-Obits- |
Protestant Firebrand Ian Paisley Dies Aged 88 |
2014-09-13 |
![]() The Protestant minister who became the province's most divisive ...politicians call things divisivewhen when the other side sez something they don't like. Their own statements are never divisive,they're principled... politician used the slogan "Ulster Says No!" to oppose Anglo-Irish negotiations over the future of Northern Ireland. His most famous response to that peace initiative -- "Never! Never! Never! Never!" -- expressed the starkest possible rejection of any compromise with Catholics and the Irish government. Paisley died Friday at age 88, his wife said in a statement. From the 1960s through the 1990s, often backed by menacing Protestant mobs, Paisley used street protests to thwart compromise with the province's Catholic minority and to topple moderate Protestant leaders from the rival Ulster Unionist Party. Some 3,700 people died in those four decades of strife called "the troubles." But Paisley's final years demonstrated that, in politics, "never" doesn't last forever. In 2007 Paisley stunned the world by agreeing to lead a coalition government in Northern Ireland alongside senior Irish Republican Army veterans, long his arch-enemies. Paisley struck such a strong rapport with his co-leader, the former IRA commander Martin McGuinness, that the press pack dubbed them the "Chuckle Brothers." |
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Britain |
9 suspects held for Northern Ireland killings |
2009-03-17 |
Anti-terrorist detectives were questioning nine suspected Irish Republican Army dissidents Monday over this month's deadly gun attacks on British soldiers and police. Sinn Fein deputy leader Martin McGuinness, the former IRA commander who is now the senior Irish Catholic in Northern Ireland's power-sharing government, said he was confident the community was uniting against the rising dissident threat. "People are not shaken, they understand this is an attempt to create mayhem in our society. It isn't going to succeed," McGuinness told reporters during a visit to New York City. The dissidents are trying to undermine the IRA's 2005 decision to renounce violence and disarm and Sinn Fein's efforts to persuade Catholics to cooperate with the police force--once overwhelmingly Protestant but now more than 25 percent Catholic. The nine suspects arrested last week are suspected of involvement in either the March 7 attack on the Massereene army barracks in Antrim, west of Belfast, or the March 9 killing of a policeman in an Irish nationalist district of Craigavon, southwest of Belfast. The nine include two well-known Irish republicans detained Saturday. The arrest of Colin Duffy, 41, triggered weekend riots by his largely teenage supporters in the town of Lurgan. Police also arrested Declan McGlinchey, 32, son of Dominic "Mad Dog" McGlinchey, who once boasted of killing more than 30 people as leader of an IRA splinter gang called the Irish National Liberation Army. Former INLA colleagues killed him in 1994 in front of his son. In the March 7 attack, two masked men with assault rifles fired more than 60 rounds at off-duty, unarmed soldiers collecting pizzas from two delivery men outside their base. Two soldiers died and four other people were seriously wounded, including both pizza couriers. A splinter group called the Real IRA claimed responsibility. Two days later, a 48-year-old policeman was shot in the head after his unit responded to an emergency call from a woman whose home was being attacked by stone-throwing youths. The Continuity IRA claimed responsibility. Analysts say the dissidents--who have mounted more than 20 gun, bomb and rocket attacks since late 2007--hoped this month's killings would undermine the current U.S. visit of McGuinness and Peter Robinson, the Protestant leader of the power-sharing government. The two leaders twice delayed their trip last week because of the killings, but are expected to meet President Barack Obama at the White House and congressional leaders on Capitol Hill on Tuesday, St. Patrick's Day, an annual event cherished by Ireland's leaders north and south. Authorities are tightening security measures in Northern Ireland. Police have asked private security firms to take over some duties, including locking security gates at the medieval walls in Londonderry each night, amid fears dissidents might ambush police. The British army canceled a planned Belfast parade for troops returning from Iraq next month. A similar parade in November triggered brief street clashes between Protestants cheering the soldiers and Catholics protesting their presence. |
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Europe |
Police race to stop Real IRA bomb plot |
2009-03-12 |
