T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1541.1 | | BIS1::MENZIES | Joan of Arc is Alive and Well...Done! | Tue Jan 23 1996 11:17 | 11 |
| Mark, i'm slightly embaressed that you could enter such a truthfully
flawed note into this conference. Although the chronological events are
correct, the simplistic reasons behind them are extreamly naive. Did
you not question its contents ? I find it hard to think that any adult
would just accept its contents blindly. Might I reccomend a book titled
"The Troubles 1967-1995", by Tim Pat Coogan. If you could refer to
this, or any other from a respectable author, before entering such
notes then you would save us all the embaressment of having to read
such a load of tripe.
Cheers, Shaun.
|
1541.2 | | GYRO::HOLOHAN | | Tue Jan 23 1996 11:47 | 9 |
|
Shaun,
You've attacked the note, yet you've provided no detail as to what
you found "truthfully flawed". My note was an accurate profile of
Mr. Adams. You might not like the fact that the truth doesn't paint
a very pretty picture of the British government, but all one needs to
read is an Amnesty International Report on British injustice to find
a confirmation of the events that taken place in north east Ireland.
Mark
|
1541.3 | | PLAYER::BROWNL | Tyro-Delphi-hacker | Wed Jan 24 1996 03:45 | 4 |
| As usual, .0 is 90% emotional hyperbole, and 10% fact. Reading it, I
wonder why Mr.Adams hasn't yet been canonised by the Pope.
Laurie.
|
1541.4 | | BIS1::MENZIES | Joan of Arc is Alive and Well...Done! | Wed Jan 24 1996 05:54 | 22 |
| Mark,
When i first saw the note, I wanted to reply and highlight the real
facts around certain 'events' listed in your note. Facts such as 'why
was internment really set up' because, as your note mistakingly
assumes, it was sod all to do with NIRCA and the civil rights movement.
Your profile paints Gerry Adams in a very Angelic Light because it
fails to provide, explore and analyse the events which make up his profile.
In fact, as we all know, it is a feeble attempt to promote Gerry Adams
and Sinn Fein.
Personaly, I have a distaste for such hyperbole. If you feel the need
to promote a person or cause then use intelligent arguments; but please
don't enter notes that are really not worth debating.
As for myself, I will discuss intelligently with you but I will not
waste my time on such irrelevent notes as .0
Shaun.
|
1541.5 | | PLAYER::BROWNL | Tyro-Delphi-hacker | Wed Jan 24 1996 07:53 | 7 |
| The worrying thing is that there are hordes of people who rely on such
tripe as their sole source of information on the situation back in the
"oul" country. There aren't any bare-faced lies in there, but a lot of
truth has been distorted and deliberately left out to present a
particular picture.
Laurie.
|
1541.6 | | XSTACY::BDALTON | | Wed Jan 24 1996 08:41 | 6 |
| re .4
I would be interested to hear your view on why internment was
really introduced, Shaun.
|
1541.7 | | CHEFS::COOPERT1 | Orpheus in the Underwear | Wed Jan 24 1996 08:58 | 15 |
| .0
HA! HA! HA!
AHHHHH! HA! HA! HA!
Brilliant! That's the funniest thing I've read for weeks!
Please, you've got to post it in HUMANE::HUMOR.
HA! HA! HA! No stop it.....
CHARLEY
|
1541.8 | | BIS1::MENZIES | Joan of Arc is Alive and Well...Done! | Wed Jan 24 1996 09:09 | 6 |
| Mr Dalton,
If you can wait till I have more free time, say the weekend, then i'd
be happy to share my view of why internment was introduced.
Shaun.
|
1541.9 | | GYRO::HOLOHAN | | Wed Jan 24 1996 13:17 | 16 |
|
Let's see, we've got Shaun calling it flawed, but not offering his opinion
as to why. We've got Laurie Brown's reference to the Pope, and refering to
"bare-faced lies" but never telling us what he considers a lie. Finally,
we have Charley, with his Ha, ha's but once again no disputing of the facts
in the article.
"Internment without trial was introduced in 1971 in response to the growing
civil rights movement and community unrest over continued human rights abuses
further provoking popular street resistance and campaigns of civil
disobedience."
Mark
|
1541.10 | | CHEFS::COOPERT1 | Te Nae Coutou Tamarekei Na | Thu Jan 25 1996 04:38 | 24 |
| Shaun has offered to put his opinion in at the weekend.
Laurie's opinion of the article isn't far off when he says that the
article paints Adams as a Saint, when everybody this side of the
Atlantic knows he isn't.
Me, I laughed because I treated the article as a joke, which it is.
The article is openly biased, twists the truth and in all, is the sort
of note I would expect like you to post. In fact, I don't
take your bigotted finger pointing seriously anymore, it's getting
boring.
Also,it is with dismay that must admit, that your rantings have probably
done more harm than good as far as many people within (and no longer
within) this conference with regard to their sympathies towards the people
of Ireland.
Good job mate, done well.
CHARLEY
CHARLEY
|
1541.11 | | BIS1::MENZIES | Joan of Arc is Alive and Well...Done! | Thu Jan 25 1996 05:59 | 20 |
| I have to say Mark that I agree with Charley. You post a note which is
intellectually insulting and then expect everyone who disagrees with it
to present their opposing arguments. Normaly, I would agree with your
expectations, however there are limits. The profile was so crap that
argueing it would just be a waste of time. If I wrote "All English
people are stupid and wear frilly red knickers" I certainly wouldn't
expect everyone to argue the toss, neither would I assume my
assertation was correct because no one did argue the toss.
