Inclusive Bloody Sunday commemoration

23.2.2006


Thursday-Monday, 19-23 January, 2006

Saturday-Tuesday, 28-31 January, 2006


Thursday-Monday, 19-23 January, 2006

Loyalist racists attempt to disrupt parade

By Irish Republican News

A Bloody Sunday commemoration parade in Scotland on Saturday narrowly avoided erupting into serious violence after loyalists waving Union flags and giving Nazi salutes hurled bottles and abuse at marchers.

Up to 400 loyalists turned out to oppose a parade to mark the day of January 30, 1972, when members of the British army's Parachute Regiment gunned down 13 nationalists during a civil rights demonstration. A 14th victim dying of his wounds in June that year.

Hundreds of police officers were mobilised after Scottish loyalists, some waving Union flags and giving Nazi salutes, lined the parade route through Glasgow city centre.

The parade was held up for 30 minutes after police expressed concern about the clothing worn by some of the loyalists.

After the march began, participants were subjected to a volley of racist and sectarian chants from loyalist demonstrators, while several bottles were thrown.

Gerry Duddy, whose brother Jackie was among those killed on Bloody Sunday, spoke at the weekend commemoration.

Mr Duddy last night said it had been a frightening experience for those who took part, but praised the restraint of the marchers.

"At one point, there were bottles, glasses and various other things being thrown at the marchers," he said.

"However, despite the provocation, there was little reaction from the marchers and this ensured that things stayed relatively peaceful. The organisers also deserve praise for how well the parade was marshalled."

Local police confirmed that 11 people had been arrested for offences including breach of the peace, assault, and possession of a knife.

Jim Slaven, of the march organiser Cairde na hEireann, said the marchers had behaved in a dignified manner.

"That's what we would expect. People on the parade behaved with great dignity and respect. It was a peaceful march from our point of view," he said.


Saturday-Tuesday, 28-31 January, 2006

Inclusive Bloody Sunday commemoration

By Irish Republican News

Thousands of people yesterday retraced the route of the 1972 civil rights demonstration that ended in a massacre on the streets of Derry on Bloody Sunday.

British paratroopers shot dead 13 civilians on January 30, 1972. A further man died in June that year as a result of his wounds.

Lord Saville is due to publish his report later this year. The Bloody Sunday inquiry was the largest tribunal of its kind in British legal history. It followed a major cover-up of the killings in a previous inquiry under Lord Widgery.

Relatives of the dead bearing 14 crosses led yesterday's procession as it wound its way from the Creggan estate to Rossville Street in the Bogside, the scene of the Bloody Sunday killings.

Prominent nationalist politicians attended the commemorative march. Marchers held photographs of those killed, and over 3,000 candles were distributed to the crowd to honour all those who died in the conflict.

At Free Derry wall, the main address was delivered by Kay Duddy, whose brother Jack was shot dead as he fled members of the first battalion of the Parachute Regiment.

Ms Duddy thanked the people of Derry for their support over the years. She said that the findings of Lord Saville, who oversaw the second inquiry into the events of the day, had the potential to send "a wave of hope or a sea of despair" to other victims of state violence in Ireland.

Ms Duddy said: "2006 will be a challenging year for all of us. In many ways, it will mark a potential watershed for the campaign for truth and justice concerning Bloody Sunday. It also has the potential to send either a wave of hope or a sea of despair to all the other victims of state violence on this island."

Ms Duddy said Bloody Sunday had been viewed as a litmus test for the British government in Ireland "and as a beacon of hope for many other families and campaigns who have not had the opportunities nor witnessed the progress that we have achieved."

She added: "We are conscious that there are many families throughout Ireland who are looking to the Saville report to get a sense of whether the British state is now prepared to face up to the consequences of their attitudes and their actions in Ireland.

"For make no mistake about it -- the true challenge of 2006 will be whether the British state can come to terms with the conclusions that I am confident the Saville inquiry will deliver, and that paramount among them will be that British soldiers murdered 14 innocent men and boys and wounded another 14 innocent men and women on the streets of Derry on the 30th of January, 1972.

"That is the challenge that will confront the British state when the Saville report is published because the tribunal really has no alternative finding to offer."

In a significant departure, a man whose wife was killed in an IRA bombing gave the annual Bloody Sunday lecture in Derry's Guildhall.

Alan McBride's wife Sharon was one of ten people killed when an IRA attack on the leadership of the UDA exploded prematurely in west Belfast's Shankill Road in 1993.

Mr McBride said it was vital that everyone accept responsibility for their actions but work together towards creating a better future.

He admitted that many people within his community were opposed to him taking part in last night's lecture.

He said it was important that republicans work to build confidence within the unionist community. He urged Sinn Fein to support policing arrangements in the North.

He criticised the Democratic Unionist Party for its continued refusal to share power with republicans.

In a strong attack on the current stalemate in the political process, Mr McBride said he felt let down by politicians on all sides.

"It is almost eight years after the signing of the Good Friday Agreement and we still haven't got an assembly. This is nothing short of shameful," he said.

"This needs to be addressed as a matter of urgency without each side blaming the other in a process that goes round and round but delivers nothing.

"Nothing is going to replace the Good Friday Agreement. There are people who are saying we can move on without others but this is not going to happen."


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