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RSF STATEMENTS

 

IRELAND NOT YET TURNED CORNER ON BRITISH OCCUPATION
Republican SINN FÉIN Poblachtach Sept. 3, 2007
John Hume's claims that we have finally "turned the corner" on the darkest days of Ireland's past wilfully ignores the fact that the British Occupation of the Six Counties continues. History shows that whilst this remains the case, the Irish people are certain to endure further conflict. Mr. Hume's support for the latest incarnation of the notoriously unstable Stormont Administration can only help prolong the suffering of Nationalists - and indeed those who mistakenly give allegiance to the British Crown - within the context of British colonial rule.
The former SDLP leader's belief that progress has been made towards the creation of a new Ireland is equally flawed. This can only be brought about ollowing a British declaration of intent to withdraw from Ireland, giving
the Irish people the opportunity to draft a new Constitution for the New Ireland. Republican Sinn Féin's ÉIRE NUA proposals recommend a Federation of the four Provinces, with maximum decentralisation of power to local
communities. This would truly enable all of our people to work for their common good.


Visit of British Queen to Dublin

Statement from Cathleen Knowles McGuirk - Vice-President Republican Sinn Féin.

Republicans throughout Ireland are strongly opposed to the impending visit by British Queen Elizabeth, who is also the British head of State, and will protest at this extravagant display of pomp and wealth.

But not alone for these reasons. Queen Elizabeth saw fit to award an OBE to Colonel Derek Wilford, Officer Commanding the Parachute Regiment on Bloody Sunday in Derry when they shot dead 14 unarmed civilians. Not exactly an inspiring role model for women? It matters not a whit that some of those armed forces are leaving Irish soil because their place will be taken by MI5 who are deeply embedded here.

There remains one huge obstacle to reconciliation between us and Britain and that obstacle is Partition.  Part of the process of putting the past behind us and moving forward would be the removal of the illegal and unjust border that divides our country and our people. Have the courage Elizabeth Windsor and begin the process of handing back what has never belonged to you – the Six northeastern Counties. That would indeed be called a ‘historic event’

It has nothing to do with maturity on our part that we should welcome the Queen of England to our shores, rather it is the same slavish attitude that has always existed in Ireland. Being an occupied and colonised people for so long can make us willing participants in our own domination.

 We reject the fraudulent claims of the English Queen to be “Queen of Northern Ireland”.

STORMONT PROVIDES NO OPPORTUNITY FOR IRISH SELF-GOVERNANCE

Richard Walsh, RSF Ard Chomhairle and PRO for Comhairle Uladh (Ulster Executive)  5/8/07

Tony Blair stated that the events at Stormont should represent an end to a dispute between “two warring traditions”, and was subsequently described by Bertie Ahern as “a true friend of Ireland”.

In  confutation Walsh responded “True Republicans were only ever at war with England, and whilst she continues to maintain her occupation of this country further conflict is inevitable. Those who have sought to ensure the continuation of English rule in Ireland are only ensuring continuing warfare between these countries, and cannot plausibly be described as our friends.

 “James Connolly - executed by the British around this time ninety-one years ago - stated before his Court Martial, "Believing that the British government has no right in Ireland, never had any right in Ireland, and never can have any right in Ireland, the presence in any one generation of even a respectable minority of Irishmen ready to die to affirm that truth makes that government forever a usurpation and a crime against human progress." We accept his analysis.

 “The English must instead announce their intention to withdraw permanently from our shores, allowing the Irish people the opportunity to govern themselves. Stormont provides no such opportunity, as an assembly under the control of Westminster - from where its powers are devolved - and continues to be subject to the purse-strings of England. ÉIRE NUA provides the only viable alternative to English rule in Ireland, offering maximum decentralisation of power to local level according to local majorities. Only this can provide for a better and shared future for the Irish people.”

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Provo/DUP deal consolidates English rule in Ireland

Ruairí Ó Brádaigh, President, Republican Sinn Féin statement -- 3/26/07

The latest accord between the Provisional movement and the Democratic Unionist Party consolidated Stormont and English rule in Ireland.

"It is based on the Partition not alone of Ireland but also of the province of Ulster and is an artificial method of administering an artificial entity of Six Irish Counties. As such it cannot work in the long term.

"Once more English money has been decisive in cobbling it together. While it may postpone Irish national independence it cannot prevent that ideal being ultimately achieved by the Irish people.

Republican Sinn Féin looks forward to Dáil Uladh, a nine-county Ulster parliament within a federation of the four provinces of a New Ireland in which all sections and shades of opinion will be represented in proportion to their numbers.

"Natural horizontal power-sharing will replace the artificial vertical rule now being attempted. The much-vaunted "new era" we all desire has not yet arrived."

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Richard Walsh, Ard- Chomhairle member and Ulster PRO, Republican Sinn Féin statement -- 3/26/07

"Nearly nine years on from the signing of the Stormont Agreement, it is time for Gerry Adams and the Provisional Movement to return to their former allegiance. The Stormont experiment will inevitably fail, whether in the short, medium or long term. The Provos must now return to their demand for a British declaration of intent to withdraw over a stated time frame.

