A Chathaoirligh, a Theachtaí is a Cháirde ar
fad,
Fearaim céad mile fáilte romhaibh go léir ag
an Ard-Fheis seo n 102ú de chuid Shinn Féin.
You are all most welcome to this, the 102nd
Ard- Fheis of Sinn Féin.
The past year has been an extremely busy one for our members. No
sooner was the Christmas period of collections and fund-raising
over for the dependants of the Republican Prisoners. – and this
was very successful I am glad to report – than we were faced
with a proposed Loyalist-march through the centre of Dublin.
This situation was debated at the monthly Ard-Chomhairle
meetings in December, January and February. Most insensitively
the march was scheduled to pass by Parnell Street, Talbot
Street, Sackville Place and South Leinster Street which were the
scenes of no-warning bombings which killed many innocent
civilians. These were perpetrated by Loyalist death-squads
operating in collusion with British forces of occupation in
Ireland.
In the armed struggle for Irish national independence since 1969
more than 1000 members of the British forces and over 400
Republicans were killed. The nationalist community lost in
excess of 1000 innocent and uninvolved people due to deliberate
assassinations carried out as a matter of policy by the Loyalist
death squads.
The Sunday Business Post of September 4 last year stated
that of the 698 members of the unionist community killed “340
died at the hands of loyalists”. It went on: “Since the first
ceasefires in 1994, the vast majority of Protestant (their term
not ours) victims have been killed by loyalists in internecine
feuds”. It would appear, then, that the sponsors of the Dublin
march should have been marching on the UDA and UVF headquarters
in Belfast.
Keenly aware at grass roots level of the rising tide of disquiet
and concern in Dublin and beyond, Republican Sinn Féin sought to
give this debate a political focus by mounting a peaceful
protest picket on the route of the proposed march. We did not
seek to stop it and we departed the scene when the march was
abandoned.
Republican Sinn Féin asked publicly if nationalist parades of
whatever kind, would be allowed through Belfast’s Royal Avenue
or the centre of Portadown. The British forces would certainly
block them.
Those who failed to have this loyalist march forced through the
centre of Dublin at the end of last February had claimed a
near-monopoly of suffering for themselves and ignored the
sacrifices of the nationalist community over the past few
decades. Republican Sinn Féin would not allow such a distortion
of events to go unchallenged through the centre of our capital
city.
Further, we acted in solidarity with the beleaguered
nationalists of the Garvaghy road, of Ardoyne, the Lower Ormeau
Road, Dunloy and other areas which have hadtriumphalist loyalist
marches imposed on them year after year. In contrast the
26-County Administration and others had turned their backs on
these communities by collaborating with the attempted loyalist
march.
When the British government finally leaves Ireland and loyalist
marches will no longer be a question of supremacy of unionists
over nationalists, then all interests will be welcome and free
to parade wherever they choose. On that day in Dublin
Republicans stood under a banner which quoted Wolfe Tone’s
immortal words: “Unite Protestant, Catholic and Dissenter ... to
break the connection with England”.
Among the leaflets distributed was the pamphlet
An Address
to the People of Ireland which makes a special appeal to
people of unionist persuasion. The text asks “everybody to
consider again our
ÉIRE NUA
programme for a four-province federal Ireland with optimum
devolution of powers down to community level”.
Of course, our statements, press conferences and political
appeals issued since mid-December due to our awareness of the
situation were ignored by the 26-County media. Only the northern
press, radio and television took notice of our concerns. When
the Dublin media finally reacted it was much too late. They
deplored the situation which they had deliberately ignored for
months. We stated that the march was ill-advised but they would
not listen.
Similarly, Republican Sinn Féin will oppose politically the
proposed official visit of the Queen of England to Dublin, the
first such visit since 1911 – 95 years. There is nothing
personal in this attitude. Republicans simply contest and reject
the claim of the English Establishment to style her “Queen of
Northern Ireland”. That is all. When that claim to part of
Ireland is relinquished, then the crowned head of England will
be received just as any other head of state. But not until then
- - -
This past year has been the 25th anniversary of the H-Block
hungerstrike deaths in 1981. Republican Sinn Féin’s ceremonies
were worthy and respectful. They kept to the letter and the
spirit of what the 10 hunger strikes died for and began with a
very fitting event at the graves of Frank Stagg and Michael
Gaughan in Ballina, Co Mayo in February.
