Category Archives: Current Affairs

Jim Allisters Special Advisors Bill Motion

Just a short personal opinion on the Bill designed to block former prisoners–“with serious offences”-from taking up positions as special advisors at Stormont.  TUV MLA Jim Allister brought the Bill basically after the appointment of high profile ex Republican prisoner Mary McArdle as an advisor to the Culture Minister Caral Ni Chuilin. McArdle had been convicted for her part in the 1984 murder of judge’s daughter Mary Travers.  The Bill seeks to ban anyone who has been sentenced to more than 5 years in prison, from taking up similar posts in the future.
The only opposition to the Bill predictably came in the shape of Sinn Fein.  To think that there would be any Unionist opposition to such a proposal is delusional.  At present we, as a Loyalist community do not have anyone in Stormont who we could label as representative of our community.  We had in the past and certainly aspire to have representation there again.  If we are fortunate enough to once again have people of the calibre of David Ervine or Billy Hutchinson once again established in Stormont the chances are that they will be restricted in who they choose as special advisors.  There are a multitude of Loyalist politically motivated ex prisoners who would be qualified to take up such positions but would be prevented from doing so when this Bill is eventually ratified.
Where is the logic behind such thinking from Allister and those who back him?  He is prepared and content to sit in government with individuals like Gerry Kelly–Raymond McCartney–Conor Murphy–the aforementioned Caral–Martina Anderson–all, who, if memory served me right served sentences in excess of 5 years.  Why such a selective response?  The reality from Allisters point of view is that it is quite okay for ex prisoners–Republicans to boot–to help run the country in tandem with himself–but unacceptable for them to have an advisor who may have in theory served less time than them in Long Kesh…or in McArdle’s case Armagh.  It is a  ludicrous situation–but one that is highly unlikely to be challenged–apart fron Sinn Fein.  Allister is a weasel of a politician who will jump on any badwagon when he sees an opportunity.  Or jump off one when he cannot get his own way either!!  In this particular case he has manipulated a situation where he has championed himself as representative of victims in order to highlight his own dubious profile. Nothing more.

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Green Brigade Disgrace Scottish Football Again

This post first appeared on www.therangersstandard.co.uk

Green Brigade Disgrace Scottish Football Again

By Chris Graham
First of all my apologies for speaking about an Irish Republican political group on a Rangers site but the continuing attempts to shoehorn the Green Brigade and the Union Bears into the same pigeonhole has prompted this response. When journalists and politicians start treating the situation with the Green Brigade honestly then I won’t have to write about them ever again. Something I look forward to.

You would be forgiven for thinking that Saturday’s police clash with the Green Brigade was the first time football fans have come a cropper due to the draconian new laws targeting them in Scotland. Of course you would be wrong. Police have on occasion been heavy handed with fans from many different teams in Scotland. However, those attempting to use this latest example as an excuse to berate the police would be well advised to take a step back, because on Saturday they were not policing mere football fans but a political group which Celtic have, until recently, allowed to operate unencumbered within Celtic Park. Normally I wouldn’t care, but I’m noticing journalists, social commentators, bloggers pretending to be journalists and even politicians trying to liken the Green Brigade to the Union Bears in an attempt to disguise their support for fellow Celtic fans as some sort of crusade on behalf of all football fans.

 

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Bobby Rodgers–Justice–What Justice?

On Friday 15th March Justice Horner delivered the life sentence tariff to Bobby Rodgers three weeks after his absurd conviction on a forty year old murder charge.  He decreed that Bobby should serve a minimum of 16 years for the killing of Eileen Doherty in September 1973. Bobby’s conviction was based solely on circumstantial evidence–two hand prints–prints that could easily have been made prior to the day of the killing.  In his wisdom Horner reasoned that beacuse Bobby had subsequently served a life sentence the he could safely assume that he must have been responsible for the earlier murder.  And because Bobby choose NOT to take the stand during the trial Horner further supposed that this was an admission of guilt. Totally ludicrous.  Last Friday after summing up once again and going to great lengths to vindicate his findings Horner again found the time to demonise Bobby Rodgers further.  He cast aspersions om Bobby’s bona fides as  leading youth worker–with a twenty years unblemished record–by stating that it was wrong to say that Bobby was a changed man because of his “actions” during the trial.  By actions I suppose he was referring to Bobby’s legal right to take the stand or not.  Horner again–” Rodgers has put Miss Doherty’s family through more pain by pleading not guilty to the murder”.  You would think that withsuch a learned mind as Justice Horners he would have had a slight notion that Bobby may have been pleading not guilty because he was in fact innocent.
The judge also stated that it wasnt for him to take into account the fact that Bobby Rodgers will serve a maximum of 2 years as declared in the Good Friday Agreement.  So in light of this how then can this system be seen as the way of dealing with the past or of delivering justice to so called victims?  Can any victims family be sure that they are getting justice if someone who they believed murdered a loved one “gets off” with a 2 year sentence–especially having waited for 40 years?  I doubt it.  In this particular case the relatives of Eileen Doherty told reporters that no sentence was long enough as far as they were concerned. That, I am sure would be echoed by other families in the same situation.  There is a great danger here that in relation to the actions of the Historical Enquiries Team–who seem to be targeting Loyalists–that rather than an even handed system being applied it will turn into a witch hunt against one section of former combatants, where justice isnt the desired outcome but rather revenge or vengeance.
Bobby Rodgers has already had a rebuke from the Secretary of State in relation to a reprieve through a Royal Prerogative of Mercy–which has been granted to a number of Republicans in recent times–and has, through his legal team lodged a Judicial review on those findings.  He also has the right to appeal which, I assume will be lodged in due process.  My abiding hope is that proper justice does prevail and that Bobby Rodgers is released on appeal due to the laughable nature of the charges against him.  Then he can be returned to his rightful place–the working class protestant communities–he has served admirably since 1990.

