Thursday, September 28, 2017

Belfast Threats

From the BBC:
"Belfast Catholic families flee 'sectarian threats'"

Four Catholic families in Belfast have left their homes having received sectarian threats, a housing authority has said.They live in Cantrell Close, a shared housing area off the Ravenhill Road.Sinn Féin said the threats came from the Ulster Volunteer Force (UVF), a loyalist paramilitary group.One of those who fled said police had visited his home on Tuesday night, telling the family they were under threat and would have to leave. "I've just got my family out of there, we're moving into temporary accommodation at a friend's house," he told BBC Radio Ulster's Talkback programme."We're not going to be able to go back to get clothes or anything and we went to the Housing Executive to try and get us rehoused." The man said he hoped he, his pregnant partner and their family would find a new home before Christmas because they are expecting another child in January.He added that he had been left "stunned" by the threat, believing that his family were targeted because they are Catholics."We've been living there for just over a year and never had a problem - talked away to the neighbours, everyone was really nice - then this just came out of nowhere," he said. Ch Supt Chris Noble said the Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) would not speculate on who was behind the threats.But he added: "Whoever it is clearly has no regard whatsoever for what the people of east Belfast want in terms a community that can work effectively together and without division."We want to work with the residents in that area to make sure this doesn't happen again."Ch Supt Noble denied that police had asked the families to leave their homes, adding that the job of the police was to "keep them safe". The Housing Executive said: "A number of families in the south Belfast area have presented to us as homeless today claiming sectarian intimidation."Cantrell Close is a housing development which is part of the Together Building United Communities programme.The strategy, which was launched by the Northern Ireland Executive in 2013, is aimed at "improving community relations and building a united and shared society".There was controversy in June when union flags and and UVF flags were put up in the area.Sinn Féin's Máirtín Ó Muilleoir said: "What family wants to get the PSNI arriving late at night, saying: 'Urgently, move from your home'? "The chief constable needs to get tough with the east Belfast UVF - they operate with absolute impunity in that area and they're allowed to get away with this."[The police] need to stand up to sectarianism." However, the East Belfast Community Initiative, which purportedly "mediates on behalf of ex-combatants linked to east Belfast UVF", said there was no proof that any threat was issued by the UVF."Sinn Féin, within their own comments, made clear that the PSNI did not identify the UVF when delivering these supposed threats," said the group."It is Sinn Féin that identified the UVF, and others have jumped on this bandwagon in order to push their anti-unionist cultural war."Alliance Party MLA Paula Bradshaw said "paramilitary thugs" were "trying to stamp their control over an area".Democratic Unionist Party representatives described the threats as "absolutely disgraceful"."This area has traditionally been welcoming to all and those responsible do not represent the area," said Emma Little Pengelly and Christopher Stalford.


^ This may seem like a random occurance and not that big of a deal to anyone besides the families directly affected, but this is exactly how The Troubles started in 1968. For several years before that Protestant thugs and para-military groups threatened Catholic families and even started a campaign of burning them out of their houses. When those families then went to their Housing Executive for a new place to live they found corruption and discrimination. An example is: a Catholic family with several kids were denied a house because it was given to a single Protestant woman with no children. The Catholic Civil Rights Movement in Northern Ireland was then formed and was non-violent until the British Military started massacring innocent men, women and children in the early 1970s (which the British Government has since admitted.) Even though people around the world like to think that complete peace was brought to Northern Ireland by the Good Friday Agreement in 1998 all you have to do is see all the stories like this one or go to Northern Ireland and see it in person - like I did. Hopefully, the PSNI, the Housing Executive and the British Government take these kinds of threats and violence more seriously than they did in the 1960s (well the PSNI wasn't around back then the RUC was and was disbanded because of it's discriminatory practices to Catholics over the decades.) The threat to any side by any para-military group needs to be addressed and stopped. No one wants a return to the 30 years of death and violence that Northern Ireland, the UK, the Republic of Ireland and Western Europe suffered through. ^

http://www.bbc.com/news/uk-northern-ireland-41424906

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