However, this time I will present my views on why internment was
introduced and I will also disect your base note and rewrite it in an
unbiased context (this weekend). But, this is the last time I will dispute
such an irrelevent and unresearched note.
If you really feel the desire to propogate the republican cause then
might I suggest you do so via well thought out arguments. Try to pick
up "The Troubles, 1967-1995" by Tim Pat Coogan and use it to qualify
your otherwise dubious resources.
Shaun.
|
1541.12 | | GYRO::HOLOHAN | | Thu Jan 25 1996 09:19 | 13 |
|
So Shaun,
When should I expect you to justify your reason for calling the article
untruthful and flawed? In 17 months?
I'm sick to the back teeth of people who attack Mr. Adams, a man who has
been patiently pursuing the course of peace.
You know Shaun, you, Charley, and Laurie are doing a great injustice to
the British conservative party by being so blatant in your support for
them and their policies.
Mark
|
1541.13 | | CHEFS::COOPERT1 | Te Nae Coutou Tamarekei Na | Thu Jan 25 1996 09:59 | 14 |
| Mr Adams, who refuses to denounce punishments beatings is a man of
peace.
Mr Adams, who refuses to condemn the shootings of 5 civilians by the
I.R.A. under a flag of convenience IS a man of peace.
Mr Adams, who refuses to condemn mainland U.K. bombings by the I.R.A.
IS a man of peace.
You emabarrass the United States and the people of Ireland with your
hypocritical, ill-informed, racist rantings.
CHARLEY
|
1541.14 | | BIS1::MENZIES | Joan of Arc is Alive and Well...Done! | Thu Jan 25 1996 10:11 | 37 |
| >>When should I expect you to justify your reason for calling the article
>>untruthful and flawed? In 17 months?
For those who are WONs (Write Only Noters) please could you read my two
previous notes where I mention, rather clearly, that I shall write my
views this weekend (i.e. it should be in here by Monday, thats the day
after the weekend, this weekend!)
>>I'm sick to the back teeth of people who attack Mr. Adams, a man who has
>>been patiently pursuing the course of peace.
All people who are willing to state their views in public should be
prepared for criticism. I'm sure Mr Adams is quite aware of that fact
and doesn't need you defending him. If you dont link the heat then get
out of the fire.
>>You know Shaun, you, Charley, and Laurie are doing a great injustice to
the British conservative party by being so blatant in your support for
them and their policies.
I cannot speak for Charley or Laurie but I do not support all the
British Conservative party policies. In fact I think its fair to say,
as a social-democrat, that I support hardly any. The viewsI express in
here are my own and bear no tory influence. As I have said before Mark,
I am greatly interested in the Irish Troubles and spend a great deal of
my free time reading and reseaching them. I dont seek to criticise you
or anyone else, I'm just fed up with the propogander - be it Loyalist
or Republican. Its just the sort of bolox that provokes sectarianism
and disunity.
Do I ever hear you express any understanding of the other side ? Do I
ever hear you attempting reconcilliation ? Do I ever hear you have a
fair word for a 'Brit' ? NO, I can only conclude that your desire for
peace is, in my oppinion, a desire for victory or else.
Shaun.
|
1541.15 | Sinn Fein don't want peace | CBHVAX::CBH | Lager Lout | Sat Feb 10 1996 09:36 | 5 |
| Gerry Adams? Great bloke. So he's either sanctioned the bombing of civilian
areas, or he has no control over Sinn Fein's military wing. Either way, I
don't see that he has much to contribute to the peace process.
Chris.
|
1541.16 | | CHEFS::COOPERT1 | Captain Compassion. | Sat Feb 10 1996 11:33 | 10 |
| It would be interesting to see how certain people will justify this
action, all in the name of peace no doubt.
"We can't get what we want so we'll try and kill some innocent
civilians."
Fabulous.
CHARLEY
|
1541.17 | | CHEFS::COOPERT1 | Captain Compassion. | Mon Feb 12 1996 04:41 | 84 |
| RTw 02/11 1040 Sinn Fein leader Gerry Adams at a crossroads
By Martin Cowley
BELFAST, Feb 11 (Reuter) - Sinn Fein president Gerry Adams, an
implacable opponent of British rule in Northern Ireland, is at a
defining moment in his role as leader of the republicans' political
thrust after last Friday's bomb blast in London.
Adams turned Sinn Fein, the political wing of the Irish Republican
Army (IRA), from a sloganising lobby group to a well-oiled machine that
commands 12.5 percent voter support in Northern Ireland and gets a
hearing in London.
But politicians on both sides of the Irish border said his
leadership and authority had been dealt a devastating blow by the IRA's
decision to end a 17-month ceasefire by detonating a huge bomb in
easternLondon, killing two and injuring 100.
Adams, who took a political risk in the diehard republican camp by
persuading the IRA to turn from violence to politics, blames
Britain for not seizing the opportunity for progress presented by an IRA
truce declared in September 1994.
The bomb was effectively a message from the IRA that Adams had run
out of time, prompting British authorities to question how much sway he
has with the guerrilla group.
Britain insists Adams condemn the IRA action, but if he were to do
so he could forfeit the influence needed to once again persuade them
to put away their weapons and explosives.
For more than a year Adams, 47, has been hailed as a peacemaker by
Dublin and Washington while London kept him at arm's length,
refusingto accept Sinn Fein as a partner at peace talks while the IRA
hoarded stockpiles of arms.
