicanism.  Nationalists had generally welcomed the ceasefires and now waited with some expectancy for some political movement which was slow to arrive.  Dublin had set up a forum for peace and reconciliation and they included nationalist politicians in this forum, however London and the Unionists remained highly sceptical and even confused by the ceasefire and what was to happen next.

Punishment beatings continued as did various other IRA activities and when a postman was shot, there were those who thought the ceasefire was either over or in serious danger of being seen as a valid ceasefire.  The IRA quickly moved to deny any involvement or sanctioning of the robbery and in particular the actual shooting.  Days and weeks of speculation followed this and for many they believed that this could be a quick end to any political settlement.  To make matters worse, Albert Reynolds and his party in the Irish Republic also became embroiled in a crisis.  His party collapsed quickly around him but it had little or no impact on the peace process though many thought it could have ruined it, as he was one of the original architects. 

The new Taoiseach John Bruton however had never been a huge fan of the actual process and in fact disliked both Sinn Fein and the IRA.  Time did tick slowly past and things did change a little in Northern Ireland as the British Army became less visible on the streets and Police Land Rovers also reduced in visibility, being slowly replaced with more normal signs of policing.  Cross border roads were re-opened and various peaceline barriers were opened in the city of Belfast. The impact of this was there for all to see and somehow these visual signs delivered a bigger impact on the realisation that some progress was being made, be it only small steps.  

In February 1995 the British and Irish governments jointly published a “framework document” setting out a joint vision for the future.  This document pictured Northern Ireland remaining as part of the United Kingdom and stressed the importance of Unionist consent should this status wish to be changed.  It also stated that the Irishness of nationalists should be expressed through an input from Dublin and through new cross-border institutions.  Unionist politicians instantly objected to accept the document as it did not want any interference from Dublin.  There has always been a strong belief from Ulster Protestants that although they would work with the Irish government where it would assist both countries, they were not prepared to have the Irish government have any decision making power in Northern Ireland.  Any discussion that even hinted of that possibility was always rejected out of hand.

The argument moved to a new position and for most of 1995 the emphasis moved to the process of decommissioning of IRA weaponry.  Gerry Adams agreed that this should be part of the solution but should not be a pre-condition for political inclusion and moving the process forwards.  Yet another barrier to progress had been set up and this one was a large hurdle.  

The IRA would not decommisson without signs of political progress and the mainstream would not discuss progress without visible signs of the IRA giving up their arms.  The argument for Sinn Fein was that to ask the IRA to do this would be considered as a military defeat, something which they would not concede.  The argument on the Unionist side was that if the IRA were vowed to peace, then why did they need guns?.  To work around this, Sir Patrick Mayhew set out a number of conditions that Sinn Fein would have to meet before they would be allowed into the political process and republicans took the position that the continued ceasefire of the IRA was proof in itself that they wished to engage in political methods only and so the stalemate continued.

What was interesting in this was that Bruton the Taoiseach also suggested that the IRA should make some type of gesture on decommissioning to help move the process on.  Due to these various pre-conditions and time slipping past without any political process, by mid-1995 the IRA ceasefire was under immense pressure to continue and started to become uneasy.

Drumcree - Portadown Northern Ireland


The marching season was approaching and this culminated on the 12th July as Orangemen celebrated the winning of the Battle of the Boyne in 1690.  As always the marching season in Northern Ireland brought with it a sense of trepidation and in this political vaccum it was likely that the situation could become more tense than usual.  

It proved to be the case and it happened at Drumcree church near the town of Portadown in County Armagh.  The RUC attempted to re-route an Orange demonstration to prevent it going down the Catholic Garvaghy Road and after days with thousands of Orangemen congregating at Dumcree, the RUC eventually allowed the march to take place.  It was seen as a triumph for militant loyalism and Ian Paisley together with the local Unionist MP, David Trimble celebrated this success by holding each others hands aloft as they walked through a cheering crowd.  

Marching had always been controversial but this single march was to prove controversial in many ways.  Not long after that Trimble replaced James Molyneaux as leader of the Ulster Unionist Party and at that time he was viewed as the most hard line of the potential candidates.  Trimble had always been to the right of Ulster Unionism and buoyed by his success at Drumcree, his election was not actually that surprising as it summed up in general the unionist attitude to the ceasefire.  That attitude was generally one of considering the ceasefire as a threat to the status quo rather than as an opportunity for political stability and future inclusive process.  

Up to this point I like many others had never heard of Drumcree and was completely unaware that it even existed.  It now filled the news every hour and for days until every single person in Northern Ireland knew exactly where it was.  It was very strange to see men with bowler hats and sashes determined to walk down a road where no-one living there actually wanted them to be.  It was also strange to see how many people could suddenly assemble in such a short space of time.  It was also strange to see the RUC change their mind when faced with such volumes of people.  Northern Ireland would probably have been divided into three camps, Unionists who believed the Orangemen should be allowed to march, nationalists who believed they shouldn’t and a group in the middle who just wondered why does it matter.

Towards Christmas of 1995 and following lengthy negotiations between the Irish and British governments an agreement was made to appoint a three person international body to report on any decommissioning process.  

It would be chaired by US Senator George Mitchell and would also include a Canadian General John de Chastelain and Harri Holkeri a former Prime Minister of Finland.  The announcement of this was quickly followed up by a visit to Belfast of the USA President Bill Clinton.  He was given a wonderful reception in both Belfast and Derry and his visit was viewed generally as a celebration of peace.  