Security forces on both sides of the Irish border are hunting tonight for a dissident republican bomb, after intelligence reports the Real IRA has smuggled a large device into Northern Ireland from the south, the Guardian has learned. The alert began on Monday before Continuity IRA killed PC Stephen Carroll. He will be buried tomorrow after requiem mass in his home town of Banbridge, County Down. As border security tightened with extra checkpoints and patrols, sources in Dublin and Belfast said "intelligence traffic" indicated a plot to explode a bomb in the north, and the device had been transported across the border by car. "The red light went up on Monday and there is a panic on that the next thing to happen is a bomb somewhere in the north," one veteran security officer said yesterday. "The problem is that no one either in the PSNI [Police Service of Northern Ireland] or the Garda appears to have specific intelligence where it is destined for." The security forces believe the device is similar in size to the 300lb car bomb that dissidents left abandoned in Castlewellan, County Down last month. With political parties united in condemning the dissidents for the recent killings, the focus turned yesterday to peace rallies that took place in Belfast, Londonderry, Newry, Lisburn and Downpatrick. Five thousand people joined the demonstration in Belfast, with protesters bearing placards that read: "No going back." In Dublin the taoiseach, Brian Cowen, told the Dail that co-operation between police on both sides of the border had never been closer. He said he would be joining Northern Ireland's first minister, Peter Robinson, and deputy first minister, Martin McGuinness, in the US , where they flew yesterday for a visit lasting a week that will coincide with St Patrick's Day. "It is important that the voices of the democratic representatives of the people are heard loud and clear at this moment, when the democratic institutions which have been established by the Irish people are being challenged," he said. "Those institutions are being challenged by a tiny and unrepresentative group of evil people who have no mandate and no support. Their actions are futile. They cannot succeed and they will not succeed." Pope Benedict XVI yesterday described the murders in Northern Ireland as "abominable acts of terrorism". Meanwhile, fears over possible loyalist paramilitary retaliation in response to the upsurge in Real IRA and Continuity IRA violence eased yesterday after the Ulster Defence Association ruled out revenge attacks. Jackie McDonald, UDA leader, also praised McGuinness for his condemnation of the dissidents, who killed two British soldiers and a member of the PSNI since the weekend. |
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Home Front: Politix |
Steyn: Obama an appeaser? How dare you |
2008-05-17 |
HT to Powerline "That's enough. That that's a show of disrespect to me." That was Barack Obama, a couple of weeks back, explaining why he was casting the Rev. Jeremiah Wright into outer darkness. It's "one thing to wallow in "adolescent grandiosity" (as Scott Johnson of the Powerline Web site called it) when it's a family dispute between you and your pastor of 20 years. It's quite another to do so when it's the 60th anniversary celebrations of one of America's closest allies. President Bush was in Israel the other day and gave a speech to the Knesset. Its perspective was summed up by his closing anecdote a departing British officer in May 1948 handing the iron bar to the Zion Gate to a trembling rabbi and telling him it was the first time in 18 centuries that a key to the gates of the Jerusalem was in the hands of a Jew. In other words, it was a big-picture speech, referencing the Holocaust, the pogroms, Masada and the challenges that lie ahead. Sen. Obama was not mentioned in the text. No Democrat was mentioned, save for President Truman, in the context of his recognition of the new state of Israel when it was a mere 11 minutes old. But they heard their names, didn't they? Nonetheless, Barack Obama decided that the president's speech was really about him, and he didn't care for it. He didn't put it quite as bluntly as he did with the Rev. Wright, but the message was the same: "That's enough. That's a show of disrespect to me." And, taking their cue from the soon-to-be nominee's weirdly petty narcissism, Nancy Pelosi, John Kerry, Joe Biden and Co. piled on to deplore Bush's outrageous, unacceptable, unpresidential, outrageously unacceptable and unacceptably unpresidential behavior. Honestly. What a bunch of self-absorbed ninnies. Here's what the president said: "Some seem to believe that we should negotiate with the terrorists and radicals, as if some ingenious argument will persuade them they have been wrong