The IRA called its truce after Britain and Ireland published the
"Downing Street Declaration" in December 1993 which guaranteed Sinn
Fein a place in talks if violence ended.
British Prime Minister John Major said the guerrillas had to start
handing in weapons before talks began, while Adams said an arms
surrender was never part of the truce deal and charged that Major
had double-crossed him and mainstream Irish nationalists.
Last March, U.S. President Bill Clinton turned down British entreaties
and welcomed Adams to the White House, a milestone in Sinn Fein's
long trek in from a political wilderness.
Adams was born in West Belfast, a traditional spawning ground for
anti-British guerrilla activity, and came up through the ranks
of republican activism the hard way, surviving internment and an
assassination attempt.
When Northern Ireland spiralled into region in the late 1960s, he
was a barman in a downtown Belfast pub.
British intelligence suspected him of being a top IRA officer and like
his father in an earlier period of anti-British upheaval, Adams was
interned in the early days of "the Troubles" in 1971. He tried to
escape and was sentenced to 18 months jail.
Adams has denied IRA membership and says that as president of Sinn
Fein, he does not speak for the extremist group.
In 1972 he was flown from internment to London, along with
high-levelRA leaders, to talk peace. But the effort collapsed and
Northern Ireland was propelled into violence.
Adams, who became Sinn Fein leader in 1983, was wounded in one of
several gun attacks and Protestants also bombed his home.
Looking like an archetypal academic, Adams is tall, bearded, smokes
a pipe and talks in a purposeful monotone drawl.
He has penned several books, personal reminiscenses, political
studies and childrens stories. Associates say that on long journeys to
political meetings across Ireland, he jots down notes for future
books.
Gerry Adams was born on October 5, 1948, and is married.
REUTER
|
1541.18 | | GYRO::HOLOHAN | | Mon Feb 12 1996 08:50 | 5 |
|
Sinn Fein is not the Irish Republican Army. You'd think that even the
British would finally begin to understand this.
Mark
|
1541.19 | Adams responds to events in London | GYRO::HOLOHAN | | Mon Feb 12 1996 08:52 | 44 |
| [Image]
9 February 1996
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Adams responds to events in London
Sinn F�in President Gerry Adams, responding to reports of an explosion in
London said:
``Our response to today's events is one of sadness.
My sympathy and thoughts are with those injured today.
I regret that an unprecedented opportunity for peace has floundered on the
refusal of the British government and the Unionist leaders to enter into
honest dialogue and substantive negotiations.
I appeal for calm.
Sinn F�in's peace strategy remains as the main function of our party. It is
my personal priority. All those who made genuine efforts to build a peace
process must keep our nerve in the face of predictable and hypocritical
reaction from public representatives who have done nothing to encourage the
risky search for a peace settlement.
That search for peace must be redoubled.''
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sinn F�in Press Office, 44 Parnell Square, Dublin 1
Tel: +353-1-8726100 and +353-1-8726839 � Fax +353-1-8733074
Released in the US by:
Friends of Sinn F�in, 1350 Connecticut Ave, NW, Washington DC 20036
Tel: +1-202-331-7886 � Fax: +1-202-331-8117
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sinn F�in Home Page � Sinn F�in Documents
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Web publication by [email protected]
Web archival by [email protected]
|
1541.20 | | MOVIES::POTTER | http://avolub.vmse.edo.dec.com/www/potter/ | Mon Feb 12 1996 08:59 | 12 |
| Mark,
John Major said that he accepted the six principles of the international
commission on Northern Ireland. I understand that Gerry Adams also accepted
these six principles.
Please explain to me how Adams' refusal to condemn the violence squares with
his acceptance of principle (d).
I look forward to seeing your reply.
//alan
|
1541.21 | | GYRO::HOLOHAN | | Mon Feb 12 1996 09:02 | 12 |
|
Alan,
"John Major said that he accepted the six principles of the international
commission on Northern Ireland. "
Right, I guess the British word for acceptance means, let me introduce
a new precondition, and ignore the recommendations of an International
peace commission. Wow, we really do have some serious language differences
between British English, and American.
Mark
|
1541.22 | | MOVIES::POTTER | http://avolub.vmse.edo.dec.com/www/potter/ | Mon Feb 12 1996 09:11 | 25 |
| Mark,
Watch the words I used. He said that he accepted the six principles. That
he chose to introduce a new conditino is not something that I would choose
to defend. However, please answer my question. To help, I've attached the
text of the six principles.
regards,
//alan
Accordingly, we recommend that the parties to such negotiations affirm
their total and absolute commitment: a. To democratic and exclusively
peaceful means of resolving political issues; b. To the total disarmament of
all paramilitary organisations; c. To agree that such disarmament must be
verifiable to the satisfaction of an independent commission; d. To renounce
for themselves, and to oppose any effort by others, to use force, or
threaten to use force, to influence the course or the outcome of all-party
negotiations; e. To agree to abide by the terms of any agreement reached in
all-party negotiations and to resort to democratic and exclusively peaceful
methods in trying to alter any aspect of that outcome with which they may
disagree; and, f. To urge that ``punishment'' killings and beatings stop and
to take effective steps to prevent such actions.
|
1541.23 | | CBHVAX::CBH | Lager Lout | Mon Feb 12 1996 09:15 | 6 |
| Mark, I notice that you're tending to make defamatory remarks about the
British in general. I guess that supports the theory that you have such
hatred of the peoples of this country that you really do approve of the
killing of innocent civilians by the IRA murderers.