I remember taking my family to see Clinton in Belfast.  We went for two reasons, the main one being to support the peace process and the other to see in person a USA President.  However within weeks of his visit the IRA ceasefire started to look under increasing pressure.  Four alleged drug dealers and petty criminals were shot dead in Belfast and responsibility was claimed by an organisation calling itself “Direct Action Against Drugs” but few if any doubted it was actually the IRA behind the shootings.  The ceasefire survived Christmas and then Senator Mitchell delivered his first report.  

In this it stated that prior decommissioning would not happen as a precondition and that it should run in parallel with political negotiations.  This was based on discussions the committee had with the RUC and the Gardai and yet the committee also knew that John Major would likely reject the report unless there was prior decommissioning.  Major did this as was expected much to the pleasure of Trimble and the Unionists and the dismay of nationalists.  It seemed once again that a process that had got so far had been thwarted yet again over a single sticking point that no-one was prepared to move on.  I could assume now that you the reader could guess what would happen next.

Late one Friday evening in February a huge bomb exploded not far from the Canary Wharf in London which claimed two lives and caused huge damage.  For many this signalled the end of the peace process and a return to war by the IRA.  Those who had always been doubtful of the IRA ceasefire now felt justified in their scepticism and others on the nationalist side had surmised it would only be a matter of time due to the lack of any willingness to progress political dialogue.  
Generally the bombing was met with dismay and frustration and more bombings were to come but noticeably none in Northern Ireland.  I saw this for the first time on the news when I came home from work.  My reaction was little more than a roll of my eyes and a shake of the head.  Once again the politicians of Northern Ireland had failed the ordinary people and the extremists on both sides had been victorious once again.

An election was called in Northern Ireland which was what the Unionists had wanted and nationalists had not.  To the surprise of many Sinn Fein were the main beneficiaries in the election capturing 15% of the vote.  The SDLP vote dropped slightly but both John Hume and Gerry Adams received huge personal votes.  

The bombings and violence continued and political talks took place in Belfast which excluded Sinn Fein. June then brought with it a wave of IRA violence with a large bomb in Manchester which injured over 200 people and this was followed by a mortar attack on a British army base in Germany.  An Irish detective, Jerry McCabe was also shot in the Republic of Ireland during a robbery and this sent shockwaves through the Irish Republic.

It was once again the marching season and Drumcree in 1996 was once again to raise its head as the focus of an entire Province’s attention.  The Orange Order were very proud of its success when they succeeded in marching down the Garvaghy Road at Drumcree in 1995, and so proud of that were they, that they issued “Siege of Drumcree Medals” to celebrate the occasion.  

It was predicted that Drumcree could once again prove to be a flash point but not a single person could have foreseen what this epic marching month would bring.  In simple terms the Protestant marchers were intent on walking down the Garvaghy Road and the nationalist residents were equally determined that they would not go down that road.  The Protestant marchers remained steadfast that they had an absolute right to march along their traditional route, a route they had marched for many years and nationalists were at the point where they had decided they would no longer be subject to any form of March, especially after the scenes of triumphalism that had taken place the previous year.

As in the previous year the RUC once again banned the parade from going down the Garvaghy Road.  When the Orangemen turned up to march they found their way blocked by barbed wire, armoured Land Rovers and RUC in full riot gear.  The Orangemen did not disperse as advised to so by the RUC and said they would stay there as long as was required to march down the Garvaghy Road.  

The Portadown Orangemen were joined by thousands of supporters and also by David Trimble and some of the loyalist protestors began to engage in abuse of the RUC.  This type of behaviour extended to other areas of Northern Ireland and loyalists started to barricade roads in an attempt to bring Northern Ireland once again to a stand still.  

I remember trying to get home from work and a usual fifteen minute journey was now taking anything between one to two hours.  There was a huge feeling of anxiety with people only coming out to go to work and then leaving as soon as they could to get home safely.  Roads were littered with broken glass and bricks and cars could be seen burning out on road sides.  It did bring me back to the early days of the 1970s.  

Police and their families suffered widespread intimidation and some towns were in effect sealed off completely.  Close to Drumcree a Catholic man was shot by loyalists as burning and looting took place in areas of Belfast.  The tension built until the actual twelth of July itself and a number of loyalists turned up with a bulldozer fitted with makeshift armour and threatened to drive it through the police lines.  Tens of thousands of Orangemen were getting ready to march across Northern Ireland and there were not enough police and army to police them all, and faced with the prospect of widespread violence Hugh Annesley, the Chief of the RUC once again reversed his decision and agreed to allow the march down the Garvaghy Road.  The vast numbers of people who had gathered once again won the day.

The Catholics on the Garvaghy Road had staged a sit down protest and that meant the RUC would have to move them from the road and allow the marchers down.  Riot police moved in and cleared the Garvaghy Road and television cameras captured the rough handling by the RUC to achieve this objective.  

The Orangemen then walked down the road and nationalists in a number of districts responded by rioting.  In Londonderry a man was killed and the very fabric of society had been torn apart by the clash of opposing cultures.  

This was as close as Northern Ireland had come to an all out civil war and everyone knew that this episode was far from over.  There are no words to explain to you the reader what the atmosphere was like to live in.  Violence of any kind is bad and dangerous but continued and sporadic violence spreads pure terror.  Somehow amidst all of this, talks had managed to continue with George Mitchell moving his role from purely decommissioning to one of chairing talks which would prove to be long and tedious in nature.

The IRA then planted two 800 lb bombs using three cars in the Army HQ near Lisburn, a target which many had considered to be attack proof.  31 people were injured and one soldier died later as a result of these injuries.