all along. We have heard this foolish delusion before. As Nazi tanks crossed into Poland in 1939, an American senator declared: 'Lord, if I could only have talked to Hitler, all this might have been avoided.' We have an obligation to call this what it is the false comfort of appeasement, which has been repeatedly discredited by history." It says something for Democrat touchiness that the minute a guy makes a generalized observation about folks who appease terrorists and dictators the Dems assume: Hey, they're talking about me. Actually, he wasn't or, to be more precise, he wasn't talking only about you. LOL, squeal piggies! Yes, there are plenty of Democrats who are in favor of negotiating with our enemies, and a few Republicans, too President Bush's pal James Baker, whose Iraq Study Group was full of proposals to barter with Iran and Syria and everybody else. But that general line is also taken by at least three of Tony Blair's former Cabinet ministers and his senior policy adviser, and by the leader of Canada's New Democratic Party and by a whole bunch of bigshot Europeans. It's not a Democrat election policy, it's an entire worldview. Even Barack Obama can't be so vain as to think his fly-me-to-[insert name of enemy here]concept is an original idea. Increasingly, the Western world has attitudes rather than policies. It's one thing to talk as a means to an end. But these days, for most midlevel powers, talks are the end, talks without end. Because that's what civilized nations like doing chit-chatting, shooting the breeze, having tea and crumpets, talking talking talking. Uncivilized nations like torturing dissidents, killing civilians, bombing villages, doing doing doing. It's easier to get the doers to pass themselves off as talkers then to get the talkers to rouse themselves to do anything. talking means not having to do anything. B.O. sez he'd have "STRONG DIPLOMACY", whatever the f*ck that means.... And, as the Iranians understand, talks provide a splendid cover for getting on with anything you want to do. If, say, you want to get on with your nuclear program relatively undisturbed, the easiest way to do it is to enter years of endless talks with the Europeans over said nuclear program. That's why that Hamas honcho endorsed Obama: They know he's their best shot at getting a European foreign minister installed as president of the United States. *smack* Mo Mowlam was Britain's Northern Ireland secretary and oversaw the process by which the IRA's Gerry Adams and Martin McGuinness became ministers of a Crown they decline to recognize. By 2004, she was calling for Osama bin Laden to be invited to "the negotiating table," having concluded he was no different from Adams: Stern fellow, lots of blood on his hands, but no sense getting on your high horse about all that; let's find out what he wants and give him part of it. In his 2002 letter to the United States, bin Laden has a lot of grievances, from America's refusal to implement Sharia law to Jew-controlled usury to the lack of punishment for "President Clinton's immoral acts." Like Barack Obama's pastor, bin Laden shares the view that AIDS is a "Satanic American invention." Obviously, there are items on the agenda that the free world can never concede on "President Clinton's immoral acts" but who's to say most of the rest isn't worth chewing over? This will be the fault line in the post-Bush war debate over the next few years. Are the political ambitions of the broader jihad totalitarian, genocidal, millenarian in a word, nuts? Or are they negotiable? President Bush knows where he stands. Just before the words that Barack Obama took umbrage at, he said: "There are good and decent people who cannot fathom the darkness in these men and try to explain away their words. It's natural, but it is deadly wrong. As witnesses to evil in the past, we carry a solemn responsibility to take these words seriously." Here are some words of Hussein Massawi, the former leader of Hezbollah: "We are not fighting so that you will offer us something. We are fighting to eliminate you." Are his actions consistent with those words? Amazingly so. So, too, are those of Hezbollah's patrons in Tehran. President Reagan talked with the Soviets while pushing ahead with the deployment of Cruise and Pershing missiles in Europe. He spoke softly after getting himself a bigger stick. Sen. Obama is proposing to reward a man who pledges to wipe Israel off the map with a presidential photo-op to which he will bring not even a twig. No wonder he's so twitchy about it. |
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Iraq |
Iraqi factions agree to renounce violence |
2008-04-29 |