May saw the Bobby Sands commemorative parades in Dublin and
Galway on the 6th and at the grave of Raymond Mac Creesh in
Camloch, Co Armagh on the 21st. On that occasion it was stated
that “the bogus claim made by the Provos that the Stormont
Agreement of 1998 was a logical succession to the hunger-strike
deaths of 1981 was equivalent to the Free Staters’ assertion
that the 26-County State arose out of the Easter Rising of 1916.
“Both claims were fraudulent. The partitionist and
collaborationist 26- County State came from England’s Government
of Ireland Act and Treaty of Surrender in the early 1920s. The
present Six-County Statelet, with or without Stormont, was an
instrument of British rule here and a denial of all Raymond Mac
Creesh, Bobby Sands and their comrades suffered and died for”.
In June and July Joe Mac Donnell was honoured at Carrick-on-
Shannon and Martin Hurson in Longford-Westmeath . A most
inspiring event was held at Dungiven in honour of Kevin Lynch
and the other Co Derry hunger-strikers on the last Saturday in
July.
Other commemorations were held farther south; those in Mooncoin,
Co Kilkenny and Cahersiveen, Co Kerry were particularly
successful. The annual parade with bands through Bundoran, Co
Donegal at the end of August for all the hunger-strikers was the
biggest and best since 1981. Increasingly people were coming to
realise that the so-called “process” led only into a cul-de-sac
– it simply made British rule here stronger and the Movement
weaker.
Seán Maguire’s address at Bodenstown 2006 quoted two telling
points from notable Englishmen. A.J. P. Taylor, Professor of
History at Oxford University wrote in 1973 in the course of
reviewing a book on Roger Casement: “Here is Casement’s message
for the present day. There is no Irish problem without solution.
The problem that had marked Ireland for centuries is the British
presence in Ireland. That problem can only be solved by British
withdrawal”. Of interest also is the quotation from General
Macready, British military commander in Ireland, in a memorandum
to the British Cabinet, May 23, 1921; “I am convinced that by
October, unless a peaceful solution has been reached, it will
not be safe to ask the troops to continue there another winter
under the conditions which obtained during the last”. So much
for the claim that the IRA was exhausted at the Truce of 1921.
In this connection one can only speculate as to what the British
cabinet papers of the past 20 years will reveal in the future
regarding the collapse of the Provisional IRA while still
intact, still in the field and still holding the initiative.
This took place under the direction of a leadership which
employed duplicity and treachery as they lusted for office
administering British rule in Ireland.
Meanwhile they seek to join the ranks of the enemy forces Such a
course will involve persecuting their former comrades and the
nationalist population in general. Who is there to cry “Shame,
Shame” now? Mo náire sibh agus ainmneacha na stailceoirí ocrais
in bhúr mbéil!
Eventually, in April last, following on 22 years of diligent
research came the publication of the biography of the President.
It has been launched each month since at different venues in the
four provinces and in the United States. The various historians,
academics, journalists and community workers who have performed
the launching ceremonies have all agreed that this is an
important book.
They have stated that it is deeply researched and documented,
that it is essential reading for a knowledge of the past 50
years of Irish history and that it presents the basic Republican
viewpoint on the historic Irish Question. They have rated it as
one of the half-dozen really serious works on the period.
On behalf of all of you I wish to express appreciation to the
author Robert W White for his labours, to Indiana University
Press for a fine publication and to Ed Moloney, formerly of the
Irish Times and the Sunday Tribune, for writing
the Foreword. It must be borne in mind that while the facts were
checked with the subject of the biography, the assessments,
judgments and conclusions reached were essentially those of
Professor White.
This book, taken together with the original source material
lodged last year with the James Hardiman Library in the National
University of Ireland Galway, provide a valuable basis for the
study of Irish Republicanism in that period of history by
journalists, historians, students and all interested parties. It
is useful to have the record set down and available to all.
Incidentally, when the subject of the biography sought a Visa to
visit New York for a weekend to attend the book launch there,
his application was referred to the State Department in
Washington and refused at the last minute. As happened under the
Clinton Administration the grounds for refusal under the Bush
regime were the rejection by your President of the current
British process which seeks to copper-fasten English rule in our
country for all time. However, a message was sent to be read out
and we were ably represented there.