Northern Ireland History - Northern Ireland Peace Process 1993-1994

Gerry Adams was spotted entering the home of John Hume and the lid was lifted on what has come to be known as the “Peace Process.”  The leader of Sinn Fein and the leader of the SDLP had been engaged in talks for some time and Hume was attacked by many politicians for talking to Adams in secrecy. 

The verbal attacks came from all sides against John Hume criticising him openly for talking with the leader of Republicanism.  Politicians who usually held a centre ground mentality also jumped on the band wagon and were very keen to join in the abuse that Hume received.  


He had taken a risk, stepped outside the usual political channels and he was persecuted for trying something different. IRA attacks and violence were at a high level and although no-one accused Hume of supporting the IRA or its brand of Republicanism, people still wanted an explanation as to why he was meeting Adams.  Adams had also met leaders within the Catholic Church and Hume had also been having talks with the Irish and British governments.  The important thing was that Hume and Adams were the two dominant people in northern nationalism and if they could come to some type of agreement despite being rivals, then there was a strong chance something could be agreed. 

John Hume actually challenged the traditional nationalist belief that the cause of the problems in Northern Ireland was the presence of the British.  There had been long held views that were Nationalists to get Britain to leave Ireland then all the troubles would end quickly.  It was his belief that the Nationalist people needed to convince the Unionist people that they could be accomodated in a new agreed Ireland.  Hume had convinced many local, European, American and International politicians that this should be the way forward, and he was a highly respected and influential politician in Ireland at this important time.  To be more specific he was respected much more outside Northern Ireland than he was inside it.  Hume’s approach was different and at least offered something other than the usual exclusion politics that failed time after time.

In 1991 Hume wrote a declaration which he was sure could form the basis of an agreement between the Irish and British governments.  The draft included ideals such as the principle of self-determination, that Britain had no selfish interest in preventing a United Ireland and the general thrust of the draft was to find a common ground that could cater for everyone’s ideological position.  

It focussed on an Anglo-Irish context and added a European dimension.  It also suggested that were IRA violence to end then Sinn Fein could join normal political life.  Hume then shared this document with Gerry Adams and with Charles Haughey the Taoiseach.  Haughey was cautious but when Albert Reynolds replaced him as leader of Fianna Fail in 1992, he was much more open to the proposals.  These were however not the only channels of contact that remained open and many secret meetings took place between republicans and various groups.  The question was would this different approach find any acceptance by both sides of the community, and especially those on the political extremes.

John Major who had replaced Thatcher as British Prime Minister probably took the biggest risk as his government had a slender majority and had anything gone wrong, he could easily have lost power.  He also had within his own party ministers strongly committed to the Unionist cause and a bunch of rebel MPs who were anti-European, and could have used this against him at any stage.  Major also to an extent relied on the Ulster Unionist Party for support due to this slender majority and this vote was at a high risk given the nature of the secretive political talks with nationalists.  

Any British Prime Minister taking a risk of this nature at least displayed a considerable amount of coverage.  John Major also knew and understood that the complex problems of Northern Ireland required dedicated, serious and a huge commitment if they were ever to be resolved.  He also found that he quickly developed a good working relationship with Albert Reynolds the Irish Prime Minister and they frequently exchanged correspondence.

As these talks were taking place there were also even more secretive talks taking place between Britain and republicans through various channels.  These lasted from around 1990-1993 and included discussions about the Hume and Adams discussions.  Both Gerry Adams and Martin McGuinness were involved in these discussions but they bore no fruit as in the end and although the republicans were talking to senior British officials, the British had to withdraw as they could not get clearance from Westminster to proceed.  Formal documentation had been exchanged but no face to face meetings had taken place.  At the time however there were denials on all sides that such intensive talks were actually taking place.  For the ordinary member of the public it was a time of confusion and it was hard to know exactly what was going on.

The discovery of the Hume and Adam’s talks in 1993 did then create a confused and often blurred picture of actually what was going on.  They eventually admitted they had been having negotiations amidst a huge amount of protest from many politicians.  With the talks now out in the open both the British and Irish governments began to adopt a more formal and distancing approach.  Major did agree to discuss the document but would not give any guarantees on negotiating within its particular framework.  It always seemed that when talks showed some signs of bearing fruit, parties disengaged probably because they believed it could damage their electorate. 

Sir Patrick Mayhew the Northern Ireland Secretary was against any such discussions though Albert Reynolds continued to believe and to push the British government into what he saw as the best hope for some type of political resolution.  Through frustration and lack of movement from the British government, Hume went public in the autumn of 1993 stating he was convinced that both he and Gerry Adams had made substantial progress in an agreement to bring together the divided people of Ireland.  

The news dominated not only local radio and television stations but was discussed at national and international levels throughout the world.  London and Dublin were angry by this media release by John Hume but did work at developing it, though not in the context of any hint that Adams had been involved in the process.  John Major tried quickly to distance himself from the agreement suggesting instead that they should return to the political discussions that were being organised by Mayhew.  There remained within the thought process that anyone found to be engaging with Gerry Adams had stepped outside the boundaries of what was acceptable.  By doing this in any public way was frowned upon and so a stalemate continued.

While all of this was happening, dreadful violence filled Northern Ireland bringing it to the brink of near disaster.  One Saturday around lunch time an IRA bomb went off in the loyalist Shankill Road.  It had been targetted at a meeting of UDA leaders, who the IRA believed were meeting in some offices above a fish and chip shop.  The bomb detonated prematurely and Thomas Begley, who was planting the bomb, was blown up himself and took with him the lives of nine Protestant people.  Four women and two children were among the dead and the offices above the shop were empty.  Once again horiffic scenes of death and destruction were broadcast on our television screens.  When Thomas Begley was being buried, images of Gerry Adams carrying the coffin were shown around the world.  This caused an outcry with people wondering how Adams could be discussing peace and then carrying the coffin of an IRA bomber who had taken the lives of men, women and children.  Adams defended his action but almost everyone else found it hard to accept, especially when he was supposed to be engaged in talks about peace.

