They say it only takes 15 minutes
By Peadar Whelan
For Sinéad, it all started at 6.30am on Saturday morning, 29 May.
The RUC and the loyalists where outside her Garvaghy Road home. The
loyalists were removing tricolours from the lamp posts and an RUC officer
was holding the ladder. When Sinead protested, another RUC man shoved her
back into the house, regardless of the fact that she had her small daughter
in her arms. The scene had been set for the rest of the day.
Heavily armed RUC and British army units, including paratroops, surrounded
the Garvaghy Road. There could have been 1,000 of them; it was hard to make
an accurate assessment and they were backed up by dozens of armoured
vehicles. They were at both ends of Garvaghy Road, they were all along Park
Road which links Garvaghy and Obins Street. They were at Obins Street, at
the Tunnel and at Craigwell Avenue.
The tension was palpable as everyone waited in anticipation of the return
of the Junior Orange Order from Bangor, where they were parading that
afternoon. Last year, serious rioting erupted after the same parade tried
to push its way up the Garvaghy Road. Seizing the opportunity, the RUC had
attacked nationalist residents. None on the Road wanted that to happen
again.
At the community centre, women gathered to make posters and paint banners
calling for justice for their community and peace for their children. The
women were planning to be at the front, to act as a buffer between the
crown forces and nationalist protesters.
As the afternoon drew to a close, the word came through that the Orange
marchers had arrived at Shillington's Bridge, at the bottom of the road.
Tension rose as it became obvious that the loyalists had not dispersed
peacefully. Later we would learn loyalists accompanying the Orange march
had engaged in a running battle with the crown forces attempting to
disperse them.
Blaming ``lager louts'' outside the stewardship of the parade, Orange Order
spokesperson David Jones said the troublemakers had been identified and
``would not be made welcome at any future events''.
As the evening sun stretched across Garvaghy Road, when it was clear the
Orange Order had dispersed, Breandán MacCionnaith, as spokesperson for the
residents, asked the RUC to withdraw from the area.
The RUC, however, intent it seems on provocation, stayed their ground;
lined across the road and in the park from where they flanked the couple of
hundred nationalists who gathered in protest - all the while their guns
trained on the residents.
Observers from Fianna Fáil, Labour and Sinn Féin who attended the Garvaghy
Road on fact-finding missions all commented that the thing they first
noticed was that the guns and armoured vehicles all addressed the
nationalists: ``The message was clear; nationalists are the enemy'', said
Mike McKee, a Shannon town councillor.
It was inevitable that the longer the RUC held their positions the more
likely it was that there would be trouble.
d when the stone throwing started, the RUC almost immediately opened fire
with plastic bullets. Over 30 were fired before the first of three or four
petrol bombs were thrown. About 50 plastic bullets were fired in all,
injuring two men, one hit on the body the other in the throat.
By contrast, during three days of intensive rioting in the loyalist
Edgarstown area two weeks ago, when petrol bombs were used and an RUC
vehicle was overturned, only one plastic bullet was fired.
By approximately 9pm, the area was relatively calm, the RUC had withdrawn
and groups of people stood about chatting about a long day and the impact
on their lives of a loyalist march that would, ``only take 15 minutes''.