The year now drawing to a close has marked the 90th anniversary
of the historic Easter Rising of 1916. This event brought about
the birth of the world-wide anti-colonial movement, caused the
renaissance of idealism in Ireland and broke the imperial myth
that the Irish people could not resist English occupation in
arms.
Every Easter since 1916, faithful Republicans have commemorated
and celebrated this momentous action, have distributed the
Easter Lily and worn it proudly in memory of the men and women
of Easter Week and of all, in every generation, who have died
for Irish freedom.
True Republicans have had their commemorations banned and
attacked by British and 26-County forces, the public display of
the national flag prohibited and have suffered imprisonment for
insisting on honouring 1916. On the other hand, the 26-County
State has ignored and denigrated the memory and legacy of 1916
for 35 years – more than a generation. This year they rushed to
claim ownership of the 90th anniversary and the centenary
celebrations. They accused faithful Republicans who have never
abandoned 1916 of hijacking its legacy. Was there ever such
brass effrontery by those who banned commemorations of 1916,
jailed the organisers and baton-charged participants on Dublin’s
O’Connell St.?
The Proclamation of the All-Ireland Republic, 1916 declared “the
right of the people of Ireland to the ownership of Ireland to be
sovereign and indefeasible”. That right, it stated could not
“ever be extinguished except by the destruction of the Irish
people”. On that ground we in Republican Sinn Féin take our
stand.
“Civil and religious liberty, equal rights and equal
opportunities” were guaranteed to all citizens, yet one in seven
children in the State were in consistent poverty (Central
Statistics Office 2003). More than one fifth of the population
were functionally illiterate. The English government still rules
the Six occupied counties and two-thirds of the laws in the
other 26 Counties are enacted by the EU in Brussels. All this is
a far cry from the situation visualised in the Proclamation.
All of our commemorations last Easter showed a marked increase
in attendance. Noteworthy were the unveiling on Easter Monday in
Bundoran of a number of plaques at the Republican Memorial
Garden there and the ceremony outside the Dublin GPO on the
weekend anniversary by date of the Rising. The booklet Our
Own Red Blood, by Seán Cronin, first published in 1966 and
re-issued in 1976, was brought out again this year by Irish
Freedom Press. Its last sentence makes the point for all to see;
“Accordingly, the promise of the Easter Rising, as enunciated in
the Proclamation, remains unfulfilled”.
Very far removed from the spirit of 1916 was the decision of the
GAA in 2001 to allow members of the British forces of occupation
in Ireland to join the association. The Daily Ireland newspaper
of August 29 last described that decision as “the GAA bowing to
massive political pressure” and noted that although five of the
six county boards in the occupied area were opposed, Mary Mac
Aleese and Bertie Ahern both spoke publicly in favour of the
occupation forces being admitted.
The change to the 117-year old policy came “just weeks after the
RUC came to be known as the PSNI”. The paper recorded that
“throughout the conflict GAA members travelling to and from
games were targeted by the RUC, Ulster Defence Regiment and the
British Army”. It took until 2005 for the RUC/PSNI cadets team
to be admitted to the Sigerson Cup students competition, while
“their senior counterparts have found it more difficult to find
opponents”, the paper went on. Daily Ireland followed
with an interview with “GAA pundit” Joe Brolly who declared that
he would be playing with his team, St. Brigid’s in Belfast, in a
match against the RUC/PSNI two days later. He described this as
“playing a match against the cops”. Republican Sinn Féin Vice-
President Des Dalton, himself a member of the GAA, replied in a
statement that such activity was “simply part and parcel of the
ongoing campaign by the political establishments in both the Six
and 26 counties to normalise British rule in Ireland”.
The harsh political reality was that by hosting such games the
GAA is sending out a signal that the British colonial military
and police are a normal part of Irish society, he continued. The
British military and police presence was abnormal and the root
cause of conflict in our country.
Such games were an attempt to encourage young Irish people join
the forces of the British Crown in Ireland by instilling in them
the notion that the RUC/PSNI are a normal police force, policing
a normal society, he concluded.
How long will it be before the naming of GAA clubs, teams and
grounds in honour of Irish patriots is forbidden by the GAA?