"Today Gerry Adams – in talks with DUP leader Mr. Paisley – agreed to resurrect Stormont on May 8. This can only lead to further instability and conflict. He spoke of building a new relationship between Orange and Green. However the true Republican position – as espoused by this Movement throughout its history – has been to unite Protestant, Catholic and Dissenter in opposition to English rule in Ireland. Prolonging English rule can only lead to continued resistance.

"The alternative is clear. Our ÉIRE NUA policy, seeking maximum decentralisation of power within the context of a Federation of Ireland's four Provinces would provide the Irish people with the opportunity to govern themselves in accordance with local majorities, and in the absence of any foreign interference in their affairs."

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Media Blackout Gives Expected results

Statement from Ruairí Ó Brádaigh, President Republican Sinn Féin.

 Given the almost total media blackout of Republican Sinn Féin during the Stormont election the results for its candidates were only as expected. Even the name of Republican Sinn Féin was suppressed by the Stormont régime’s electoral body and a compliant media followed suit. Our candidates were styled “Independents”, taking away our coherent strategy and sense of direction.

 Although not registered as a “party” at Leinster House for 40 years, the media in the 26 Counties do not class Republican Sinn Féin candidates as “Independents”, but treat them as an organised body.

 Indeed, on the TG4 television programme Seacht Lá on polling day, a commentator [Tomás Tiernan] stated that there was a complete block on publicity for Republican Sinn Féin and that there appeared to have been an agreement between the various channels to this effect.

 The result was, that denied publicity and even their organisation’s name, our six candidates were consigned to a welter of Independent candidates, without the distinction of the Republican Sinn Féin title and direction. Of course the harassment by the RUC/PSNI of our election workers continued during the campaign.

 As to the general results, the DUP is moving towards a monolithic Unionist Party such as existed up to the 1960s . With its increased vote it will impose even more humiliating terms on the Provisionals.

 The Provos, for their part, will go on to consolidate English rule here, to lead away from Irish national independence and secure lucrative positions of power for their leadership within the system.

 For Republican Sinn Féin the task must be to build support, to expose the direction of the Provisional leadership and the mis-use of the unionist population by their leaders and by unscrupulous English governments.  
ENDS 

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Provos embrace total collaboration with British Rule
Statement by Ruairí Ó Brádaigh President of Republican Sinn Féin - Jan. 07

The Provisionals have now completed a 360 degree turn with their acceptance of British law, British courts and British police in Ireland.
In 196970 they vehemently opposed the acceptance of British institutions here by the Officials, later The Worker's Party. Now they have swallowed the English establishment in its entirety. Having put the Irish people through tremendous sacrifice in the meantime.
Off course Messrs Adams and McGuinness remained with the Officials for a number of months in 1970 until they both found that the Provos were in the majority, whereupon they neatly switched sides. The lack of ideological conviction in such matters was already evident.
Realistically, having gone so far down the constitutional road, there was no where else for them to go except further into that cul-de-sac.
But their English masters will require more of them. They will demand that the Provos physically protect British institutions in Ireland from those who would continue the struggle.
The British will seek to have them complete the work of collaboration by steeping their hands in the blood of Irish Republican activists.
That is the lesson of history which has been borne out step by step since 1986. Ultimately the Provos will be indistinguishable from the Unionists in their support for British Rule in Ireland.

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Republican Movement Leadership Easter Statement 2006

THE Leadership of the Republican Movement extends fraternal greetings to members, supporters and friends throughout the world on this the historic 90th anniversary of the 1916 Proclamation of the Irish Republic. We send special greetings to our imprisoned comrades in Ireland and to prisoners throughout the world who are incarcerated because of their struggle for freedom and justice.

Since we last assembled twelve months ago we have witnessed the final act of treason by those who would have described themselves as Republicans. Irish Republicans throughout the world watched with total dismay at the declaration that the war of the Provisionals was over permanently, and at the destruction of all arms under their control which had been given to them to wage a war for the freedom of Ireland. The effect that these so-called Republicans were attempting to imply was that the struggle for national liberation was over permanently and that the IRA had been killed by its own leadership.

We have a message in response to this act of treason. The Irish Republican Army has declared that it is still very much alive in the form of the Continuity Irish Republican Army  which remains active and dedicated to the achievement of Irish independence for however long this may take.

This Easter the Dublin Administration have attempted to hijack the Easter commemoration ceremonies, having ignored them for the past 35 years. It should be remembered that the heritage of 1916 belongs to all the people of Ireland. For their part, genuine Republicans have marked Easter each year in good times and in bad. Other elements, including some members of the media, have allied themselves completely with British Imperialism, saying that 1916 was unnecessary and condemning outright everything associated with the national struggle. Many politicians seek to besmirch the Republican Movement and rob it of its good name. The emergence of tiny groupings as rivals to the Movement only cause confusion and obscure the supreme issue facing the people, that is the unity and freedom of Ireland.

