From Reuters:
“'Bloody Sunday' still scars
Northern Ireland 50 years on”
(People stand outside the Houses
of Parliament to commemorate the victims of the "Bloody Sunday"
shootings ahead of the 50th anniversary, in London, Britain, January 27, 2022.)
Five decades after British
soldiers killed 13 unarmed Catholic civil rights marchers on one of the
defining days of the Northern Ireland conflict, relatives are still searching
for the justice they believe is needed for a scarred society to heal. Family
and friends of the 13 Catholics who died in Londonderry on "Bloody
Sunday", Jan. 30, 1972 - and of a 14th who died later of his wounds -
gathered this week for a series of commemorations to mark the event that helped
fuel three decades of bitter sectarian and political violence. While a judicial
inquiry found in 2010 that the victims were innocent and had posed no threat to
the military, the commemorations come just months after prosecutors announced
that the only British soldier charged with murder will not face trial. "Our generation are very slowly dying
off... and we would like to see it [justice] when we're still alive," said
Jean Hegarty, whose brother Kevin McElhinney was shot dead aged 17. She
supports legal action to bring the soldier to trial. "My head would say
no, but my heart would still like to believe that we can see at least some
soldiers face a court," she said.
BITTERNESS Northern
Ireland's 1998 peace process has been hailed around the world for its success
in largely ending a conflict in which more than 3,000 people were killed. Irish
nationalist militants seeking unification with the Republic of Ireland faced
off against the British Army and loyalists determined to keep the province
British. But nearly a quarter of a century after the peace, the
bitterness lingers. A number of flags of the British Army's Parachute
Regiment, whose members shot the protesters, were hung from lamp posts in the
city in the run-up to the commemorations, something that has become an annual
ritual. The regiment condemned the action. A leading member of Northern
Ireland's pro-British Democratic Unionist Party complained that "countless
words" had been written about Bloody Sunday but little about two soldiers
shot dead by Irish nationalist militants a few days earlier. While the
Irish Republican Army (IRA) was responsible for about half of the deaths in the
conflict, nationalists argue the violence was spurred by a repressive state
that denied them their rights - and rarely more vividly than on Bloody Sunday. "I'm
disappointed by the belligerence of politicians," said Hegarty. "In
some respects there has not been a lot of change. In some respects there has
been tonnes."
Commemorations this weekend will
include a memorial service on Londonderry's main square and a play centred on a
famous photograph of priest Edward Daly holding up a white handkerchief to
British soldiers as men tried to carry a dying man to safety. The play will be
performed entirely by locals in a city where January 30 retains a "real
deep poignancy", said director Kieran Griffiths, who worked closely with
the relatives. Gleann Doherty, whose father Patrick was among those killed on
Bloody Sunday, believes the relatives have been given more closure than most
impacted by the conflict. The detailed inquiry led Britain's then-Prime
Minister David Cameron in 2010 to apologise for the "unjustified and
unjustifiable killings".
The current British government
last year announced a plan to halt all prosecutions of soldiers and militants
in a bid to draw a line under the conflict - a move that angered relatives and
has been rejected by all the main local political parties. "We're sort of
one of the lucky - if you can call it lucky - ones to have some sort of answers
to what happened," said Doherty. "It's fairly difficult to get any
sort of reconciliation... when you have the British government trying to close
the door on any possibility" of justice, he added.
^ The British Government continues
to cover-up the crimes of the British Military by not bringing any of the
Soldiers, who shot and killed or wounded unarmed, peaceful people simply
because they were Catholics, to justice. Add Brexit to all of this and 50 years
on and things are not much better than they were back in 1972. ^
https://www.reuters.com/world/uk/bloody-sunday-still-scars-northern-ireland-50-years-2022-01-28/
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