Loyalist gunmen then went on a revenge rampage killing six people in a series of shootings.  Two gunmen opened fire in a public bar in the small village of Greysteel where they killed or fatally injured eight people, seven of who were Catholics.  Twenty-three people had died in under a week and along with the multiple funerals it seemed to many that there was little sign of any of the murdering and killing stopping.  

It was a time akin to the 1970s when people stayed indoors and cancelled social events for fear of being shot dead.  It was a time of great fear and anxiety where no-one felt safe.  

London and Sinn Fein then released versions of the correspondence they had been having and both told very different stories.  Each accused the other of telling lies and fabricating versions of the events.  The Northern Ireland Office and the British government did admit to twenty-two typing and transcription errors and their government’s credibility at that time suffered a major set back.  

In December 1993 Major and Reynolds met in Dublin in what is often described in a tense and bad tempered atmosphere.  Major believed that the Irish government had been guilty of press leaks and the Irish were not pleased that Major had been having other negotiations with republicans.  Against all the odds the two men still managed to maintain a working relationship.  This constant pattern of violence and politicians playing on words and actions simply had the effect of either driving people away from politics, or of frustrating the very life out of them with false hopes and promises.

In December 1993 Major and Reynolds unveiled the “Downing Street Declaration.”  It read, “The British government agree that it is for the people of the island of Ireland alone, by agreement between the two parts respectively, to exercise the right of self-determination on the basis of consent, freely and concurrently given, North and South, to bring about a United Ireland if that is their wish.”

This was launched to a waiting world and for the people of Northern Ireland it was significant though like the many before it viewed with a lot of scepticism.  This joint declration contained many of the items that Hume and Adams had discussed but the Republican points had been diluted to make them more attractive to the Unionist audience.  The Republicans however did not reject this out of hand and asked for clarification on certain elements of the agreement rather than a complete rejection.  Major stated that no clarification was required and this produced weeks and months of stalemate.  This was very typical of the confrontation that any worded agreement would have, with each side placing their spin on exactly what it meant.  The result was always a vaccum and one thing filled that, violence.

Up until 1994 Gerry Adams had been banned from entering the USA but in February of that year, that ban was removed by the American President Bill Clinton.  This was despite long protests from the British government who were very keen to stop Sinn Fein from getting any propoganda, but Clinton had the final word and allowed Adams to enter America.  Adams was given what can best be described as a celebrity reception and appeared on many television shows and met many influential people.  In one of the most strange episodes ever by the IRA about a month after this they IRA fired mortars at Heathrow Airport which was a confusing attack given the fact that they could have taken much civillian life.  In yet another unusual twist it transpired that the mortars could never have exploded so that this incident was more about terror than any danger of loss of life. 

Some months later on May 1994 the British government did finally clarify elements of the Downing Street Declaration but got no response from the Republican movement.  Six Catholics were shot in a bar in Loughinisland in June 1994 by loyalists and in response a number of prominent loyalist figures were shot dead.

On 31st August 1994 an IRA statement was read out, “There will be a complete cessation of military operations.”  This caused a celebratory and jubilent mood in the nationalist community but a more uncertain response from the unionist community.  This is a very strong memory for me as I remember the celebrations on the street and it was almost a festival atmosphere within the strong nationalist areas.  Elsewhere the response was much more muted and like myself although we retained some hope, it was simply that, hope rather than expectation.

Northern Ireland History - The Anglo-Irish Agreement 1985 1990

Northern Ireland History 1985-1990

The Anglo-Irish Agreement document was formally signed by both Prime Ministers (Britain by Thatcher and Fitzgerald for the Republic of Ireland) at Hillsborough Castle in Northern Ireland in November 1985, and was significant as it did for the first time give the Republic of Ireland a consultative role in the running of Northern Ireland.  It was a carefully crafted and worded document and at its heart was an intergovernmental conference that would be jointly chaired by London and Dublin ministers.  A well guarded office at Maryfield gave a support service to this conference team.  

An important fact was that the Republic of Ireland did not have executive powers as they were only consultative in their role.  Despite that many people had been taken aback by the fact that Thatcher had signed such an agreement and the Unionist people were simply dismayed and outraged.  The Unionist people felt betrayed and abandoned.  The very thought that any British government could sign up to an agreement that the Republic of Ireland could have any say in the running of Northern Ireland was viewed with utter dismay.  The fact that it was Margaret Thatcher, a British leader with strong Unionist instincts was not only surprising to many, but was like a double blow to the Unionist community.

James Molyneaux, the then leader of the Unionist Party had opted out of any such talks and his only offer had been some minor concessions to nationalists pending a return to the old Stormont regime.  Molyneaux had been convinced that without his participation no such agreement could be worked and the Unionist people had initially relaxed, reassured by these words.  The realisation that this shift in thinking by both governments was not going to go away, the more militant unionists such as Ian Paisley and his deputy Peter Robinson began to threaten widespread protests.  

Paisley said the proposals would be resisted to the very death and accused Thatcher of being prepared, “To wade knee deep in the blood of loyalists for this document of treachery and deceit.”  Many Unionists flocked to a protest at the City Hall in Belfast and throughout the North many Unionist controlled councils postponed and called off council meetings.  The New Northern Ireland Secretary, Tom King was physically attacked by loyalists on a visit to the City Hall in Belfast.  

