Sinn Féin’s Conor Murphy has urged the British government to
“build a bridge towards democracy and equality” following the
setting of a timetable for intensive discussions on the peace
process next month.
Unionist politicians have been urged to speak out after a series
of racist attacks in working-class unionist areas of the North.
Tension surrounds two sectarian parades tonight after
controversial decisions by the Parades Commission on marches in
Maghera and north Belfast.
Irish Americans have expressed dismay at the failure to give
weight to the Ireland issue in the Democratic Party 2004
Platform for the US Presidential election.
Relatives and survivors of the 1974 Monaghan and Dublin bombings
have accused the Irish government of a “betrayal of trust” over
a continued failure to set up a full public inquiry into the
attacks.
Irish political parties have united to condemn seriously illegal
activity at the National Irish Bank following a damning report
by two High Court inspectors.
The latest IMC report is a mix
of carelessness, pomposity, arrogance and toe-curling
subservience to their masters in the NIO.
Elements of the unionist paramilitary UDA have said that they
are in possession of the intelligence dossier which
“disappeared” from Castlereagh Crown force base in east Belfast
last week.
The British Ministry of Defence has placed a gagging order on a
former undercover British soldier, who said an IRA sniper attack
could have been prevented.
The British Army is understood to have lost one of its most
sophisticated pieces of bomb detecting equipment during rioting
in north Belfast earlier this month.
An Irish Republican has been convicted of the 1992 killing of a
British Army recruiting sergeant after pleading guilty in a
court in Nottingham, England.
The funeral was held in West Belfast this morning of veteran
republican Joe Cahill, who died last week.
An extract from the biography of Joe Cahill, A Life in the IRA,
written by Brendan Anderson and published by O’Brien press.
One man was thrown through a window as a loyalist mob attacked
the homes of three families in County Antrim at the weekend.
Immense anger has lingered in the nationalist Ardoyne community after a Protestant Orange Order parade and a mob of followers were forced theough the area on Monday evening....
The 26-County Taoiseach Bertie Ahern, and the British Prime
Minister Tony Blair, have agreed to hold a three-day summit
aimed at reviving the 1998 Good Friday Agreement in
mid-September.
The Mayor of Dublin has unveiled a memorial this morning in
memory of three CIE transport workers killed in two explosions
in the city in December 1972 and January 1973.
Sinn Féin’s newly elected MEPs attended have attended their
first sessions in the European Parliament in Strasbourg.
Sinn Féin’s Gerry Kelly has said it is time to “name and shame”
pro-unionist elements in the British government’s civil service
and the PSNI police who are actively working to undermine the
peace process.
Members of the British Army’s Royal Irish Regiment have been
blamed for the “disappearance” of a top secret document from a
joint British Army/PSNI base in east Belfast.
Bertie Ahern has begun a reshuffle of his government by naming
unpopular Finance Minister Charlie McCreevy as Dublin’s next
European Union commissioner.
Ian Paisley’s church will take to the streets to oppose a
planned visit by the Pope to the North next year.
A PSNI police chief has admitted he has not even questioned the
individual he blames for his decision to force an anti-Catholic
march through Lurgan last week.
The so-called Independent Monitoring Commission has drafted a
propogandistic report on British demilitarisation in the North
of Ireland.
The 26-County government has appointed a senior police chief to
investigate new evidence into the murder of a Sinn Féin
councillor in Donegal over 10 years ago.
Unionist paramilitaries are believed to have been handed a
British Army dossier on leading republicans following an
incident at the top security Castlereagh base in east Belfast.
Events of the last few weeks have brought into sharp focus two
of the key issues that need to be addressed if there is to be
political progress.
The official name of Derry may indeed be Derry, and not the
‘Londonderry’ moniker favoured by unionist hardliners.
The 26 Counties is second in the world in terms of the gap
between rich and poor, according to a damning UN Human
Development Report.
The 26-County government has finally yielded to demands that it
seek recognition of Irish as an official working language of the
European Union.
Republican Sinn Féin has denied a US determination that the
party is simply a front for the breakaway Continuity IRA.
The Pope is to return to Ireland next year to mark the 25th
anniversary of his first visit to the country, it was confirmed
today.
British paratroopers came within seconds of firing live rounds
at nationalist protestors during a Protestant march in Ardoyne,
it has emerged.
I put it to Mr Blair that the best way to secure all of our
futures is for the British to make a new strategic alliance with
Irish nationalism and republicanism.
Gerry Kelly of Sinn Féin has accusing the British government’s
Northern Ireland Office of deliberately preventing the
implementation of the 1998 Good Friday Agreement.
The North’s Police Ombudsman, Mrs Nuala O’Loan, has launched an
investigation into allegations that the British Army could have
prevented the murder of a British soldier who was shot dead by
an IRA sniper in south Armagh in 1997.