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The Good Friday Agreement is Starting to Become Part of the Problem.

This post first appeared on http://www.openunionism.com

 

Lucius Winslow is an MA Politics student at Queen’s University Belfast, who takes an intensive interest in his subject. He also writes things.

Readers, I am sure, will be astounded to know that I dislike the Good Friday Agreement. This is for a myriad of reasons, not least for compromising with murderers. But let’s not go into that. That shoddy compromise is done, and isn’t going to be undone.

So let us proceed with the assumption that I supported it at the time as a means of bringing peace and so on and so forth. But  something happened in the Assembly on Tuesday which should be deeply concerning to those who value good governance, or at least a good legislative process. And people should be particularly concerned, because what happened on Tuesday has happened before, repeatedly in fact.

 

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History Repeating Itself?

The following letter appeared in todays edition of the Belfast Telegraph and indicates the level of concern shown from the loyalist working class public at the antics of the Historical Enquiries Team in the hounding of Protestants, whilst seemingly showing a disregard for republicans.

 

Over the past few weeks I have seen history repeat itself before my very eyes, a journey which many have taken before and if we don’t suitably address the issues of the past in a constructive inclusive manner, many may walk their footsteps again.  Many ex-prisoners from the troubles era now play proactive roles in the management of the peace process; many others have successful businesses whilst some have vanished into almost obscurity leading quiet family lives. We have ex prisoners at the seat of power in government organising the policies of the country.   No one is condoning their actions of the past, but what must be recognised is that almost to a man they endorsed the Good Friday Agreement and the beginning of a new era in our troubled history for our young.  Of course my point surrounds the actions of the Historical Enquiries Team (H.E.T), never mentioned in a referendum voted by the people of this country and brought onto the scene in 2005 after the St Andrews agreement between the four largest political parties.  The majority of those arrested have already served long prison sentences for other offences, which leads me to the question – What are we achieving by locking these old men away for a token gesture of two years? Hardly closure for loved ones.   If this is allowed to continue, where will it end.  A futile, destabilising and costly process for all communities who voted unanimously to move forward in the name of peace and prosperity after so many troubled years.

 

David Whiteside

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The ACT Initiative responds to Sunday Life article

According to the ‘Sunday Life’ newspaper and one of its journalists, Ciaran Barnes, as reported in the article ‘UVF peace group on last legs’ (10-03-13), the UVF/RHC conflict transformation programme Action for Community Transformation, ‘The ACT Initiative’, is in serious trouble. The author asserts that his source within ACT informs him that after the imprisonment of Bobby Rodgers, a vital ACT participant, following an HET-led enquiry into a political murder in 1973, other key participants within ACT are withdrawing their support. Read more »

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Thomas-Tucker-McKeown.

TUCKER McKEOWN

 

Last Monday, we the old Volunteers of the early seventies, had the privilege of providing a Guard Of Honour at the final parade of our fallen friend and loyal comrade Tucker McKeown. Tucker entered Crumlin Road and Longkesh as an eighteen years old RHC Volunteer in early 1973 in the company of his equally young friend and comrade the late, Volunteer Noel Baker. Tucker arrived in C wing complete with his trademark crombie overcoat, with the statutory red hankie in its top pocket, wide skinner jeans with the statutory braces hitching the wide bottoms of the skinners up above the top of his big DM boots and a Billy Connolly style, headfull of wild long frizzy hair, amusing now but the height of fashion back in 1973.
You won’t read about Tucker, in any of the books relating to the troubles, he didn’t leave behind any statements of  profound political literacy, or poetry but just like his big friends and fellow comedians, the late Davy Kirkwood and the late Sam Ferguson, Tucker was an essential component part of compound 18.      During the dark stressful early days of Political Status and the battles for political segregation and humane prison conditions, when confrontation with the army and the prison authorities was a regular occurrence, it was often the banter and pranks from these three loveable eejits, that made life bearable and victory achievable.
It was Tucker who nicknamed the Late Davy Ervine, “the Professor,” because of Davys love for big books and even bigger words.  He reverently nicknamed the late, Gusty Spence, “the auld boy”, he christened Fergie Robb the “Clumsy Drug, the Late” Billy Hammill “CoCo” and myself “Charlie Brown”. Billy Hammill got his revenge by nicknaming Tucker “Corporal Clott”, because of Tuckers obsession with always trying to please our compound 18 Commander, the Late Danny Strutt.
From shortly after his release and for the rest of his life Tucker suffered from serious illness, but in the true spirit of the old Compound 18 battle cry, “Get yer boots on”, Tucker battled on regardless and never let his illness stop him from living life to the full.   Right up until shortly before his death he was still working at house renovations with his life time friend and fellow comrade Fergie Robb, who he was still bantering right up until the very end from his hospital bed.