During the same month of August, the hunger strike martyr Kevin
Lynch who had captained the Derry under-16 All Ireland hurling
champions in 1972, had the local GAA park in Dungiven and a
senior hurling club named in his honour. Is not the premier GAA
stadium in Ulster named after Roger Casement?
Throughout the Six Occupied Counties repression is visited
officially on faithful Republicans while unofficial loyalist
gangs prowl the streets in some areas targeting ordinary
nationalists for mayhem and even murder. During June Republican
homes in Co Fermanagh were raided by British Crown Forces in the
Lisnakea area. In one area all members of the family were put
out on the street while the house was minutely searched. The
father, a member of the Ard-Comhairle of Republican Sinn Féin
was and taken to Antrim barracks for interrogation before being
released.
In another instance the family were herded into one room while
the house was ransacked. Acomputer, all documents and papers
dealing with family finances and the business in which they are
engaged were seized. No supervision of the raiding in either
case was permitted. The name of the RUC has changed but
otherwise these aspects of British rule remain the same.
The sectarian murder of 15-year old Michael Mac Ilveen who died
on May 8 following a beating by a loyalist gang in Ballymena, Co
Antrim the previous day was another barbaric reminder to
nationalists of how little has changed. Acompanion who had
visited a local cinema with him was chased by the gang and
fortunately escaped. A well-known political commentator (Susan
MacKay) writing in the Irish Times Weekend Review of May
13 stated: “British rule in any part of Ireland is unstable and
bound to rely in the final analysis on sectarianism. The
ideology that drives unionist sectarianism is based on its
semi-detached relationship with the British state. The Stormont
Agreement served only to institutionalise sectarianism, forcing
people to adopt sectarian labels to describe themselves
politically”.
Indeed, given the absence of the national question from
publicised debate in the Six counties since 1998, the incidence
of segregated housing and sectarian attacks has increased
greatly. A DUP councillor (Roy Gillespie) said publicly that
young Michael Mac Ilveen “won’t get into Heaven unless he is
saved”. An Irish flag with the murder victim’s name inscribed on
it was burned on a loyalist bonfire locally, but there were no
prosecutions under the much-lauded British legislation outlawing
“ Incitement to Hatred”. All-Ireland democracy with maximum
local power, as provided for in the ÉIRE NUA programme,
is the sure antidote to such excesses.
The findings of the Barr report into the John Carthy siege at
Abbeylara, Co Longford in April 2000 were published last July.
They exposed a complete lack of humanity and basic common sense
by the 26-County police in their failure to deal competently and
compassionately with a mentally-ill young man. The report cannot
be just shelved by the Dublin Government but must be acted on to
ensure that similar tragedies do not happen in the future.
Taken together with the Morris findings into the disgraceful
conduct of members of the Gardaí in Co Donegal, we have seen a
totally unaccountable force with its Emergency Response Unit
being allowed by the 26-County State to act with impunity
against ordinary citizens. This is something to which
Republicans can only too well testify. Members of the force have
been exposed “planting” explosives, arms and ammunition for
“discovery” later on both sides of the Border. Surely it is past
time to place police in a clearly-defined, independent and
publicly accountable framework.
Similarly, the Barron investigation into the Dublin-Monaghan
bombings of 1975 has been obstructed in its work by the total
refusal of the British government to cooperate with it. In
addition, relevant files have been “missing” from the 26-County
Department of Justice and also from Garda headquarters. To date
Barron points at “probable collusion” between the British forces
and loyalist paramilitaries but finds its work blocked at
political and official level by both British and 26-County
states.
In the case of the cross-border murder of Séamus Ludlow in 1976,
there was another downright refusal by the British forces to
cooperate despite significant evidence pointing at four
perpetrators. The Ludlow family were treated very badly by the
26-County forces and the name of Séamus himself was smeared when
he was dead and no longer able to speak for himself. The British
security service, - the MI5 – was believed to be heavily
involved in such cross-border bombings and assassinations in the
1970s.
It is relevant to note that in the new Stormont proposals the
M15 – and not the RUC/PSNI – will be responsible directly to the
British Cabinet for so-called “national security” in the Six
Occupied Counties. Whitehall and Downing St. will continue to
hold the whip-hand in such matters.
Even as we deliberate here this weekend a massive new
headquarters for the M15 in the Six Counties is being built in
the greater Belfast area – a portent of things to come.
