From the BBC:
“Twelfth parades are taking
place across Northern Ireland”
Several hundred Orange Order
parades are under way across NI in a more localised Twelfth of July to try to
keep gatherings smaller than usual. Organisers have said they are largely
sticking to plans for parades of 500 people due to the Covid-19 pandemic. Up to
2,000 police officers will be on duty throughout the day on Monday. The
traditional parades were cancelled last year due to the health emergency, and
people were asked to celebrate the event in their own homes and gardens. The
last time the Twelfth took place in 2019, the policing operation cost £1.2m. The
Parades Commission has imposed conditions on a number of marches this year. A
planned nationalist protest in west Belfast was cancelled after the Orange
Order amended the proposed route. Though the event returns this year, it is not
a normal Twelfth and was organised weeks ago with health regulations in mind. Even
though the 500 limit on public gatherings has since been removed, the Orange
Order is sticking to its original plans for scaled-down parades. In Belfast, a
number of small parades took place before the main march at 10:00 BST. Bands
gathered at Carlisle Circus in north Belfast before the scheduled walk through
the city centre and onto Shaw's Bridge in the south of the city. No return
parades or large gatherings for speeches are planned. The Parades Commission
has issued determinations on events in Belfast, Portadown, Lurgan, Bellaghy and
Rasharkin, in some instances restricting march routes near flashpoint areas. In
west Belfast, a nationalist protest on Springfield Road has been cancelled
after the Orange Order dropped plans to walk through the gates of the Workman
Avenue peace line.
In the run-up to the Twelfth, the
Order urged members, bands people and spectators to be mindful of the public
health situation. "The institution wants everyone to enjoy the Twelfth,
but also to look after each other's health," said Reverend Mervyn Gibson,
Grand Lodge Secretary. "Whether that is simply wearing a face covering, or
regularly using hand sanitiser on the day, everyone has a part to play." Each
year, the 12 July celebrations by the Orange Order mark the anniversary of the
victory of Protestant William of Orange over Catholic King James II at the
Battle of the Boyne in July 1690. The Orange Order was formed near Loughgall in
County Armagh in 1795, when its founding members pledged their loyalty to the
royal family and swore to defend the Protestant faith.
'A Twelfth near home' In
June, it was announced that the 2021 parades would go ahead after discussions
between the Orange Order, then-First Minister Arlene Foster, Health Minister
Robin Swann and Northern Ireland's chief medical officer. "The
current regulations are such that the traditional county or combined district
Twelfth parades are not possible," the Grand Lodge's grand master Edward
Stevenson said. "As an institution we have had to make great
sacrifice over the past 12 months and more, but we are now in a better place
and our parades can take place, albeit in a slightly different format to a
normal year. "This year we will have smaller local parades, so it
will be a Twelfth near home for most members. This is a positive step towards a
return to our normal full parades - hopefully in 2022."
^ This is the Northern Irish
Protestants reminding the Northern Irish Catholics that they (the Protestants)
are at the top. Last night (Eleventh
Night) the Protestants burned Catholic symbols (crosses, Irish Flags, pictures
of the Pope, etc.) in their bonfires. Today (The Twelfth) the Protestants march
through Catholic neighborhoods - going
through the Peace Lines - to show their "superiority." It is the same thing as Neo-Nazis marching
through a Jewish neighborhood or the KKK marching through a Black neighborhood.
There is always violence. These bigoted marches need to be outlawed. I've been
to Northern Ireland and the fear, violence and death are still there. ^
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