Representatives of rival factions in Iraq said on Monday that they had agreed to renounce violence at talks in Finland facilitated by former peace negotiators in Northern Ireland and South Africa. The meeting brought together 36 participants, including senior Sunni, Shia and Kurdish politicians, for three days of talks at a secret location in Finland. The talks were co-chaired by Martin McGuinness, a former IRA commander, who helped find a solution to the violence in Northern Ireland in 1998, and Cyril Ramaphosa, who assisted in bringing an end to apartheid in South Africa in 1993. All sides are now convinced that they should participate together in bringing stability to their country and agreed on renouncing armed struggle, Osama al-Tikriti from the Iraqi Islamic Party, a Sunni political group, told reporters at Helsinki Airport. We have made steps, great steps forward, he said. Reconciliation efforts between politicians from Iraqs religious and ethnic communities have moved forward in recent weeks. In one of the most significant developments, Sunni political parties look set to rejoin the Shia-dominated government after walking out nine months ago to protest what they said was the governments bias against Sunnis. Violence continues, however, much of the result of a crackdown on Shia militias by Iraqi government forces and US troops. Participants in the talks in Finland said all parties agreed that foreign troops must leave Iraq, but only when Iraqi forces are ready to assume responsibility for security. We need efficient, trained and qualified (Iraqi) security forces who are able to operate so that it would make it unnecessary to have foreign forces in Iraq, said Humam Hammoudi, the Shia chairman of the parliaments Constitutional Review Committee. |
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Home Front: Politix |
Nobel Winner: Hillary Clinton's 'Silly' Irish Peace Claims |
2008-03-08 |
Hillary Clinton had no direct role in bringing peace to Northern Ireland and is a "wee bit silly" for exaggerating the part she played, according to Lord Trimble of Lisnagarvey, the Nobel Peace Prize winner and former First Minister of the province. "I dont know there was much she did apart from accompanying Bill [Clinton] going around," he said. Her recent statements about being deeply involved were merely "the sort of thing people put in their canvassing leaflets" during elections. "She visited when things were happening, saw what was going on, she can certainly say it was part of her experience. I dont want to rain on the thing for her but being a cheerleader for something is slightly different from being a principal player." Mrs Clinton has made Northern Ireland key to her claims of having extensive foreign policy experience, which helped her defeat Barack Obama in Ohio and Texas on Tuesday after she presented herself as being ready to tackle foreign policy crises at 3am. "I helped to bring peace to Northern Ireland," she told CNN on Wednesday. But negotiators from the parties that helped broker the Good Friday Agreement in 1998 told The Daily Telegraph that her role was peripheral and that she played no part in the gruelling political talks over the years. Lord Trimble shared the Nobel Peace Prize with John Hume, leader of the nationalist Social Democratic and Labour Party, in 1998. Conall McDevitt, an SDLP negotiator and aide to Mr Hume during the talks, said: "There would have been no contact with her either in person or on the phone. I was with Hume regularly during calls in the months leading up to the Good Friday Agreement when he was taking calls from the White House and they were invariably coming from the president." and this "So in a classic woman politicky sort of way I think she was active...She was certainly investing some time, no doubt about it. Whether she was involved on the issue side I think probably not." Some of the people Mrs Clinton met went on to help found the Womens Coalition, which took part in the Good Friday talks. Lord Trimble said: "The Womens Coalition will think they were important. Other people beg to differ." Steven King, a negotiator with Lord Trimbles Ulster Unionist Party, argued that Mrs Clinton might even have helped delay the chances of peace. "She was invited along to some pre-arranged meetings but I dont think she exactly brought anybody together that hadnt been brought together already," he said. Mrs Clinton was "a cheerleader for the Irish republican side of the argument", he added. "She really lost all credibility when on Bill Clintons last visit to Northern Ireland [in December 2000] when she hugged and kissed [Sinn Fein leaders] Gerry Adams and Martin McGuinness." |
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-Signs, Portents, and the Weather- |
Protestant leading St. Patrick's parade? |
2007-11-07 |