Chris.
|
1541.24 | | CHEFS::COOPERT1 | The Human Tripod | Mon Feb 12 1996 09:42 | 11 |
| .18
>Sinn Fein is not the Irish Republican Army. You'd think that even the
British would finally begin to understand this.<
No, they not the I.R.A.
Part of, linked to, a wing of - maybe, but not *the* I.R.A.
CHARLEY
|
1541.25 | | PLAYER::BROWNL | I like Chris | Mon Feb 12 1996 10:48 | 14 |
| Holohan,
The peace has not foundered on any British failures or intransigence.
It has foundered on the back of a bomb made of 1000lbs of Semtex
planted and detonated by the IRA. The IRA clearly gave up the
democratic process because either it was too slow (it cannot be
anything but slow, given the need for constant compromise where none
appears possible) or because they thought they might not be getting
their own way. They didn't *have* to plant that bomb, no-one forced
them to. Other avenues hadn't been exhausted. They're just murdering
scum doing what they love to do. So take you IRA proaganda from
thousands of miles away, and shove it.
Laurie.
|
1541.26 | | GYRO::HOLOHAN | | Mon Feb 12 1996 11:35 | 32 |
|
"So take you IRA proaganda from
thousands of miles away, and shove it."
Is this what British discussion degrades to?
"Mark, I notice that you're tending to make defamatory remarks about the
British in general."
Nope, you're so upset over the London bombing, that you are doing a
good job all by yourself. I can understand why the British people
are upset. I can understand why the Irish Republican Army resort to
these kind of economic attacks after 18 months without peace talks
even beginning. As an outside observer, I suggest that you (and your
representatives in the British government) decide to sit down with
your enemies and reach a peaceful solution. Rhetoric, selective condemnation,
and continued attempts to lay blame aren't bringing either you or the
Irish people to a peaceful solution. Why don't you try sitting down
immediately with your enemy?
And Alan, the recommendations of the Mitchel commission sounded pretty
good to me. Why did the British government throw them in the trash?
The onus would have been on the Irish Republican Army, if the British
hadn't trashed the recommendations of this independent international
commission. Sadly, I think it is because the British don't want peace,
at least not if it means there might be a united Ireland, with the
potential for other celtic nations wanting out of the "United" part of
the Kingdom. Seems pretty expensive to me, both in lives, and money
for your nation to continue with the status quo.
Mark
|
1541.27 | | PLAYER::BROWNL | I like Chris | Mon Feb 12 1996 11:43 | 3 |
| Answer the question. Do you condemn the bombing, yes or no?
Laurie.
|
1541.28 | | CBHVAX::CBH | Be kind to Andrea 'coz she's daft | Mon Feb 12 1996 11:50 | 8 |
| .26,
no need to be patronising, Mark, it just undermines your already weak
argument. As to the comment of `doing a good enough job yourselves', I'd like
to point out that you have single handedly done more damage to the Republican
cause than anyone else could ever hope to achieve.
Chris.
|
1541.29 | | CHEFS::PANES | Public footprint size 8 | Mon Feb 12 1996 11:50 | 51 |
| <<< Note 1541.26 by GYRO::HOLOHAN >>>
> Nope, you're so upset over the London bombing, that you are doing a
> good job all by yourself. I can understand why the British people
> are upset. I can understand why the Irish Republican Army resort to
> these kind of economic attacks after 18 months without peace talks
> even beginning. As an outside observer, I suggest that you (and your
> representatives in the British government) decide to sit down with
> your enemies and reach a peaceful solution.
So which of the "enemies" do the British Government speak to?
The IRA? Gerry Adams who has nothing to do with the IRA?
> Rhetoric, selective condemnation,
> and continued attempts to lay blame aren't bringing either you or the
> Irish people to a peaceful solution.
I suspect that this statement could be equally applied to Messrs
McGuiness and Adams.
> Why don't you try sitting down
> immediately with your enemy?
Again, who represents the enemy?
> And Alan, the recommendations of the Mitchel commission sounded pretty
> good to me. Why did the British government throw them in the trash?
> The onus would have been on the Irish Republican Army, if the British
> hadn't trashed the recommendations of this independent international
> commission. Sadly, I think it is because the British don't want peace,
> at least not if it means there might be a united Ireland, with the
> potential for other celtic nations wanting out of the "United" part of
> the Kingdom. Seems pretty expensive to me, both in lives, and money
> for your nation to continue with the status quo.
I would suggest that most British people would not mind a United Ireland.
I would suggest that the British Government would quite gladly be shot
of Northern Ireland. And, if my experience in Dublin and conversations
with most people I know from the South is representative, they don't want
the North and all its attendant problems. So, I guess its down to few
people who either have a misty view of the past, or have no idea of what
the real situation is, or just enjoy the power of the gun, who want this
situation to continue.
Stuart
|
1541.30 | | CHEFS::COOPERT1 | Jamie badman -> Coke drinker | Mon Feb 12 1996 12:00 | 39 |
| .26
>Is this what British discussion degrades to?<
BBWWWAAAAAAAAAAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!
That's a laugh coming from you.
> I can understand why the Irish Republican Army resort to
these kind of economic attacks after 18 months without peace talks<
You seem to be quite pleased about your home city being bombed.