Agus muid i dtreo chomóradh an chéid dÉirí Amach 1916, tá sé
thar am again muid féin a Ghaelú agus plean céimnithe deimhnithe
a leagan síos chuige sin. Má Glactar le scéim chuimsitheach de
phleananna grádaithe chúig bhliana i dtosach. Bíodh gach plean
chúig bhliana i bhfoirm moltaí; roghnoidh in bhallraíocht trí
chinn ar a laighead asta seo, siad sin na baill i ngach brainse
de Ghluaiseacht na Poblachta. Déanfar é sin a a mhonatorú agus é
dá chur i bhfeidhim.
Thiocfadh liosta eile moltaí le roghnú as ón Ard-Oifig faoi
cheann cúig bhliana agus mar sin ar aghaidh ar feadh 32 bhliain
go dtí 2048, Comóradh Éirí Amach 1848. Faoi’n am sin bhéadh na
seanfhondúirí nach bhfuair seans í a fhoghlaim – sna Sé Chontae
nó sna 26 Chontae – básaithe, agus cuid mhaith dínn-ne ina measc
siúd. Beidh an-mhéadú ar scoileanna lán-Ghaeilge ar fud na tíre
faoin sprioc-bhliain le Cúnamh Dé. D’fhéadfadh sé go n-eireodh
lena leithéid seo de phlean. Cuirimís chuige, in ainm Dé
What is being advocated, as we approach the centenary of 1916,
is a definite step-by-step programme to Gaelicise ourselves and
our Movement. This could take the form of a comprehensive scheme
of Five Year plans over a 40 year period.
For instance small steps to begin with, e.g. in the first five
years the membership would pick at least three from five
recommendations: (1) five per cent of all written material
emanating from us to be in Irish; (2) that the “fada” or long
accent be included in all Irish words (Seán, Séamus, etc); (3)
no transalations of phrases like Sinn Féin , Bord na Móna, Páirc
Uí Chaoimh or C I É., as if Irish was a lesser language; (4)
that the ridiculous expression “chair” be dropped in favour of
“Cathaoirleach” and “A Chathaoirligh” when addressing that
person; (5) that each member would cease saying “thanks” or
“thank you” and that “Go raibh maith agat”or “Go raibh maith
agaibh” when speaking to more than one would be used instead.
Members would be asked to pick three of these. They are so
simple that I would hope all five would be chosen. Practical
steps such as these would be so much more attainable than
passing pious resolutions which do not require us to do anything
concrete. Our national draw tickets, for example, already exceed
the five per cent in Irish suggested. This year 2006 marks the
centenary of the birth of Máirtín Ó Cadhain, the most acclaimed
writer of prose in Irish in the 20th century. An active
Republican for many years, on his release from the Curragh
Concentration Camp in 1944 he devoted the rest of his life to
writing and campaigning for the Irish language. His novel, Cré
na Cille, was chosen by UNESCO, the United Nations Educational,
Scientific and Cultural Organisation, for translation into
several European languages.
Máirtín famously said on one occasion that while it was possible
to shame Fianna Fáil in the matter of neglect of the Irish
language it was very difficult to embarrass Fine Gael. Now while
the predecessor of the latter party, Cumann na nGaedheal, did
good work in regard to the language in the first ten years of
the Free State from 1922 to ’32, Fine Gael has led the climb
down in that regard since 1961. Their election manifesto in that
year marked their turning point.
An earlier move by others in 1957 was the dissolution of the
Coláisti Ullmhúcháin and the consequent deterioration in the
standard of proficiency in Irish of primary teachers. Now Fine
Gael seeks to water down Irish in the Leaving Certificate
examination. Their founders argued in favour of the Treaty of
Surrender in 1921-22 by saying that it gave control of education
and that the Irish language could be restored with such powers.
At the present time with Gael-scoileanna – fully Irish primary
schools – increasing steadily in numbers, Fine Gael seeks to
sabotage and cut off the good work at the far end of secondary
education.