On the international scene we continue to see the mighty world powers, through sheer force and intimidation, take over weaker countries and terrorize their people. We send solidarity greetings to oppressed people throughout the world who are suffering from these superpowers.

We have noted with regret the public announcement that the struggle over so many decades of the Basque people for national liberation is at a permanent end. The involvement of the same forces that have been at work in Ireland, and especially of the Provisional leadership, in bringing about this outcome for a friendly people is to be deplored.

Ireland’s national struggle, particularly since the 1916 Rising, has been admired and looked up to by subject peoples throughout the world who have been and are fighting colonialism. Now they receive the news of the collapse of the active struggle in Ireland, the acceptance of British rule and the voluntary destruction of arms. But the fight goes on.

On the home front we send greetings to the Rossport Five and to their families and supporters. We salute your courage in confronting this multinational company who has little regard for the welfare of local communities.

In recent weeks we have seen on the streets of Dublin how far removed those who profess to be in power are from the communities at local level. We saw how Leinster House ministers were so readily available to meet leaders of a loyalist organisation while refusing to meet with representatives of the Dublin and Monaghan bombings or the relatives of the Stardust tragedy. The Free Staters got their answer when the local community showed their resentment at what only could be described as an exercise of appeasement of their British masters. We urge Republicans throughout Ireland to start now and prepare for the next act of appeasement – the visit of the foreign Queen of England who claims jurisdiction over part of our country.

Faithful Republicans throughout Ireland have continued to feel the jackboot tactics of so-called forces of law and order on both sides of the Border and we urge our members to be at all times vigilant.

Now for the fourth time the English government is seeking to resurrect Stormont which was brought crashing down in 1972 by the peoples’ struggle under the leadership of the Republican Movement. Of course they now have the collaboration of former Republicans who have already administered English rule here and are prepared to police it by joining the British forces.

For eight years since the 1998 Agreement sought to copper-fasten Partition and British rule, they have failed in their efforts. Whether as “shadow, interim or transitional”, Stormont must be rejected.

The men and women of 1916, whose deed we honour today and every Easter ever since their Rising, set out clearly in the Proclamation of the Irish Republic what their objectives were. That noble document was read to you here. It required “a permanent National Government representative of the whole people of Ireland and elected by the suffrages of all her men and women”.

Such a government was indeed elected in an act of self-determination by the whole Irish people acting as a unit in 1918 and established by the All-Ireland Dáil in 1919. a combination of British brutality and force and Irish weakness and treachery overthrew that 32-County government and suppressed it by the creation of a British Act of Parliament, Stormont and Leinster House.

Any new-style Stormont must be brought down and replaced by an All-Ireland parliament. A new federation of the four provinces can best implement this and provide a just solution for minorities and majorities alike.

To secure the “civil and religious liberty, equal rights and equal opportunities” guaranteed in the Proclamation and sealed by the blood of the leaders and martyrs of the 1916 Rising, a Democratic Socialist Republic must be instituted.

Ninety years to the day since that momentous event in Irish history we renew these guarantees and pledge to strive might and main for those objectives. No collaboration with Imperialism and with British rule here – but straight through to Irish freedom and Irish national independence. An Phoblacht Abú! 

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Statement by Ruairí Ó Brádaigh, President, Republican Sinn Féin -- Oct. 2006

The "formula to restore Stormont" and "the basis for an agreement" which are being sought at St Andrews, Scotland today (October 13) will not be a final settlement between Ireland and England because it does not address the historic Irish Question, ie the issue of the presence of the British government in Ireland. 

If control of "policing" is to be ceded to Stormont it will merely cover ordinary offences and traffic, etc. The British government will retain control of security through the MI5, for which a huge headquarters is at present being built in the greater Belfast area. 

As Republican Sinn Féin has reiterated since 1986, the Provos are being dragged into the British net gradually. Their total immersion into the English system in Ireland is now almost complete and they may soon return to Stormont to administer British rule here. 

The result of today's talks may well be Mr Blair's and Mr Ahern's "final settlement" but Irish history teaches us that there will be no permanent peace here short of total British government disengagement from this country.

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 Statement by Ruairí Ó Brádaigh, President, Republican Sinn Féin -- Oct. 2006

Contrary to what today's British government statement says an agreement between the DUP and the Provos as to how to reconstitute Stormont will not be "a final settlement" of the historic "Irish Question".
History teaches us that nothing short of total British government disengagement from Ireland will provide the basis for such a settlement.

Already in the eight-and-a-half years of its existence, the Stormont Agreement of April 1998 has failed miserably, precisely because it did not address the basic question of the English government's presence here.

 That Agreement was concerned merely with restructuring British rule in Ireland and nothing beyond that. The conflict here from 1969 on was not simply about civil rights and a civil rights solution will not resolve the situation.

 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 feel comfortable in such a New Ireland.

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