>I suggest that you (and your representatives in the British government)
decide to sit down with your enemies and reach a peaceful solution.<
The I.R.A. have killed several innocent citizens under a flag of
convenience, the have exploded a 1000lb bomb in London killing two more
and causing countless million pounds worth of damage. There are
systematic beatings of people who do not do as they order on the
streets of Ireland, scores of people have lost kneecaps.
Don't give me this "peaceful solution" horseshit. The only faction not
committed to peace is your beloved I.R.A. as the above proves beyond
all measure of any doubt.
<Rhetoric, selective condemnation, and continued attempts to lay blame>
Sound like one of your notes Mark.
>with the potential for other celtic nations wanting out of the "United"
part of the Kingdom. Seems pretty expensive to me, both in lives, and
money for your nation to continue with the status quo.<
The over whelming majority of the "Celtic" nations of the United Kingdom
wish to remain so.
CHARLEY
|
1541.31 | | PLAYER::BROWNL | I like Chris | Mon Feb 12 1996 12:09 | 43 |
| RE: <<< Note 1541.26 by GYRO::HOLOHAN >>>
>> "So take you IRA proaganda from
>> thousands of miles away, and shove it."
>>
>> Is this what British discussion degrades to?
You aren't discussing anything, you're spouting the same tired old crap
you always spout.
>> Nope, you're so upset over the London bombing, that you are doing a
>> good job all by yourself. I can understand why the British people
>> are upset. I can understand why the Irish Republican Army resort to
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
So, here we are again. You "understand". Well, I don't. Please tell me
what you think this cowardly act has contributed to the peace process.
>> these kind of economic attacks after 18 months without peace talks
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
I'm sure that the relatives and friends of the dead and injured will be
very pleased to hear that their loved ones were only an "economic"
target. What planet do you live on? these people were *killed* and
*maimed* by a bunch of cowardly thugs planting a bloody great bomb in
the middle of London. Get a grip! They weren't "economic" they were
people, with families, and friends.
>> Rhetoric, selective condemnation,
>> and continued attempts to lay blame aren't bringing either you or the
>> Irish people to a peaceful solution.
Hello Pot, this is Mr. Hypocrite the Kettle calling.
>> And Alan, the recommendations of the Mitchel commission sounded pretty
>> good to me. Why did the British government throw them in the trash?
The British Government didn't throw them away. They, oh this is
pointless. Another question:
Was the IRA justified in planting that bomb? Yes or no.
Laurie.
|
1541.32 | spare us the twisted excuses please | MKTCRV::KMANNERINGS | | Mon Feb 12 1996 13:04 | 19 |
| Mark,
the excuse that it was an economic target won't wash. If the IRA wanted
to do economic damage, they could have avoided Friday evening in the
rush hour couln't they? They could have parked the bloody thing on the
Severn Bridge at 3 am or something vaguely intelligent. They could have
announced the ending of the ceasefire and attaked some isolated telecom
installation a day later with small weaponry. The political effect
would have been the same, possibly more.
They wanted blood Mark. They wanted to create terror, so they can bring
London to a standstill next week with a few hoax calls.
So they went into the heart of London on Friday evening and it is just
good fortune that there were not a hundred dead to apologise for. But
then, you don't agree that the IRA should apologise to its victims do you?
Kevin
|
1541.33 | Adams Accuses Major of Betraying Peace Process | GYRO::HOLOHAN | | Mon Feb 12 1996 14:23 | 61 |
| [Image]
12 February 1996
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Adams Accuses Major of Betraying Peace Process
Sinn F�in President, Gerry Adams has accused John Major of ``betraying the
peace process.'' Mr. Adams challenged Mr. Major to ``honour his
commitments'' and to ``show real leadership and join with the Irish
government to lead everyone into the all-party talks and the substantive
negations that are required even at this late stage to restore the peace
process.''
Mr. Adams said:
``I have made my position and the position of Sinn F�in very clear about the
actions taken by the IRA Friday night. The responsibility for that explosion
lies squarely with the IRA.
``There is widespread shock and sadness at the deaths and injuries but there
is also a deep sense of disbelief that for 18 months the British government
and the Unionists have doggedly refused to enter into meaningful talks.
``John Major must accept his share of the responsibility for the breakdown
in the peace process. In private discussions with Sinn F�in; in discussions
with John Hume; in discussions between the British governments and the Irish
government; and in public statements, the British position was that
substantive talks were to begin 3 months after the start of an IRA
cessation.
``The British government reneged on that commitment. John Major betrayed the
peace process. In 18 months there was not one word of real negotiation. The
lesson is clear, you cannot make peace in Ireland unless Mr. Major wants to
make peace.
``In the Middle East and in South Africa breakdowns in the peace process
required those leaders to increase their efforts on behalf of peace.
``The challenge for Mr. Major is - Will he even now honour his commitments
and show real leadership. Will Mr. Major join with the Irish government to
lead everyone into all-party talks and the substantive negotiations that are
required even at this late stage to restore the peace process.''
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sinn F�in Press Office, 44 Parnell Square, Dublin 1
Tel: +353-1-8726100 and +353-1-8726839 � Fax +353-1-8733074
Released in the US by:
Friends of Sinn F�in, 1350 Connecticut Ave, NW, Washington DC 20036
Tel: +1-202-331-7886 � Fax: +1-202-331-8117 � E-mail:
[email protected]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sinn F�in Home Page � Sinn F�in Documents
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Web publication by [email protected]
Web archival by [email protected]
|
1541.34 | | CHEFS::COOPERT1 | Jamie badman -> Coke drinker | Tue Feb 13 1996 04:55 | 6 |
| Tired, racist crap Mark.