A chairde, the Irish language is central to our being; it is an
essential part of the Irish nation. Just as the national
territory cannot be abandoned, even by referendum, an Ghaeilge
cannot be thrown away even by plebiscite. To do so would be
treason to the Irish nation and would be a giant step towards
its destruction – something we in Republican Sinn Féin will
never tolerate. It is time to embarrass Fine Gael for its
creeping treachery to our Irish language. On the international
scene the imperialist war in Iraq, begun by England and the
United States in defiance of the United Nations, has continued
with the number of Iraqi civilians killed now numbering more
that 600,000. The Dublin government keeps providing Shannon
Airport as a feeder base for the war. Even with the Guantanamo
Bay barbarity and the Abu Graib brutality, no measures are taken
to ensure “rendition” flights do not avail of facilities at
Shannon.
The United Nations rapporteur on torture, Manfred Novac, stated
on the Pat Kenny Show, RTÉ radio on May 9 last: “flights through
Shannon should be inspected including private aircraft used for
State purposes”. But no, the 26-County establishment will not
assert Irish neutrality. For our part we must continue to
support anti-war protests.
Ar chósta thiar na h-Éireann, i gceantar Iorrais, Co Mhuigheo tá
agóid ar bun le sé bhliain anuas i nGaeltacht Ros Dumhach.
Teastaíonn ó mhuintir na h-áite go ndéanfar gás na “Coiribe” a
scagadh amuigh ar an bhfairrge in ionad é a dhéanamh i measc an
phobail ag Béal an Átha Buí. Cúrsaí sláinte agus slandála atá ag
déanamh tinnis dóibh ach chosnódh bealach oibre na ndaoine níos
mó ar chomhlacht Shell. Sin é croí na ceiste.
At our last Ard-Fheis we were addressed by Máire Harrington, a
local schoolteacher in Drumhach, Co. Mayo and a leader of the
“Shell to Sea” protest there. She explained the local people’s
opposition to the Shell project which sought to have the raw gas
refined among the community at Bellanaboy. The locals wanted the
gas refined at sea for reasons of health and safety. The Shell
Company was treating the local community in much the same manner
as it dealt with Third World people.
Ten years earlier at our 1995 Ard-Fheis we protested against the
executions of Ken Sara-Wiwa and seven other members of the Ogoni
community in Nigeria. The military dictatorship there had acted
in collaboration with the same Shell Company which was
exploiting oil deposits in the Ogoni homeland.
Similarly, the 26-County police were deployed in support of
Shell at Ros Dumhach and against the local people. Early each
morning they escort the Shell contractors into the proposed
terminal site at Bellanaboy. We witnessed on television the same
Máire Harrington being deliberately knocked down and
hospitalised by the Gardaí. We pledge our continued support to
the Shell to Sea protest. A campaign spokesman accurately
described the police action as “a co-ordinated assault designed
to delegitimise and criminalise local opposition to Shell’s
project in Mayo”.
In the same manner Irish Ferries, Gama and other big companies
seek to exploit workers, both foreign and native. Our members
took part and carried banners in protest marches against the
action of Irish F erries in displacing Irish workers by making
them redundant and replacing them by foreign operatives for much
reduced wages. Gama was found to be exploiting foreign workers
in a most outrageous fashion.
An urgent problem facing the entire international community is
the question of global warming caused by the emission of
greenhouse gases. It is difficult to envisage this being
countered without the cooperation of some of the world’s largest
carbon dioxide emitters, e,g, the US and China. These two
countries are not bound by the 1998 Kyoto Protocol which aims to
reduce greenhouse gas emissions to levels lower than those in
1990. Indeed the US which has 4 per cent of the world’s
population continues to emit 25% of world greenhouse gases.
Washington refuses to be bound by Kyoto on the grounds that the
agreement would damage the US economy.
So do we just wait until much greater damage is done to the
whole world by rising coastal waters and flooding in winter,
drought in summer, storms, falling crop yields, heat-related
mortality and death of species. Here in Ireland we saw a
short-sighted decision not to introduce carbon taxes and the
growing use of “gas-guzzling” SUVs (sports utility vehicles)
even where there is no economic necessity for such.
The growing use of private transport, commuting to work and
development of roads rather than of public transport have
contributed to the likelihood that the State’s emissions will be
16 per cent above the Kyoto target by 2010.
The result will be substantial fines on the State and the
purchase of credits for emission from low-discharge countries.
Greater use of renewable energy (wind, wave and solar) in
electricity generation and biofuels in transport plus the
encouragement of heat-retaining measures in house construction
should help our performance.