These forms of protest continued for years and there were many violent clashes between protestors and police.  Loyalist paramailitaries now turned against the police force and attacked their homes, with over 500 homes being attacked and 150 police officers forced to move home.  The 15 Unionist MPs resigned in an attempt to force by-elections and ended up losing a seat to the nationalist SDLP in the new election.  Loyalists once again tried to bring Northern Ireland to its knees as they had done before with a day of action, but the intimidation that was used and the violence that followed, was disapproved of by many Protestants.  Personally I remember a huge banner which draped around the City Hall in Belfast with the famous words, “ULSTER SAYS NO”.

Other forms of protest took place and Peter Robinson and a group of loyalists staged a midnight incursion into County Monaghan in the Irish Republic to demonstrate how weak security was, however he was arrested, and at a later date pleaded guilty to unlawful assembly and had to pay a £15,000 fine.  Despite all these various types of protests the Agreement continued on.

Anglo Irish Agreement - Nationalist Viewpoint

The IRA and Sinn Fein were also concerned about the Agreement, especially whan a new set of security measures appeared along the border in the form of watchtowers.  Politically Sinn Fein were concerned that this new accord could result in a loss of votes as it now appeared that both the British and Irish governments were intent on working with the SDLP on a new process.  Sinn Fein for the first time in their history made a move in the republic of Ireland and voted against their lifetime policy of asbtentionism of taking seats in the Dail.

Clearly political changes were taking place across the nationalist parties and the Unionist politics remained one of protest rather than solution.  Despite the initial hope that the British had finally stood up to the Unionist protest, Nationalists quickly became disillusioned as no significant reforms took place.  

For Thatcher and King the protests by Unionists and the lack of any quick military gains appeared to change their thoughts to ones of soothing Protestant concerns and no futher development of the Agreement.  The net result therefore was that the Agreement was not as bad as the Unionists had feared and had delivered nothing for the Nationalists.  The Irish government grew frustrated at the lack of progress and at times were infuriated with the British government’s viewpoints on important issues such as Human Rights.  


Northern Ireland History - The Birmingham Six

These included the long running appeal by the Birmingham Six and the Guilford Four about their innocence.  These were Irish people who had been found guilty of crimes relating to bombings in England.  Britain resisted any attempt to admit any miscarriage of justice to Dublin and also denied any interference with the independence of the Stalker enquiry.  These would all later be resolved in the 1990s with Britain admitting they had got all of them wrong.  Likewise Britain were growing weary of the Irish government’s attitude towards extradition policies, whereby Britain were trying to get known Republicans sent to Britain for justice, something which the Irish government were reluctant to do.

This situation suited Sinn Fein and the IRA.  They continued on with both a political and military strategy. At around the same time relations between Colonel Gaddafi of Libya and Britain had declined, and the IRA who had once got weapons from Libya, once again recommenced that line of procurement.  This resulted in various shipment deliveries of rifles, semtex, armour piercing machine guns and anti-aircraft guns.  

The British combined security services including MI5 and MI6 failed to detect this activity.  The IRA kept their activity low during these shipments to avoid drawing attention to their supply source but once that had been achieved, then the IRA violence once again began to rise.  They attacked a wide range of targets in England and also attacked British troops based in Europe.  

They did not forget about Northern Ireland and a mortar bomb at Newry Police Station took the lives of nine policemen, and in 1987 a senior judge and his wife were blown up by a road side landmine.  Seldom a single day would pass without hearing of some incident on the local news.

The SAS retaliated and killed eight IRA men as they attacked a police station in the small village of Loughall.  In November 1987 eleven civilian lives were taken where mainly Protestants had gathered in the County Fermanagh town of Enniskillen for Remembrance Day.  The bomb which had been hidden in a community hall ripped through the assembled crowd removing eleven people from this earth and injuring more than sixty people.  Five of the people who lay dead were women.  The IRA had got this one completely wrong and the World at large turned against such an act.  These people had come to remember those who had given their lives during the World Wars and to defend democracy, and yet that remembrance had been used to carry out a terrible attrocity. 

Northern Ireland History - The Libyian Connection

Not long after that a French custom’s patrol intercepted a trawler carrying Libyan weapons destined for the waiting arms of the IRA and that did finally alert authorities to what had been happening.  At exactly the same time a renegade INLA member called Dessie O’Hare had kidnapped a Dublin dentist.  This man was held for several weeks and during this time O’Hare hacked off two of the dentist’s fingers with a chisel.  There was a huge revulsion throughout the country and although the dentist was rescued, the police failed on several occasions to capture O’Hare who shot his way out of several road blocks.  These combined actions by the IRA and associated Republicans put an end to any political success for Sinn Fein in the Republic of Ireland.  They have failed to fully recover from this and even today, they do struggle to win seats in the Republic of Ireland.

March 1988 and the SAS shot dead three IRA members, one of them a woman on the island of Gibraltar owned by Britain.  The killings were controversial as although this IRA unit were planning a bombing attack against British soldiers, those shot dead were unarmed.  Witnesses stated that the three dead may have been attempting to surrender and the SAS involved said the three people did not freeze instantly and also made suspicious movements.  

Hundreds gathered at Dublin airport to wait for the bodies to return home and many people lined the route as the bodies were brought home to Belfast.  Thousands of people attended the funerals at Milltown Cemetry in West Belfast, and as they did, a lone loyalist gunman called Michael Stone entered the graveyard and attacked the mourners.  He fired a handgun and tossed grenades at the mourners before making his exit back to the nearby motorway.  He was eventually caught and beaten by the crowd before being rescued by the police.