I feel sorry for you strangely enough.
CHARLEY
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1541.35 | what racism? | MKTCRV::KMANNERINGS | | Tue Feb 13 1996 06:02 | 10 |
| re .33,.34
CHARLEY,
if it is true that John Major lead SF/IRA to believe that talks would
start within 3 months of a ceasefire, then that is a valid point for
discussion. What is your answer to it? I cannot find anything in the
form of the note to object to.
Kevin
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1541.36 | | MOVIES::POTTER | http://avolub.vmse.edo.dec.com/www/potter/ | Tue Feb 13 1996 06:09 | 16 |
| if it is true that John Major lead SF/IRA to believe that talks would
start within 3 months of a ceasefire, then that is a valid point for
discussion. What is your answer to it?
That it was to be a permanent ceasefire. The scum never used the word
permanent. Yet the British government was willing to move forward - it
suggested decommissioning of weapons.
The scum refused to decommission a single weapon - it's now obvious why. Yet
the British government was still willing to try to find some kind of
democratic mandate for Sinn Fein in order that the peace process could move
forward - it proposed elections.
The scum responded by murdering two people in London and injuring many others.
//alan
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1541.37 | | CHEFS::COOPERT1 | Jamie badman -> Coke drinker | Tue Feb 13 1996 06:18 | 11 |
| .36
That just about sums it up Kev.
No-one, but no-one, can in any way, shape, or form, blame John Major for
the bombing of London.
One group of people are responsible, no one else.
CHARLEY
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1541.38 | 2 sides to every argument | MKTCRV::KMANNERINGS | | Tue Feb 13 1996 07:26 | 40 |
| I hope I have made my position on the bombings clear. The question is,
why did the peace negotiations grind to a stanstill, and why have Adams
and Bruton publicly stated that they feel Major was not playing
straight? You see the answer I have given is that the Unionists and the
Tory right were in a position to destabilise Major and the peace, thus
forcing him to chance his arm by dumping Mitchell and calling for
elections, although the Irish Government went on their knees
diplomatically to try and stop him.
And I want to say something else which may hurt some of you but it is
what I think:
It is the failure of British public opinion to face this aspect of the
problem and pretend that all is well in the UKOGBANI apart from some
murderous scum who should be hunted down etc.., which is a major
barrier to peace. And the failure to get a straight answer to this and
have a constructive debate about how the UKOGBANI came into existence
(through the threat of terrible and immediate war by the then Prime
Minister Mr Loyd George) in this conference amoung the British visitors
is as bad to me as Holohan's evasions.
So let us have some straight answers to these questions CHARLEY, Alan:
Is it acceptable to you that the Unionists have a veto on any change?
Is it acceptable to you that the Unionists slag off nationalists
striving for peace and refuse to cooperate with them?
Do you expect the ghettoes of the minority community in NI to lie down and
take another 75 years of discrimination from the Unionists?
On the question of elections: I have already dealt with this. Why not
32 county elections? The border has no more validity to nationalists
than if the nazis had grabbed Kent in 1940 and it was today part of the
FRG.
Kevin
Kevin
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1541.39 | | CBHVAX::CBH | Be kind to Andrea 'coz she's daft | Tue Feb 13 1996 07:39 | 5 |
| In my opinion, the Unionists are being a pain in the arse as far as sorting
out peace talks is concerned. I think it's understandable that they should
have reservations, but not to the degree we've seen.
Chris.
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1541.40 | | CBHVAX::CBH | Be kind to Andrea 'coz she's daft | Tue Feb 13 1996 07:42 | 10 |
| > On the question of elections: I have already dealt with this. Why not
> 32 county elections? The border has no more validity to nationalists
> than if the nazis had grabbed Kent in 1940 and it was today part of the
> FRG.
I think a better analogy would be, having all 32 counties voting on the future
of NI would be like having a Scottish referendum that's open to the entire
population of Great Britain.
Chris.
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1541.41 | Well said! | TAGART::EDDIE | Easy doesn't do it | Tue Feb 13 1996 07:47 | 28 |
| Re .38
> It is the failure of British public opinion to face this aspect of the
> problem and pretend that all is well in the UKOGBANI apart from some
> murderous scum who should be hunted down etc.., which is a major
> barrier to peace.
Kevin,
That was a very good note and I think you hit the nail on the head
with the extract I have quoted above. (I also like your
juxtaposition of "major" and "barrier to peace")This attitude was
evident last night on a "World In Action" programme which featured
Jonathan Dimbleby interviewing Gerry Adams. The sneering looks
perpetual interruptions and rudeness of the interviewer were evidence
of the attitude which you describe. One of the best parts of the show
was when Dimbleby referred to "...a bombing campaign on the mainland..."
and Adams replied "I live on the mainland. The mainland of Ireland."
This annoyed Dimbleby.
This attitude is perpetuated by the British media - the same
media who campaigned for the release of the murderer Clegg. Some of
the more narrow minded noters in this conference believe
everything they read in "The Sun" and "The Mirror" and close their
minds to every other source of (often more reliable) information
available to them.
Eddie.
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1541.42 | | CBHVAX::CBH | Be kind to Andrea 'coz she's daft | Tue Feb 13 1996 08:00 | 23 |
| > Some of
> the more narrow minded noters in this conference believe
> everything they read in "The Sun" and "The Mirror" and close their
> minds to every other source of (often more reliable) information
> available to them.
