Heavy rioting has erupted tonight in east Belfast after a Sinn Fein
event was attacked by a large loyalist mob.
August 31, 2009
Declan McGlinchey, son of INLA leader Dominic McGlinchey, has been found not
guilty of four charges relating to making and possessing a
bomb after the prosecution admitted its low-copy DNA evidence was
“insufficient”.
A new ‘peaceline’ has been erected in Belfast, 40 years after the first
such barriers were built to keep the divided communities apart.
The 26-County Minister for Foreign Affairs Micheal Martin has launched
an extraordinary attack against the ‘Coir’ campaign on the Lisbon
Treaty referendum.
A sectarian arson attack has destroyed an Irish language school in
Castlewellan, County Down.
The last day of the marching season saw loyalist bands play sectarian
tunes through republican areas and a village in County Down completely
shut down, with tailbacks of up to seven miles long.
In the course of the current crisis, the only
state intervention into the market has been to secure the interests and
profits of a tiny wealthy elite.
When
Suzanne Breen wrote after the verdict in her case, declaring it a
triumph for press freedom across Europe, it can hardly be said she was
exaggerating.
August 27, 2009
The PSNI were forced to pull back after encountering a ‘Real IRA’
checkpoint in south Armagh this week, it has been confirmed.
A spate of serious sectarian attacks followed a contentious parade in
the County Antrim village of Rasharkin last weekend.
Sinn Fein’s Martin McGuinness has said the only obstacle to the
devolution of policing and justice powers would be if the DUP “loses its
nerve.”
West Belfast Long Kesh escapee Pol Brennan said it is a “bittersweet”
feeling for him to be back on Irish soil after his deportation from the
US at the weekend.
The Police Ombudsman has confirmed that a Crown force informer was a
member of a gang that gunned down a father of six in front of his wife
and children.
It has now been confirmed that UDA leader Jackie McDonald was one of
over 100 unionists who laid siege to homes in the Peggy’s Loaning area
of Banbridge for several hours on Tuesday, August 11.
There has been a wave of praise by politicians in Ireland and Britain
following the death of US Senator Edward Kennedy for his efforts in the
Irish peace process and his decades of political service.
UCD lecturer Karl Whelan on the implications of the Dublin government’s
proposed bailout for Irish property speculators and their bankers
through the National Asset Management Agency (Nama).
Forty years after the attacks on homes and people in 1969, we are
hearing new descriptions of what happened.
The Parades Commission’s decision to allow Friday’s Orange Order march
through Rasharkin without restriction was disgraceful.
August 22, 2009
August 20, 2009
Tensions have risen in the North ahead of a highly contentious Orange
Order parade due to take place in the County Antrim village of Rasharkin
on Friday.
An international human rights adviser is to investigate the
circumstances in which four young people, including a 13-year-old child,
were injured with plastic bullets in north Belfast last month.
The families of two unarmed IRA Volunteers shot dead by the British Army
SAS nearly 20 years ago are to take their case to Europe over the
failure of the RUC police to hold a genuine investigation.
As part of a weekend of events a rally and wreath-laying ceremony took place in the village of Galbally -- home of Martin Hurson, the sixth person to die in the 1981 fast.
Hundreds of members of the West Belfast community gathered on Sunday for
a march and rally to mark the 40th anniversary of the pogroms of August
1969.
A group campaigning for a ‘No’ vote in the October 2nd referendum on the
Lisbon Treaty has expressed concern over guidelines issued to
broadcasters.
Two republican activists boarded a British warship in Belfast last
weekend.
The scene for the Battle of the Bogside was set long before August 1969.
A new residents group has been set up to ‘give support to a community who have suffered ongoing abuse from the police.&rsquo
Few people know that about a fortnight before the Battle of the Bogside
the RUC’s Belfast Commissioner requested that British troops be deployed
against unionist mobs on the Shankill Road.
August 17, 2009
August 14, 2009

The Green Party is set to hold a special convention on the Dublin
government’s controversial ‘bad bank’ after a swell in grass-roots
opposition
Sinn Fein brushed off suggestions of internal unrest following a meeting in Navan,
County Meath, this week.
Residents are demanding that the British Army stop using a County Tyrone
village as a training centre for its war in Afghanistan.
Members of the Policing Board have unanimously appointed Englishman Matt
Baggott, head of Leicestershire police, as the new PSNI chief.
Up to a hundred loyalists descended on an area of Banbridge, County Down
this week terrifying residents and ripping down two Irish flags.
Forty years ago this weekend, the dam broke and the generational
political failure that had deepened since partition washed over all the
Irish political institutions.
Anthony McIntyre on internment morning, 38 years ago.
August 7, 2009
The British authorities have dropped plans to extradite four Provisional
IRA Volunteers, including two who famously escaped from London’s Brixton
prison 18 years ago, it has been revealed.
A sit-in action by workers who occupied the Dublin store of
international travel company Thomas Cook ended violently this week when
scores of Garda police used battering rams to raid the premises and
arrest the workers.
The PSNI have been accused of facilitating the KKK-style intimidation of
a Catholic family in Larne.
The PSNI are likely to mount a military-style operation to force an
Apprentice Boys parade through a Belfast sectarian interface this
weekend.
The North’s Policing Board has agreed to sell off underused and
abandoned PSNI stations in towns and villages across the Six Counties.
Sinn Fein President Gerry Adams has issued an open letter to the
Orange Order Grand Secretary Drew Nelson.
Brendan Duddy is slowly emerging as another
important name to add to that list of names most publicly associated with the Irish peace process
´A statement this week is a
revealing glimpse into Dawdsland, a place of denial and distorting
mirrors.