A matter that has touched the hearts and minds of Republicans in
recent months has been the protest campaign by the prisoners in
Maghaberry Jail, Co. Antrim. They seek political status, won by
the hunger-strikers in 1981 and abolished under the Stormont
Agreement of 1998.
The right to wear their own clothes was retained and earlier
protests in 2001 and 2003 won back the right to abstain from
penal labour and separation from loyalists and ordinary
prisoners.
But in their separate accommodation they have been victimised
and treated in many ways worse than ordinary prisoners.
“FreeAssociation” on landings has been completely removed and is
replaced by “controlled movement”. Prisoners have been made to
choose between daily exercise and education. They are denied
facilities to organise their own education and the right to
spend their time in prison constructively. They are locked in
their cells for alternately 21/23 hours per day while the
Governor has power to punish by taking away remission of
sentence.
This capacity of prison governors was banned by the European
Court of Human Rights in 2002 but was later reintroduced
specifically for Republican prisoners. Access to a doctor is
available only once per week. Irish language and cultural items
including handcrafts made relating to the hunger-strikers are
confiscated or destroyed by prison warders. Easter Lilies are
banned to prisoners and their visitors. Breaking this rule means
punishment for prisoners, but of course British Poppies are on
sale in the prison shop.
Parole entitlement has been reduced to half that of other
prisoners and parole for funerals of immediate family members is
often restricted to six hours or less. Prisoners returning from
parole are put in punishment cells for 48 hours. Family visits
are closed, i.e. they take place through a Perspex screen. The
abuse of a sniffer dog routine has resulted in priests and
pensioners alike being refused visits. Use of the canteen for
meals is denied and prisoners were forced to eat in cells which
also contain toilets. Protests on the outside by family members
and supporters gained no publicity. Accordingly on June 19
Republican prisoners embarked on a programme of non-cooperation
with the prison regime. First, television sets were removed from
cells to the landing. Then education and gymnastics were
abandoned. This was followed by a refusal to eat meals in the
cells. Whatever eatables were available from the prison shop
were purchased in order to sustain life. This, of course, is not
adequate and the prisoners have been losing weight steadily.
The first phase of protest continued for a month but despite
constant press releases no publicity whatever was gained. Then
during July the prisoners embarked on a 24-hour hunger strike
once a week, later increasing to a 48-hour strike and eventually
stepped up to a 72-hour or three-day strike every week. In this
action they were supported by Republican prisoners in Portlaoise
prison who went on a similar hunger strike each week in sympathy
with their comrades in Maghaberry.
On the outside support demonstrations for the protesting
prisoners were stepped up. White-line pickets, public meetings
and leafleting were engaged in. The Republican Prisoners Action
Group (RPAG) deserves great commendation for its work in
producing leaflets, organising events and co-ordinating
activities with Republican Sinn Féin in this regard.
Outstanding in this series were the demonstrations in Belfast on
July 8 and September 2, in Lurgan on August 19 and Newtownbutler
on September 23, while the Eve of the All-Ireland Rally outside
Dublin’s GPO on September 16 was very successful.
At all hunger strike commemorations on both sides of the Border
the statement of June 20 from the OC Republican POWs in
Maghaberry announcing the commencement of the protest was read.
But there was a complete media black-out in the 26 Counties on
the plight of the prisoners and their consequent protest action.
In the Six Counties publicity has been minimal – confined to a
few scanty references in the two nationalist daily papers.
Speeches from speakers who travelled from south of the Border,
including Des Dalton, Vice-President and Des Long of Limerick,
went unreported.
In order to break the media black-out, members of the Republican
Prisoners Action Group travelled to St Andrews, Scotland, during
the recent meetings there in October. Despite police harassment
they succeeded in getting to within a mile of the venue, where
they unfurled a large banner. Police action hindered the media
from approaching them, but there was a mention on Sky Television
that evening. The protesters are to be complimented on their
imaginative and spectacular action in support of the prisoners.
On the international scene, activities took place during October
from the United States to Glasgow, to Sweden. Members of the
National Irish Freedom Committee staged a demonstration outside
the British Consulate in New York. Leaflets were distributed and
storyboards carried depicting the political status struggle from
1981.