The funeral of one of the mourners, a known member of the IRA followed and a car carrying two British Army Corporals drove into the cortège.  Republicans afraid this was another attack by loyalists rushed the car and eventually pulled the two men out, kicking them and beating them.  They were dragged to a nearby sports ground, partially stripped, beaten again and finally shot dead.  This sequence of events from Gibraltar, Milltown and the deaths of these two young men are remembered as an almost unreal time of complete instability and sickness within the Troubles of Northern Ireland.  Despite the new all time low of pure hatred and violence things did not change and if anything society became more polarised.  This was for me probably the most horiffic time to have lived in Northern Ireland.  No-one I knew was sure what madness would or could happen next and it was a time of great fear and bewilderment.

Loyalists continued to kill Catholics and the IRA continued their attacks on Protestants and soldiers.  Thatcher responded by banning the voices of Sinn Fein members from the airwaves, and removing remission for paramilitaries.  The IRA nevertheless continued their campaign in England and an IRA bomb killed 11 army bandsmen in County Kent in England.  The IRA insisted they would attack anyone they considered part of the British war machine and this could include civilian contractors working on government buildings, those involved in the British legal profession and any job associated with British security services.

At around this time a lawyer who represented Republican clients, Pat Finucane was shot dead by loyalists and Sinn Fein alleged British collusion in the killing.

You can now read about the Northern Ireland Troubles 1990-1992

Northern Ireland History - Northern Ireland Troubles 1976-1981

Northern Ireland History 1976

Roy Mason took over as the Secretary of State from Merlyn Rees.  He was a more strict and uncompromising man who focussed on security and in particular a military defeat of the IRA.  In May 1977 a new group formed called the United Unionist Action Council (UUAC).  Their prime objective was to have another strike to try and force the hand of the British government to have a Stormont government put back in place.  It was not supported by all Unionists however it was by Harry West and the Orange Order.  Ian Paisley was also keen to push the strike through but business people and trade unions appeared to have no appetite for it. 

The strike went ahead in early May and once again intimidation was used to prevent people getting to work with gangs of UDA members patrolling the street.  However after a few days people began slowly drifting back to work when the police and British troops started to clear the main roads, in a move that did not happen in the previous strike.  A key element also missing from this strike was the fact that Ian Paisley and Ernest Baird were unable to convince the Electricity Power workers to go on strike.

The remaining strikers also began to feel pressure from the main Protestant churches and when violence claimed the lives of three people, the strike was called off.  Paisley had stated that he would resign if the strike failed but then continued on afterwards.
 
I had just started work when this strike was called and my memory was fresh from the last such strike.  There was a difference this time though as none of the barricades were set up and there did not appear to be as much intimidation.  I had just started as an apprentice and contacted work to see if it was possible to get to my base in Belfast.  Some others had tried to but had been met with some opposition so I was advised to leave it for a couple of days and just report to my local base.  Some areas of Antrim had been cordoned off but generally work continued on as normal, but it was yet another of those very tense and divisive times.

Mason's new approach had assured Loyalists they had nothing to fear and paramilitary activity declined as they felt more assured with Mason in charge.  Mason also wanted the Royal Ulster Constabulary (RUC) to take the lead role in the security of N.Ireland and for the British army to provide a more supportive role.  As internment had been stopped Mason focussed on putting paramilitary, especially IRA members through a criminal system and into jail.  

Northern Ireland History 1976 - Diplock System

Since the beginning of the Troubles, juries had been abolished for fear of intimidation and had been replaced with a system known as the "Diplock" system.  This was simply a single judge making a legal decision on any case brought before him.  

The best way of convincing a judge was twofold: confessions and forensic evidence.  These became the policies of the RUC and an interrogation centre was created in Castlereagh in East Belfast and many paramilitaries rounded up and taken there.

Both loyalists and republicans complained that brutality had taken place in Castlereagh and that confessions had been extracted under violence and coercion, through a sustained period of systematic torture.  I do remember talking to a guy one night in a bar that had been “lifted” by the RUC.  He told me he had been taken to Castlereagh and that he had been beaten up quite a bit. All I can tell you was that he did have bruises around his kidney area and he now had a deep hatred for the police.  He told me he had done nothing and was just walking home from a friend’s house in the Rathcoole area of North Belfast.  

I heard other similar stories like this over this time period.  One other notable difference was to happen as the SAS staged ambushes and shot dead members of the IRA.  This started the allegations of a “shoot to kill” policy by the British government.

Northern Ireland History 1976 - Political Stagnation

Politically N.Ireland seemed to be going nowhere and John Hume of the SDLP then tried to bring N.Ireland into the International scene by making it an Anglo-Irish affair and involving Irish friendly politicians in the USA.  Up until then the USA had viewed Ireland in a very patriotic way, not that aware of Unionism and supportive of the Irish fighting for their freedom.  It was always what is probably best described as a romantic relationship and somewhat ideal, rather than an understanding of the complex political situation.  As such it was a rich source of money raising and gun-running for the IRA.
 
Mason tried to introduce private investment and agreed a £56 million government investment to bring De Lorean sport's cars to West Belfast.  As all of these many changes were taking place Gerry Adams and Martin McGuinness took the leadership of Sinn Fein over from Ruairi O Bradaigh and Daithi O' Conaill.  They told their followers from the start that the British had no intention of leaving Northern Ireland and that they would have a long struggle ahead.  This became known in Republican circles as the beginning of the "Long War".
 