I'd be interested if you could identify these `narrow minded noters' you
mention. I'm frankly amazed that you believe that anyone here would take the
likes of `The Sun' seriously, which possibly says more about your own opinions
than it does about other people's.
I'd also be interested to know what you categorise at more reliable
information providers? Hopefully not the likes of the Irish Republican
Information Service or whatever the hell it calls itself. I know that there
are some people who take their words as gospel and all others as heresy, but
personally I like to take my news reports from a (hopefully balanced) set of
sources, such as BBC, CNN, Reuters and assorted other independant reporting
agencies who don't purport to be the mouthpiece of some organisation.
And, before you say it, I would strongly dismiss accusations that the BBC (or
the EBC as your ever so scathing wit put it) is a government mouthpiece.
Chris.
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1541.43 | | MOVIES::POTTER | http://avolub.vmse.edo.dec.com/www/potter/ | Tue Feb 13 1996 08:31 | 16 |
| On the question of elections: I have already dealt with this. Why not
32 county elections? The border has no more validity to nationalists
than if the nazis had grabbed Kent in 1940 and it was today part of the
FRG.
Kevin,
Let me turn this question back at you. IF the above had happened, AND the
majority of the residents of Kent today wanted to stay as part of Germany,
WOULD it be right that the people of Yorkshire could vote Kent back into the
UK?
It seems to me to be a direct parallel, I'd be interested in your response.
regards
//alan
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1541.44 | | PLAYER::BROWNL | I like Chris | Tue Feb 13 1996 09:00 | 18 |
| RE: .39
Well said Chris. In fact, Paisley is as big a bigot as any I've seen.
One by-product of an election of those empowered to negotiate for the
future of NI, might well be that Paisley gets no say. Now that'd be a
result! I don't think anyone, even the Unionists who seem to think
they've some kind of mandate by default, has the right to a veto,
whether through due processes or through the bomb.
Eddie, Dimbleby, and other of his ilk, such as James Naughtie from R4
and Jeremy Paxman from Beeb1 are unbelievably rude to everyone they
interview. It seems that these days it's considered to be a sign of a
"good" interviewer if he gives the interviewee as hard a time as
possible using ill-mannered and aggressive tactics. I disagree, and
prefer to more measured pace of earlier times. I think you're reading
too much into it, frankly.
Laurie.
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1541.45 | | CHEFS::COOPERT1 | Jamie badman -> Coke drinker | Tue Feb 13 1996 09:06 | 6 |
| .38
I'm with .39 .40 .42 .43 & .44
CHARLEY
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1541.46 | Now stand for Deutschland ueber alles please... | MKTCRV::KMANNERINGS | | Tue Feb 13 1996 09:33 | 36 |
| I have gone into this already, somewhere earlier. Do a search
"Gladstone" to find it. Yorkshire is not quite equivalent, as NI
represents a topological rape of Donegal and all the border counties
which affects the whole country.
I don't think an election or a referendum is the answer, what we need
is a a piece of fudge about the size of the Isle of Wight (?sp)
However, as you know I don't duck questions...
So a minority of the residents of Kent want to rejoin the uk but a
majority of former German settlers want to stay in Germany. It is clear
for a start that the deutsche Bundestag will have to vote on any new
legislation and it is certainly unfortunate that Dr Kohl is dependent
on the votes of the Kentish unionists to stay in power. The little
Englanders living in Kent are fed up with 50 years of compusory German in
schools , no jobs, atrocious treatment in Thanet concentration camp
etc. They are also up in arms that flying the union jack is illegal
and point out that the german settlers were given stolen farms in the
garden of England and that the border of the aicient county of Kent
was moved to give the Kentish unionists a built in majority after the
traitor king Edward VIII did a deal with Adolf Hitler.
So, now I am sitting under the oak tree in Moate park Maidstone
drinking a pint of Fremlins watching Yorkshire play Kent at cricket
while German helecopters are circling round like it was Casement Park,
talking to a Yorkshireman and a Bavarian Hop farmer from Yalding.
We are all reasonable chaps trying to solve the problem of the KRA
terrorists who are leving bombs at the Gedaechniskirche in Berlin.
No Alan, I would not say that in those circumstances, the Kentish
Unionists would have a veto, and you wouldn,t find many Yorkshiremen
who think that either.
Kevin
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1541.47 | | MOVIES::POTTER | http://avolub.vmse.edo.dec.com/www/potter/ | Tue Feb 13 1996 09:52 | 25 |
| re .46
That's the longest "yes" or "no" I've ever seen!
However, you omitted an important point or two. The only reason the
helicopters are flying around is because of the KRA bombings that have been
taking place. The KRA have spent the past twenty five years bombing people
and causing misery to both those loyal to Germany and those who want to revert
to the UK. The KRA is loathed by people on both sides of the divide.
Chancellor Kohl has told the KRA that he's willing to try to forget the blood
that the KRA has shed by its callous and cowardly use of bombs, even though
he and some of his political colleagues have been the target of KRA attacks.
The KRA even crippled the wife of one of his party chairmen - the brave KRA
that murders people in their beds.
Yes, Kohl's willing to set that aside and treat the KRA as human beings, and
just asks for a demonstration that the KRA is willing to set aside violence
by destroying a few of its weapons.
And how does the KRA respond? It waits until there's a children's
basketball event in the centre of Berlin, and places a huge bomb next door to
it.