 STAND AT EASE, STAND EASY OLD COMRADE, WE WILL REMEMBER.

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And Another Thing….

Cardinal Keith O’Brien has apologised for his sexual behaviour which of course led to his resignation recently.  He says he realises that he has fallen behind the standards expected of him.  I would say that is open to conjecture.  The former highest ranking Roman Catholic cleric in Great Britain is the latest in a long line of Catholic clergy to fall below these so called standards–and a great deal of those priests were very high ranking.  From an outside point of view it looks like there ARE certain standards required and many priests are living up to them rather than falling below.  And like many of the other sexual miscreants in the that profession he never apologised or admitted to his deviances until he was actually caught out.

A little memo to the latest three apprehended would be bombers in Londonderry—conveniently labelled dissidents..in reality a branch of the omnipresent and good old fashioned IRA. You are as well sitting in the house and voicing your discontent on twitter or facebook.  Are you missing the glaring consistencies here?  Virtually everytime you go to do something or on the odd occassion you actually complete an “operation” arrests follow.  From time immemorial the Republican movement of whatever ilk has been riddled with informers and it now seems that there are more people talking than not.  Give all them guns and bombs back to your bosses and tell them to do their own dirty work!!

Who said that the Alliance paty are a pack of fence sitters? After years of ridicule and derision directed at them about having little or no input on anything of importance they gave the best possible response during a Belfast Telegraph poll of delegates at their recent conference.  When asked about their thoughts on a Border Referendum 42% stated that they had absolutely no opinion on whether they remained in Britain or became part of an united Ireland.  So there.  That’ll silence the critics!!

One final thought.  It seems that wee Jamie has finally ended his hunger and thirst strike–after two and a half days!!  Farley’s Rusks and Fruit Shoots all round then?

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A Fair Crack Of The Whip For Loyalists.

Historical Enquiries Team

 

September 2005 saw the emergence of the HET. Set up to investigate unsolved murders during ‘the troubles’ specifically between 1968 and 1998. The team aims to bring closure to many bereaved families who still have unanswered questions about the death or disappearance of their loved ones.

I’m aware that in 2008 the HET decided to pursue cases connected to the British Army. Since then research has been provided by Patricia Lundy to evidence that the HET treated the interviews with the soldiers differently from other HET cases. She evidenced that soldiers were given better treatment than paramilitaries. There was also a hint that differential treatment was shown to victims and perpetrators, this was identified by Patricia McBride (Victims Commissioner). The related dates for the investigations were 1970 – 1973. Of course these findings are absolutely despicable. For politicians on both sides who would seek to use inquiries to re-write history, these under investigated explorations into the past have a double-edged quality: they can inflict as much damage on them as on their opponents.

Unless there is some kind of overarching truth commission that allows for a full examination of what actually happened over the last four decades, however, we are not foolish enough to think that our government in Stormont and London are prepared to divulge embarrassing and dangerous information.

I’m highlighting this because on 16 March this year is the 30th anniversary of the murder of William Miller by the RUC in Belfast. I would like to ask how people can get the HET to investigate this RUC killing. There seems to be no investigations against RUC. Why can the HET investigate Loughall etc and not accept that they murdered this young man. Maybe there are people out there who can offer ideas into how we can address this matter.

 

South Belfast

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What Makes Me A Loyalist?

Article first appeared on   Jasonrobertburke.blogspot.co.uk

What Makes Me A Loyalist?

 

‘The Principles of Loyalism’ have laid out quite clearly what it means to be a Loyalist and how this should be upheld, but what are today’s perceptions of Loyalism?  Are there practical and theoretical differences in Loyalism?  Is it more acceptable in today’s society to be termed a Republican as a legitimate political position rather than a Loyalist?  A brief look at the make-up of the Northern Ireland Assembly would suggest this to be the case, there are no MLAs who would describe themselves as ‘Loyalist’, while Republican representation continues to grow.

 

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