A legally binding determination by the Parades Commission was
ignored this evening and and over a thousand loyalists were
allowed to march provocatively through the Ardoyne in north
Belfast, infuriating the area’s nationalist residents.
The following account of the Orange Order and its early years is
taken from ‘For God and Ulster -- An Alternative Guide to the
Loyal Orders’ by the Pat Finucane Centre
A family including three children aged under five escaped injury
in a petrol bomb attack on their County Derry home.
The bonfires which mark the eve of the July 12th marches by the
Protestant Orange Order is traditionally a focus for violence
and this year was no exception.
Sinn Féin has criticised the coverage of the Twelfth marches by
the Orange Order by the BBC.
The demolition of Ballymun’s notorious tower blocks began
yesterday, to mixed feelings among local residents.
Pubs in Cork and Galway which had briefly defied the smoking ban
this week have now given written undertakings that they will
comply with the legislation.
Two jailed members of the Provisional IRA are to bring
proceedings under the European Convention on Human Rights
against the refusal of the 26-County government to release them.
North Belfast man Jude O’Hagan has been convicted of “possessing
information of use to terrorists”.
The Protestant Orange Order is mobilising its members to ensure
an anti-Catholic parade, complete with ‘kick-the-Pope’ bands and
hangers-on, is forced through a nationalist interface on Monday.
A review of Stakeknife, written by Greg Harkin and ‘Martin Ingram’, by Mick Hall.
The British government has released only sketchy details of its
plans for inquiries into the murders of Rosemary Nelson, Billy
Wright and Robert Hamill.
Two jailed members of the Provisional IRA are to bring
proceedings under the European Convention on Human Rights
against the refusal of the 26-County government to release them.
The breakaway ‘Real IRA’ was thought to have carried out parcel
bomb attacks on the governor of Maghaberry prison and and four
members of District Policing Partnerships (DPPs).
The 26-County Taoiseach Bertie Ahern has admitted that his
government did not seek full status for the Irish language
during its presidency of the European Union.
A Galway publican has decided to challenge the new workplace
smoking ban by allowing customers to light up in designated
areas.
Nationalist frustration has grown after the British and
26-County governments again suggested that they have little role
to play in resolving the deadlock in the peace process.
New legislation intended to tackle the issue of intimidatory
sectarian flags has been undermined after the PSNI police
refused to act on the issue in Larne, County Antrim.
Events on this week throughout Irish history.
A boycott of Bass beer has been mooted after the owners of the
Bass Brewery in west Belfast decided to sell up.
A decision to allow a march by the anti-Catholic Orange Order
through a Belfast nationalist interface on July 12 has been
strongly condemned.
The Police Ombudsman in the North, Nuala O’Loan, has said she
believes the PSNI police did all they could to protect a British
double-agent before he was shot dead.
The case of a Limerick man sentenced to five years behind bars
without his lawyer present must be reviewed, Republican Sinn Féin
has said.
The Chief of the PSNI police has told a Sunday newspaper that he
believes the war by the Provisional IRA is over and that Sinn Féin
is moving closer to supporting his police force.
Eight years after sectarian intimidation of Catholic church-goers
began in Ballymena, the doors of the Church of Our Lady closed on
Saturday night.
The tenth annual parade by Orangemen in Portadown since trouble
first arose passed off quietly yesterday, but there is still no
sign they will hold face-to-face talks with nationalist
residents.
A Catholic pensioner narrowly escaped injury yesterday when a
rock was thrown through her bedroom window by loyalists.
The Irish Prime Minister, Taoiseach Bertie Ahern admitted to the
Child Abuse Commission in Dublin today that the 26-County state
had “let down” victims of child abuse in the past.
Ulster Unionist leader David Trimble was today accused of trying
to undermine efforts to restore the Belfast Assembly after
calling for it to be scrapped if a deal to revive it is not
reached it by September.
Sinn Féin’s approach to the annual commemoration in Belfast of
the World War I Battle of the Somme has again proven
controversial.
The breakaway ‘Real IRA’ has claimed responsibility for a series
of hoax bomb alerts which created traffic chaos across Belfast
early yesterday.
Another member of the Human Rights Commission has resigned,
claiming the body’s failure may have been orchestrated by the
British government.
The Ciaran Ferry Freedom Action Committee is holding a raffle to
benefit the legal defence fund for Ciaran, an Irish republican and
current U.S. resident unjustly imprisoned at the whim of U.S.
immigration authorities.
Concerns that a sectarian march could still be forced through
the nationalist Garvaghy Road in Portadown were resolved after
the Protestant Orange Order dropped a legal challenge today.
An announcement that a British Army base in County Down is to
close has been greeted with cynicism by republicans.
On his latest visit to the North only last week, Robert McBride,
now a South African cop responsible for policing two million
people, appeared as a guest of Coiste na n-Iarchimi.