The publisher of a local Irish newspaper is calling on the organizers of the city's annual St. Patrick's Day parade to begin overhauling the event's image by inviting Northern Ireland's Protestant leader to be a leader of next year's procession. Irish Voice publisher Niall O'Dowd said in interviews Tuesday and in an editorial to be published Wednesday that the parade could "symbolize a new era for hope" if it were led next March by Ian Paisley and his Catholic partner in the territory's new power-sharing government, the Sinn Fein deputy leader Martin McGuinness. The parade typically draws about 2 million spectators. Paisley, head of the Democratic Unionist Party, and McGuinness, a commander in the Irish Republican Army, were bitter enemies for decades but have been running Northern Ireland's cabinet together since May. Putting the two men at the head of the St. Patrick's Day march would send a message about peace, O'Dowd said, and simultaneously say something about the future of the parade, which has been beset in recent years by disputes about its inclusiveness. "I think people would be hugely impressed by it," O'Dowd said. "We need to take our head out of the 19th century here." The idea, which O'Dowd first broached publicly during an interview on WNYC Radio, was met with disdain by John Dunleavy, president of the parade's organizing committee. It would be inappropriate to put someone with a history of virulent anti-Catholicism at the head of a parade honoring a Catholic saint, he said. Paisley has been "a thorn in the side of the Catholic community in Northern Ireland" for many years, Dunleavy said. "If Ian Paisley wants to come out and march in the parade, he's welcome to do so," Dunleavy said, noting that nearly 160,000 people of varying faiths and backgrounds are expected to march in the procession. "But as a grand marshal? That's a totally different matter." Dunleavy also criticized O'Dowd for suggesting that the parade needs an image overhaul. "He forgets where he came from," he said. The parade's main organizer, the Ancient Order of Hibernians, has been criticized for more than a decade for refusing to allow gay groups to carry banners in the procession, a policy that Dunleavy said would continue this year. |
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Britain |
I.R.A Calls offical ceasefire |
2005-07-28 |
THE Irish Republican Army formally ended more than 30 years of armed struggle in Northern Ireland overnight, pledging to lay down its weapons and fight British rule through purely peaceful means. The British, Irish and US governments welcomed the statement as "historic" provided the Roman Catholic paramilitary group matched its words with deeds, but the head of the province's main Protestant party was more sceptical. The IRA's order to abandon their armed campaign to unite Northern Ireland, which is mostly Protestant, with the Irish Republic came into effect at 4pm local time (0100 AEST). Supporters say the move, which comes against the backdrop of worldwide revulsion over terrorism, is designed to revive the 1998 Good Friday Peace Agreement and the power-sharing institutions that have been suspended. "All IRA units have been ordered to dump arms," the group said, adding its militants "have been instructed to assist the development of purely political and democratic programs through exclusively peaceful means". It said that militants "must not engage in any other activities whatsoever" and described the order as compulsory. But the statement stopped short of disbanding the organisation, as demanded by leading Protestants, and it also omitted any apology for past bombings. "Our decisions have been taken to advance our republican and democratic objectives, including our goal of a united Ireland," the group said. "We believe there is now an alternative way to achieve this and to end British rule in our country." Britain's Prime Minister Tony Blair and his Irish counterpart Bertie Ahern released separate and joint statements welcoming the breakthrough. "If the IRA's words are borne out by actions, it will be a momentous and historic development," the two men said in a joint statement. "This may be the day when finally after all the false dawns and dashed hopes, peace replaces war, politics replaces terror on the island of Ireland," added Blair in a separate comment. "This is a step of unparallelled magnitude in the recent history of Northern Ireland." In Washington, US President George W Bush's chief spokesman Scott McClellan called the announcement "an important and potentially historic statement". But Ian Paisley, the fiery leader of Northern Ireland's main Protestant party, the Democratic Unionist Party (DUP), was far more cautious, noting that the IRA statement lacked an explicit call to end criminal activity. "They have