This new leadership believed they would have to use violence and politics to achieve their objective and they also went about changing the structure of the IRA volunteers into what were known as cell units.  This was to minimise the risk of informers and infiltration.  They also widened their targets to include anyone who supported what they described as the British war machine, such as prison warders.  

They targeted a hotel in East Belfast known as La Mon House and in this attack 12 people died, some of them burning to death.  It was a horiffic attack and worked against the IRA as they had been trying to maintain the profile of Freedom Fighters rather than terrorists.  This along with the numerous arrests caused Mason to make a statement that the IRA was waning and could not sustain a prolonged campaign.  He had hoped for an IRA ceasefire but this did not materialise.


Northern Ireland History 1976 - INLA and Lord Mountbatten


Another Republican paramilitary group known as the Irish National Liberation Army (INLA) were also active and had been from the early 1970s.  In 1979 they planted a bomb under the car of Airey Neave the shadow Northern Ireland Secretary, which killed him instantly.  He was a close aide of Margaret Thatcher and when she got elected in 1979 a new Secretary of State called Humphrey Atkins took over.  

Soon after Lord Mountbatten, the Queen's cousin and 18 soldiers were killed near to Warrenpoint in County Down.  16 of these were from the Parachute Regiment and they were attacked initially with an 800 pound bomb which was followed up by gunfire.  As the soldiers took cover behind a wall, another bomb that had been concealed there was detonated and took their lives.

Atkins tried once again to set up a conference with the major political parties to discuss devolution.  The SDLP leadership was also changing with both Gerry Fitt and Paddy Devlin resigning as essentially their principles of trade unionism and socialism were being squeezed by Thatcher's type of politics and the fact that Northern Ireland politics was now more about nationalism than socialism.  

They were replaced by the well liked and respected John Hume who had always argued that the Northern Ireland problem was one of unionism and republican division rather than the British presence in N.Ireland.  He had always argued that partition was a symptom rather than what had actually caused the current period of violence.  He strongly believed that it was up to nationalism to convince unionism that they should have an accomodation in an agreed United Ireland.

Atkins however ruled out any return to Stormont and any involvement from the Republic of Ireland which effectively ruled out any chance of his inititative ever working.  James Molyneaux who had taken over leadership of the main Ulster Unionist Party boycotted any such initiative, and that pretty much put an end to that political move.

Northern Ireland History 1980 - The Hunger Strikes in Northern Ireland

As the 1980s approached a decision made by William Whitelaw as far back as 1972 was to have serious repercussions for the province.  Back then, Whitelaw had agreed that a special category status was to be created for prisoners involved in paramilitary activity and this was often known as "political status" rather than branding them as criminals.  

Ever since he had introduced that status, the various Home Secretaries had attempted to have it removed and protests at Long Kesh had been ongoing since 1976.  The name Long Kesh had also been changed to the "Maze Prison" and the jail, when viewed from the air looked like a set of "H-blocks".  With the special category in place these H-Blocks were run along similar lines to World War Two camps, and they were essentially tin huts surrounded by barbed wire.  

The prisoners inside did not obey any instructions from the warden or any authority but from what was known as their Operational Commander (OC), usually the most senior ranking within their own organisation. The prisoners wore their own clothes, did not have to do any prison work and received additional visits and parcels.  This meant that the prisoners although under guard and imprisoned, largely led their own type of existence within the compound.

In 1976 Merlyn Rees announced that he was removing this special status for any new prisoners convicted, though he was not going to remove it for prisoners who were already on that status, for fear of a violent backlash.  These prisoners would therefore be expected to work and wear prison uniforms.  

Loyalist prisoners initially protested against this but with some reluctance did eventually accept these new changes.  However, many Republican prisoners refused to accept these new changes and were then kept in their cells wrapped only in a blanket.  They were also refused visits and lost remission, and often had their cell furniture removed as a punishment.  

Tension grew rapidly between the prisoners and the prison warders. (Usually called Screws) Outside the jail, the IRA began to target prison warders and from 1976-1980 nineteen of them would lose their lives.
   
The protest inside the jail continued and was known either as "Being on the the blanket", or "The blanket protest".  In 1978 there were approximately 800 republican prisoners and there were 300 of them on this blanket protest.  What was also strange was that this protest by the prisoners was not actually supported by the IRA leadership and outside the prison there was also little support in general from the republican movement.

Several leading people were involved in what was known as the H-Block campaign and these people now came under attack from the UDA.  These included Bernadette McAliskey (Bernadette Devlin) who had a miraculous escape from being killed in a shooting, the deaths of Ronnie Bunting a member of the INLA, a university lecturer called Miriam Daly and a Protestant nationalist politician called John Turnly.

Inside the prison the prisoners decided to increase the pressure by going on a "no-wash" protest.  The prisoners refused to leave their cells which meant that prison officers had to empty chamber pots and many clashes took place between warders and prisoners.  This became known as the "Dirty Protest" when prisoners started smearing excrement on the cell walls and as the state of hygiene dropped dramatically with infestations of maggots and a danger to health, the authorities were forced to act.  They removed all prisoners and steam cleaned the cells, and then forcibly gave all prisoners haircuts, shaves and baths.  

