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The troubles in Northern Ireland | ||||||
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(A) The Roots of Trouble in History
1. Survey of Anglo-Irish relations from the Middle Ages to 1923 Ireland (all or part of it, at various times) was a colony of the English from
the 12th century. From the late Middle Ages it was a kingdom, under the same
monarch as England, but a separate country. In law and in practice, the Irish
government was usually subordinate to the English government. l7e5ep The conflict between Catholicism and Protestantism played a large part in the 17th century’s several wars in England and Ireland: civil wars, colonial wars… . In 1960 William of Orange deposed the Catholic king James II, after the battle of Boyne. After the victory, laws were enacted by the all-Protestant Parliament of Ireland barring Catholics from all offices, land ownership, schooling, and other avenues leading toward wealth and education. These laws effectively entrenched the existing hatreds between the two communities and glorified violent actions by one community to ‘defend’ itself from the other. 3.The Easter Rising of 1916 Two nationalist militias, the Irish Citizen’s Army and the Irish Volunteers were formed, dedicated to Home Rule. They were far less efficiently then the UFV and they quickly spilt in 1914. However a small part of the force, led by Republicans staged an armed rebellion (the Easter Rising) in April 1916, briefly tacking over a small part of central Dublin. Their attempt at gun running had failed with the capture and scuttling of the Aud, carrying thousand of German weapons. The general uprising the Republicans hoped they would inspire throughout the country never happened. The rebellion was crushed: it’s leaders were judge guilty of treason and shot. 4. The Partition of Ireland (1921) and the Civil War in the Irish Free State (1921 to 1923) The failed Rising was an inspiration for more to join the newly created Irish
Republican Army (IRA) and fight. The conflict escalated into a brutal war of
attrition between the IRA and the British. (B) Aspects of the development in Northern Ireland 1923 to 1969 1. Gerrymandering and restricted franchise in LondonderryThe northern unionists effectively created a single-party state. Proportional representation was eliminated for local council elections in 1922 and for the Northern Ireland Parliament in Stormont in 1929. One vote per person did not hold in local elections until 1969. Gerrymandering was used to secure unionist seats in nationalist areas throughout the thirties. 2. Civil rights marches in late 1960s.By the 1960s, northern republicans had mostly given up violence and turned either to politics or to retirement. But a new civil rights movement arose in the North, to protest and correct the discrimination against Catholics. The Prime Minister of Northern Ireland, Captain Terence O'Neill (a moderate Unionist) pushed through reforms in electoral law and public housing. He met with increasing opposition from hard-line Unionists including William Craig and Brian Faulkner, important members of his cabinet. After a general election (in which he retained a narrow majority) he was forced out of office in April 1969, following a bombing which was blamed on the IRA but later turned, out to be the work of loyalists. (C) Aspects of troubles in the 1970s and 1980s. 1. The pervasiveness of violence in Northern Ireland.Civil rights turned into civil disorder. The Belfast government could not cope
when fighting broke out in the streets of Belfast. At times, the riots verged
on pogroms, such as when loyalists invaded the nationalist Falls Road. Thousands
of families were forced to leave their homes. The London government sent British
troops into Northern Ireland to keep the factions apart in August 1969. 2. Bloody Sunday (January 30th 1972) The last Sunday in January 1972 was Bloody Sunday. British paratroopers shot
dead thirteen unarmed men, six of them under eighteen. A fourteenth died later
of injuries sustained on the same day. Thirteen others, including a widow, were
wounded. All of them had been participating in an illegal but largely peaceful
march against internment. The public inquiry that followed, conducted by the
British Chief Justice, Lord Widgery, was a whitewash, clearing the soldiers
of blame, and lending credence to their claims that the men they shot were armed.
The Irish Republican Army (the IRA) is the descendant of the most forceful
military group that had fought for independence for the whole of the island
of Ireland in 1921. By the end of 1969, following the resistance by the unionist
government to the civil rights campaign, the IRA had begun to regroup, and by
early 1970 its members were confronting British troops who had arrived on the
island to assist with riot control. The violence of the IRA grew into extensive
bombing campaigns directed against civilian, public utility, and military targets.
Support for the IRA was increased in August 1971, when, in an attempt to curb
the escalating violence, Internment (imprisonment) without trial was introduced,
4. Protestant paramilitary groups The threat of the use of force by the Ulster Volunteer Force (UVF), a Loyalist
paramilitary group, in the early 1900s was a consistent factor in the opposition
to Home Rule for Ireland. In the 1960s a modern version of the UVF was formed.
Loyalists were worried by the tentative civil rights reforms for Catholics suggested
by the Prime Minister of Northern Ireland and recruitment to the ranks of the
Loyalist paramilitaries was substantially increased when violence erupted on
to the streets in1969. There was rioting between Catholic and Protestant areas
of working class Belfast almost every night. In the early 1970s bombings by
the IRA became a feature of daily life as businesses in the city center were
targeted. There was frequent sniper fire from Protestant areas into Catholic
areas and vice versa. The physical segregation of the two communities can be attributed to various reasons, not all of which stem from a fear of violence. For instance, as most schooling is conducted by religious denomination, it makes sense for Protestant and Catholic families to find housing closer to their schools. Church attendance is high in Northern Ireland, with the church community providing the structure for social interaction. In addition, marriages in Northern Ireland primarily take place with people from the same local area, creating elaborate family-based structures that tend to be exclusionary and segregated. These trends tend to isolate and insulate local communities from outside influences, preserving old attitudes towards outsiders and considerable conformity within the community. (D) The Good Friday peace agreement of 1998 and the most recent development1. A new framework for peace. The Good Friday agreement After Sinn Fein's brief suspension because of the attacks, it rejoined the now round-the-clock talks in late March and all parties were presented with a deadline of April 9 for completion. Several days of frantic activity between the Irish and British governments and all parties finally led to the agreement, signed by the Irish and the British prime ministers, on Good Friday, April 10, 1998. The main principles of the agreement are: 1) Change in the status of Northern Ireland can only come about with the consent of a majority of its people, and if that situation changes, there is a binding obligation on both governments to comply with the wishes expressed by the people of the North. 2) The right of the people in Northern Ireland to hold both British and Irish citizenship remains, and would not change even if the status of Northern Ireland changed. 3) Proposed new North-South bodies are to be set up. 4) A 108-member assembly is to be elected by proportional representation; key decisions of the assembly must be taken on a cross-community basis. For a decision to be made by simple majority, there must be a majority among both Nationalist and Unionist members. The assembly will meet first as an interim body without legislative and executive powers. 5) A new British-Irish Agreement will establish a new British-Irish Conference, which will subsume the inter-governmental machinery established under the 1985 Anglo-Irish Agreement. 2. The Omagh bombing of 1998 and afterwards IRA demands for early prisoner releases and Ulster ministerial posts for Sinn Fein will depend on the decommissioning of weapons, to be overseen by an International Commission on arms. The first major post-agreement event was the election in June 1998 of the 108-member assembly; the assembly was inaugurated in July. In August a car bomb exploded in Omagh, killing 29 people and injuring hundreds—it was the worst terrorist action in Northern Ireland for over 30 years. In reaction to the incident a series of tough new anti-terrorist laws were introduced in the United Kingdom. In February 1999 the assembly endorsed blueprints for devolution from the UK government and the formation of an executive, but progress faltered over the issue of decommissioning of paramilitary weapons. In an attempt to derail peace process talks, there was an upswing in loyalist violence in March, including the car-bomb killing of a prominent nationalist rights lawyer. |
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