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View Full Version : Thousands protest for peace in N. Ireland


Summer
March 11th, 2009, 11:10 PM
Thousands of people joined peace vigils across Northern Ireland ahead of the funeral later this week of a policeman whose shooting has threatened the province's hard-won peace.

The murder of Stephen Carroll, along with that of two soldiers 48 hours before, prompted rallies across the troubled British province showing solidarity against the attacks claimed by Republican dissidents.

In Belfast, the streets around City Hall were brought to a standstill as thousands of people gathered for a rally organised by the Irish Congress of Trade Unions (ICTU).

Protestors held a couple of minutes' silence and a lone piper played "Amazing Grace" and "Abide With Me".

"The callous attacks of the last few days were an assault on every citizen who supports peace," Peter Bunting, the ICTU's assistant general secretary, told the crowd.

"(The killers) must be faced down with a massive display of the unity of the people of Northern Ireland," he said on the BBC earlier.

In Craigavon, southwest of Belfast, a candlelit vigil was held to remember Carroll, the 48-year-old police constable who was shot dead there Monday.

At the end of the Lismore Manor estate, just metres away from where Carroll was murdered, members of the local Church of Ireland's Methodist and Roman Catholic congregations gathered together to pray for peace in a joint act of remembrance.

The protests came as Pope Benedict XVI condemned the killings as "abominable acts of terrorism", while political leaders insisted that they would not throw the peace process off course.

Police are still questioning two men, aged 17 and 37, over Carroll's death, while his funeral is set for Friday.

The deadly attacks, the first such incidents in over a decade, have been claimed by two dissident Republican groups.

The Real IRA (Irish Republican Army) said it killed the soldiers at the Massereene barracks northwest of Belfast on Saturday, while Continuity IRA claimed Carroll's killing.

Britain and Ireland have joined the province's political leaders in vowing that the violence will not shake the devolved power-sharing government which has united Protestant and Catholic former foes since 2007.

British Prime Minister Gordon Brown said that Northern Ireland was currently seeing a degree of unity against the attacks "that some people thought they would never see in their lifetime".

He added that Wednesday's peace marches highlight "the defiance and the determination to stand up to the evil of criminal violence... to say with one voice that the peace that the people of Northern Ireland are building, no murderers should ever be allowed to destroy".

And in Dublin, the Dail (lower house of parliament) unanimously passed an all-party motion "utterly condemning" the murders and affirming the republican groups responsible had "no mandate or support" from the Irish people.

The Continuity IRA and the Real IRA are both splinter groups of the IRA, which has laid down its arms and was the military wing of Catholic socialists Sinn Fein, which now shares power in Northern Ireland with conservative Protestant former foes the Democratic Unionists.

The Real IRA was behind Northern Ireland's most deadly attack, the 1998 Omagh bombing which killed 29 people.

http://www.breitbart.com/article.php?id=CNG.c100a745d8dcbd43073580ced87495ab.b1&show_article=1&catnum=0

Brian Foley
March 28th, 2009, 07:37 PM
They have it all wrong, it was Britain that provoked this act of Irish self defence.

This was the statement from the Irish Liberation leader in the run up to the attacks.
Gerry Adams: British Army Special Forces in Northern Ireland threaten peace process (http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/northernireland/5004234/Gerry-Adams-British-Army-Special-Forces-in-Northern-Ireland-threaten-peace-process.html)
Gerry Adams, the Sinn Fein leader, has renewed his criticism of the British Government's decision to deploy Special Forces soldiers from the British Army in Northern Ireland.
That action violated the 'Peace Process'.

fyc
April 5th, 2009, 03:19 AM
They have it all wrong, it was Britain that provoked this act of Irish self defence.

This was the statement from the Irish Liberation leader in the run up to the attacks.

That action violated the 'Peace Process'.

nice to know you support a group that campaigns for asylum seekers and is openly pro none white immigration. shows what an idiot you are:rolleyes:

W.B.
June 12th, 2009, 11:18 AM
nice to know you support a group that campaigns for asylum seekers and is openly pro none white immigration. shows what an idiot you are:rolleyes:

When have Sinn Fein/ IRA had a single non-white member? The UDA have had several black members (Louis Scott, the Shoukri brothers who were leaders of the entire UDA) and also many openly gay members. The UVF had a guy in jail recently who was a chink. Their political wing are also Marxist the PUP) and openly support israel and the jews. The Orange Order have had many non-white members in the Uk and further afield in Africa where entire lodges are black! The oo are based on the freemasons who in turn serve the jews. Hitler himself put masons on a par with the jews except they were harder to identify.

The IRA/ Sinn Fein as mentioned have never had non-white members (even the BNP have had turkish, jewish and sikh members and supporters!) Former IRA commander O'Duffy commanded the Greenshirts in Spain fighting for Franco and Sean Russell the IRA commander died aboard a German U-Boat (there's still a statue of him in Dublin).

The Real IRA killed two British soldier (one of Turkish descent) and injured two others (including one Catholic Polish-born immigrant). http://www.irishcentral.com/news/Link-between-US-neo-Nazis-and-the-Real-IRA-41925177.html Sinn Fein condemned the attacks.

Once again I have no problem with the majority of the Protestant people of Northern Ireland but we must WORK TOGETHER to save Northern Ireland for Irish and British alike!