This did bring the prisoners some publicity but little changed within the prison and in 1980, the prisoners used their ultimate form of protest, a hunger strike.  Again, given the lack of success of previous hunger strikes within the republican movement, this was opposed by the IRA leadership, but in October 1980, seven prisoners went on hunger strike.  The killing of prison officers stopped and the dirty protest was stopped and the prisoners issued five demands:

1.        The right to wear their own clothes
2.        No prison work
3.        Free association with other prisoners
4.        Weekly letters, visits and parcels
5.        Restoration of all remission lost during the protests

These were issued and sent to the British government who at that time was a Conservative government and the Prime Minister, known as the "Iron Lady" was Margaret Thatcher.  Her initial statement ensured that the protest would not be easy to resolve as she said, "I want this to be utterly clear - the government will never concede political status to the hunger strikers or to any others convicted of criminal offences."  

This clearly demonstrated the view that although the IRA considered their volunteers to be Irish Freedom Fighters, the British government considered them to be terrorists and criminals.  It was a wide chasm in view points and one that would prove difficult to close.  In the background links netween the IRA and MI6 were made and it was muted that concessions on clothes and work were possible but only if the hunger strikes ended.  In December a hunger striker lost his sight and was close to death.  The strikes were called off amidst considerable confusion with Sinn Fein claiming a victory; however it quickly transpired they had not achieved this at all.  

To this day there is still confusion as to what was offered and what was not, but the bottom line was that the prisoners did not get any of their demands and a new phase was to be entered.
On the 1st March 1981 a second hunger strike began and it was to be done in a phased approach.  Bobby Sands the OC for the IRA in the Maze was the first to go on hunger strike.  Two weeks later another would join and so on which would continue to build the pressure on the British government.  

Bobby Sands ignored the IRA leadership and was indeed angry about the way the first strike had been dealt with and wanted that to be avenged.  This earned him the nick name of "Geronimo."  Bobby Sands was born and grew up in the mainly Protestant Rathcoole estate on the outskirts of North Belfast and his family had been forced to leave that area, along with other Catholic families as a direct result of intimidation.  They had moved to West Belfast and he joined the IRA, served a short prison sentence in 1972 and was sentenced again in 1977 for 14 years after being arrested in possession of a gun on an IRA operation.

This new hunger strike did catch the sympathy of the nationalist people as although not many Catholics supported the IRA, they did view this situation as being a lack of flexibility by Margaret Thatcher and her British government.  Photographs of Bobby Sands were released and he looked ordinary, more like a long haired musician rather than an IRA member, and this proved to be a very useful propaganda tool for the Republican movement.  

Silly as it may seem the fact that he had been imprisoned for having a gun, along with his ordinary looks, made Thatcher's stance appear one of pure obstinance rather than a political sticking point.  I remember seeing the first photograph of Bobby Sands and it is true, he looked to me much more like some kind of folk singer, rather than an IRA man.  Perception is a strange thing and on top of this Margaret Thatcher was not the most popular of people.
 
Northern Ireland History 1980
West Belfast Mural
To add to this a unique, somewhat fortunate card was dealt to the hands of Sinn Fein.  An independent nationalist MP called Frank Maguire passed away suddenly.  This created a by-election in the constituency of Fermanagh-South Tyrone for a seat at Westminster.  Sinn Fein put Bobby Sands up for election and he stood against the former Unionist party leader, Harry West.  Sands defeated West and won the election by 30,492 votes to 29,046 in a huge turnout.  Thatcher was now left with an MP on hunger strike and this proved to be a massive PR victory for Sinn Fein and the first time they could see the use of politics in developing a future.  However nothing changed and on the 5th May 1981 Bobby Sands died and with his death he became a Republican martyr.  Over 100,000 people attended his funeral and the impact from around the world was one of criticism for Thatcher.

Disturbances on the street were inevitable and the Army reacted with plastic bullets and yet again the death toll in N.Ireland started to mount.  Seven Catholics were killed including 2 young girls and although the Army maintained those that had been killed were rioting, subsequent inquests in five of the seven cases proved this to be untrue and compensation was awarded.  I was 23 years old at the time and I was working on and off in Belfast.  I witnessed some of the worst rioting I had ever seen, and saw in the faces of many young people absolute signs of hatred.  It is hard to explain this vehemence on a website but I remember those faces and I remember the anger.

James Prior now replaced Atkins as the Secretary of State.  The rioting and violence continued and at times was heavy and prolonged. The hunger strikers continued to die as each side of the dispute dug their heels in.  In total seven IRA and three INLA hunger strikers died bring the total to ten.  It was finally brought to an end by the intervention of the families of the prisoners who were assisted by Father Denis Faul.  Where the others had died the families now asked the medical teams to intervene when their sons had lapsed into comas.  

The protests were called off in October and within days Jim Prior eased the prison regulations to allow the prisoners to wear their own clothes and made some smaller adjustments to cater for the remaining four demands.  It had been a harrowing time for the people of Northern Ireland and even at its conclusion the violence, death and murders continued.

The IRA assisnated a Unionist MP called Robert Bradford who had called for a tougher security policy against the IRA.  On the day of his funeral many memorial services were held by the Protestant people and Ian Paisley threatened to organise a rent and tax strike to make N.Ireland ungovernable.  The loyalists then staged a day of action where members of a “third force” were put on parade.

The hunger strike initially looked like a miserable failure for the IRA and Sinn Fein, yet it did bring Republicanism many gains.  Most importantly the world had noticed and had to an extent sympathised and taken a deeper interest in the politics of a divided land.  New recruits once again started to fill the ranks of both the IRA and Sinn Fein.  It allowed them for the first time to announce a strategy that would include “the ballot box in one hand and an armalite in the other.”  The loss of the ten lives which had initially seemed to be a waste and a defeat for the IRA had in fact gave them a new direction, a new strategy and many new recruits to their cause.


You can now read about the Northern Ireland Troubles 1982-1984