//alan
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1541.48 | how to untie the knot... | MKTCRV::KMANNERINGS | | Wed Feb 14 1996 09:05 | 40 |
| re .47
Alan,
I am not arguing for ther IRA here, but I feel you don't understand the
nationalist argument and also that you ignore the reality of what was
NI under the Unionist jackboot. I'm not saying that nazi Kent is a
perfect analogy, but it does correspond closely to IRA thinking,
particularly Rory O'Brady. In .47 you suggest that the repression is a
response to IRA terror but that is wrong. In the late sixties when
loyalist pogroms of the Cathlic ghettoes started again and Unionists
disgraced themselves beyond belief with their participation in the
attacks on the NICRA, the IRA was practically non-existent. Graffitti
appeared in Belfast "IRA I ran away". The IRA was born again of
B-special brutality. Of one thing you can be sure, they are never going
back to that, and they will bomb and bomb and bomb for another 100
years if they have to. So by not rejecting the Unionist veto and
calling for 6-county elections as a precondition to negotiations,
UKOBANIans are blocking the way to peace.
It is clear to SF and everyone down here that the Unionists are using
the election ruse to play for time and would use their built in
majority in a negotiating body to veto everything. Trimble is still
playing politics slagging Dick Spring and is simply pretending to be
interested in peace.
I have noted the crticisms of Unionism here, but that is not enough.
The veto is the bad tooth which will have to be pulled.
That does not mean a sell-out, but it does mean that they will have to
join in the spirit of the great sovereignty fudge which is being
cooked and work together with all those who want peace to isolate the
cancer of violence.
Of course it goes without saying that every IRA outrage makes this
harder to achieve and will make the result more fragile, as if loyalist
terrorists feel that the IRA bombs achieve anything, they will get
their automatic rifles out and go on the rampage again.
Kevin
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1541.49 | | PLAYER::BROWNL | I like Chris | Wed Feb 14 1996 10:14 | 3 |
| Good note Kevin, good note.
Laurie.
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1541.50 | | CHEFS::COOPERT1 | tell mum before you go somewhere | Wed Jun 19 1996 08:18 | 87 |
| UK News Electronic Telegraph Wednesday June 19 1996
By Toby Harnden, Ireland Correspondent
Sinn Fein is cast into wilderness
TWO questions posed to Gerry Adams yesterday prompted more than 10
minutes of rhetoric from the Sinn Fein president and angry exchanges
with the interviewer, who accused him of giving evasive and convoluted
replies.
Mr Adams was telephoned in west Belfast by Sean O'Rourke, presenter of
RTE radio's lunchtime news in Dublin. He was asked questions drawn up
by the Irish government after the IRA bomb in Manchester and the
shooting of a detective in Adare, Co Limerick.
The first question was: "Have you actually gone to the IRA to ask them
to reinstate the ceasefire?" Mr Adams's response was: "Well, I'm going
to answer the question, Sean, and my answer to the question is that I'm
not going to speculate about exactly where we are.
"What I'm trying to do is to bring about, along with others, a peace
settlement, and if it was useful in that process to answer that
question, to speculate on these matters, I would speculate until the
cows come home. My commitment is to see an end to all armed actions and
a restoration of the peace process. That's the focus and I say what I'm
saying in good faith.
"And, of course, it's a totally legitimate question and your listeners
can draw whatever conclusions they want from my answer."
The second question was: "Does Sinn Fein support the armed struggle of
the IRA?" Mr Adams replied: "Well, first of all Sinn Fein wants to see
an end to the armed struggle. That's our position in one sentence. We
want to see an end to the armed struggle. We're not involved in it; we
do not advocate it.
"We clearly are a party which has suffered as a result of the armed
actions of others, and our focus has been, and will continue to be, the
total end of all armed actions; and I do that with my colleagues, in
the first instance to get a negotiated settlement which removes the
causes of the conflict, and in the second instance - and it's part of
the same project - to try and build an alternative to the armed
struggle. And I have to say that I think you have to look at our record
on this as well."
When pressed about the Manchester bomb, he said: "I wish that the bomb
had not happened in Manchester
The interviewer accused Mr Adams of evasiveness. Mr Adams said: "Let's
not confuse this any more than it needs to be, please. The answer to
the question was given in my first sentence. I want to see an end to
armed struggle.
"That is the clear, concise, non-complicated answer to the question. I
want to see an end to armed struggle and my record and the record and
the endeavours of our party to help bring that about are clearly on the
public record."
When pressed about the Manchester bomb, he said: "I wish that the bomb
had not happened in Manchester. I wish that there weren't British
soldiers on the streets of the six counties [Northern Ireland]. I wish
there wasn't discrimination. I wish that our island wasn't partitioned.
"But the reality is that we deal with the objective situation and the
conditions which exist in making peace. And making peace is very
difficult."
He said he wanted to deliver a lasting peace settlement: "That's my
commitment and, no matter how difficult it is, that is what I am going
to pursue. And I may fail. But it won't be through any lack of trying.
"And my conviction is that we will get a peace settlement and that it
will grow out of inclusive dialogue and that Sinn Fein will be in there
alongside the other parties and working with the two governments to
bring about an accord."
He accused the Irish government of being "discourteous" in using the
media to put questions to Sinn Fein. He said John Bruton, the Irish
Prime Minister, was "fully aware of the efforts of Sinn Fein's
leadership to restore the peace process".
The interview continued for 10 minutes with Mr O'Rourke becoming more
and more frustrated as Mr Adams dug himself deeper and deeper into his
trench.
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