failed to provide the level of transparency that will be necessary to truly build confidence that the guns have gone in their entirety," he said, insisting it would delay the whole process. A comprehensive agreement to reinstate power-sharing between Protestants and Catholics stalled in December after the DUP demanded that disarmament of the paramilitary IRA be documented in photographs. Today's announcement comes after the IRA suffered major blows to its credibility in recent months, over its alleged involvement in a massive bank heist in Belfast and the murder of an Irish Catholic man earlier this year. In April, Gerry Adams, the leader of the political wing of the IRA, Sinn Fein, made a direct appeal to the paramilitary group to embrace purely political and democratic activity. The IRA has held secret consultations with its membership over the future of the movement for months. Calling the IRA decision "courageous", Adams said it "can help revive the peace process" and challenged the Protestant community to respond. In an immediate response to the statement, the international commission charged with monitoring disarmament said it had resumed contact with the IRA after having suspended contacts over the bank heist. Martin McGuinness, the chief negotiator for Sinn Fein, is in Washington to brief those concerned in the US Congress and in New York about developments. On Tuesday Irish Justice Minister Michael McDowell said Adams, McGuinness and convicted gun runner Martin Ferris - now a member of the Irish parliament - had left the ruling "military council" of the IRA. The Sinn Fein trio have previously denied that they were on the ruling body of the underground military organisation, which is responsible for dozens of bombings around Britain over the decades. The IRA declared a ceasefire before the 1998 Good Friday peace deal that largely ended the violence and paved the way for a Protestant-Catholic power-sharing assembly in Belfast. But that deal was suspended almost three years ago amid allegations of IRA espionage. Even if the IRA lays downs its arms for good, Northern Ireland could still be bogged down by bickering between Catholic and Protestant parties. |
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Europe | |
IRA Expected to Make Peace Declaration | |
2005-07-28 | |
DUBLIN, Ireland (AP) - Senior figures in Sinn Fein, the Irish Republican Army-linked party, left Wednesday for the United States ahead of an expected major new peace declaration from the outlawed IRA. The British, Irish and U.S. governments have been pressing since December for the outlawed IRA to disarm fully and disband in support of Northern Ireland's 1998 peace accord. The pact's key goal - a joint Catholic-Protestant administration for the British territory - has been hold since 2002 because of Protestant refusal to cooperate with Sinn Fein, the major Catholic-backed party. The British and Irish governments both expect the IRA to release a new policy statement soon, perhaps on Thursday, outlining its intentions. Both governments insist the IRA must disarm fully and renounce violence and criminal activity - commitments the IRA has refused to give in the past. Sinn Fein deputy leader Martin McGuinness and the party's North American representative, Rita O'Hare, were planning to meet supporters in the Congress and President Bush's envoy to Northern Ireland, Mitchell Reiss. In a sign of recent U.S. pressure on the Sinn Fein-IRA movement, O'Hare in February was barred from traveling into the United States - the first time that happened since she became Sinn Fein's senior U.S.-based lobbyist in 1998. O'Hare has been on the run from British justice since the early 1970s in Northern Ireland, where she absconded on bail while awaiting trial on charge of attempting to murder British soldiers.
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Britain |
Sinn Fein's U.S. Representative Barred |
2005-05-22 |
![]() Peter King, a Republican congressman from New York who is sympathetic to Sinn Fein, said U.S. officials were trying to "send a signal" to the group with the travel ban. On Saturday, McGuinness and O'Hare met U.S. Ambassador to Ireland James Kenny to seek a reversal of the ban. U.S. immigration officials say O'Hare is being punished because she violated the terms of a previous visa by traveling without authorization to Florida. |
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Britain | ||||
Sinn Fein Leader Wants Victims Family to Shaddup! | ||||
2005-03-15 | ||||
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Britain |
Bush snubs Irish Republican Army |
2005-03-08 |
EFL![]() McGuinness will remain back in Northern Ireland to tend to various crises. |
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