In Sweden, the Ireland Information Group held pickets outside
the British Embassy in Stockholm, the capital and outside the
Consulate in Gothenburg, the second largest city. Members of the
Francis Hughes Cumann of Republican Sinn Féin and the local
Republican Prisoners Action Group distributed thousands of
leaflets and sold copies of SAOIRSE outside the Celtic
Football Ground in Glasgow.
The five demands of the protesting prisoners are: the Right to
free association; an End to controlled movement; the Right to
fulltime education; Separate visiting facilities; and the Right
to organise their own landings. It will be noted that Free
Association – always an essential part of political status – is
strictly denied to Republican prisoners. The commemorations this
year of the 25th anniversary of the H-Block hunger strikes by
those who accepted the criminalisation of Irish Republican
prisoners under the Stormont Agreement of 1998 is indeed an act
of sickening hypocrisy.
At this point certain matters need to be emphasised and brought
to people’s attention. First of all, the protest campaign in the
prison was decided on, and embarked upon, by the prisoners
themselves and by them alone. Their statement of June 20 says
clearly: “The protest which we now embark upon will not end
until our demands are met.” The conditions under which the
protest will end will be a matter for the prisoners themselves
and for them alone. Accordingly, we here this weekend salute the
Maghaberry prisoners on their stand and on the action they are
taking, and we pledge ourselves to continue our actions in
support of them. We can do no less and still regard ourselves as
true and faithful Republicans.
Also during October came the St Andrews Agreement between the
British and the 26-County governments. It was described
officially as the “basis for an agreement” and “a formula to
restore Stormont”. Ireland was initially partitioned by the
Government of Ireland Act 1920 of the British parliament. The
undoing of Partition and of English rule in our country thus
required a decision of Westminster. Far from evolving towards
Irish National Independence, subsequent legislation of the
British Parliament put additional locks on any movement in that
direction.
By the Ireland Act 1949, passed in Westminster, a decision by
Stormont as well as by the British parliament was made
necessary. Then the enactment by Westminster of the Northern
Ireland Constitution Act 1998, embodying the Stormont Agreement,
enshrined the Veto on a free and united Ireland in the
artificial and local Unionist majority in the Six Occupied
Counties. In this manner was the triple lock on progress towards
Irish Independence put in position.
Now following on the St Andrews Agreement between London and
Dublin, Paisley was able to announce that there was a “DUP Veto”
on the much-vaunted cross-border bodies. AWestminster Veto, a
Stormont Veto, a Unionist Veto and the latest a DUP Veto. So
much for evolution or the gradual working out or development
over 85 years in the direction of an end to British rule. It
has, in truth, been the reverse. Further it has to be borne in
mind that in the end of the day, the British Cabinet is master
and has power to overcome all vetoes.
In 1986, 20 years ago, we were told that the Provos would
“never, never, never” enter Stormont or Westminster. Now,
having, so far as was in their power, stopped the war of
national liberation and destroyed all arms under their control,
they propose to accept and join the British police in Ireland.
Some commentators, while admitting that Republican Sinn Féin
forecast all of this, really doubted that we could have seen how
far they would go at St Andrews.
We could and did. And they will go even further. When they don
the Black-and-Tan uniform and take up the Black-and-Tan gun and
point it at us, and at the nationalist population generally,
does anyone think they will hesitate if ordered by their British
masters to shoot? The sheer logic of the situation demands such
an outcome. They will protect their illgotten gains, just as
history teaches us.
This is the stark reality behind Gerry Adams’s words when he
tells a meeting in Belfast that he ‘accepts policing’. We all
accept policing but not British policing in Ireland. This is the
harsh actuality behind the Provo Ard-Chomhairle’s ‘qualified
acceptance’ of the St Andrews proposals. Let no one say that
they were not told the plain unvarnished truth of the matter.
But history also teaches us that there is no final settlement
short of British disengagement from Ireland. No matter what
Blair and Hain, Ahern and Kenny, Adams and Paisley tell us, that
is the situation. While the British government remains in
Ireland, the historic Irish Question continues to be unsettled
with all the consequences of that position.
Those who ignore such realities have blinded themselves as to
the way forward. The best hope in the wake of British
disengagement lies in a nine-county Ulster, as part of a new
four-province federation, with power and decision making shared
naturally – not artificially – according to local majorities.
All sections would, we believe, feel comfortable in such a New
Ireland.
Victory to the Irish people!
An Phoblacht Abú!