From the BBC:
“Secretary of state condemns
bonfire sectarianism”
Secretary of State Hilary Benn
has condemned sectarian signs and effigies on Eleventh night bonfires. Signs,
election posters and an effigy appeared on bonfires in parts of NI during what
the Northern Ireland Fire and Rescue Service (NIFRS) described as "a
relatively quiet" night.
Bonfires are lit on 11 July to
kick off the Twelfth of July celebrations. The NIFRS attended 37
bonfire-related incidents overnight, dealing with 25% fewer emergency calls
than last year. A sign apparently threatening SDLP leader Colum Eastwood was
placed alongside a hanging effigy on a bonfire in the Rathcoole area of
Newtownabbey. Images of First Minister Michelle O'Neill and SDLP MP Claire
Hanna were also placed on a bonfire. Mr Eastwood said it was saddening that
such displays have become “normalised” and happen annually. It is a “minority”
of people, he added, who “feel they have to connect" cultural celebrations
"with sectarian abuse and death threats”. “I think the Twelfth should be
able to be celebrated and people should be encouraged to do that. I would
always defend people’s right to do that. But it is not OK at the same time to
say, you are then allowed to do whatever you want,” he told BBC Radio Foyle’s
North West Today programme. “There are elements of it that are clearly
hate-filled,” the Foyle MP added. Unionist leaders, he said, need “to be much
more proactive in trying to move people away from that kind of thing”. The
Police Service of Northern Ireland said it was investigating material placed on
the Rathcoole bonfire as a hate crime. The board was removed following
engagement between neighbourhood policing teams and the local community, police
added.
Speaking at the Twelfth parade in
Irvinestown, County Fermanagh, Mr Benn condemned the threatening messages and
burning of effigies of fellow MPs. "I really don’t know why people do
that. It’s wrong. It’s disrespectful. We should all be able to celebrate our
traditions and histories without engaging in that sort of activity," Mr
Benn said. "And when that does happen then it undermines what is the
central purpose of all of this: respect - respect for all." Election
posters depicting Ms O'Neill and Ms Claire Hanna were placed on a bonfire in
south Belfast, alongside sectarian threats.
Republic of Ireland and
Palestinian flags were also placed on the structure. Last year, there was
condemnation after an image of Ms O'Neill appeared on a bonfire in Dungannon,
County Tyrone. Signs criticising local newspaper titles have also appeared on
several bonfires, one of which mentioned SDLP councillor Dónal Lyons, who said
"there is a lot more to life than poking people in the eye". "This
is depressing, not in that it’s about me but that there’s young ones being
taught that this is how they can best celebrate their community and
traditions," he wrote on X, formerly Twitter.
In 2023, police received 68
reported incidents, including 21 alleged hate crimes, involving the burning of
election posters or effigies, and 47 alleged hate-related incidents, including
the burning of flags. NIFRS Assistant Chief Fire and Rescue Officer Brian
Stanfield said it had been "a relatively quiet eleventh night for Northern
Ireland Fire and Rescue Service". "Between 6pm and 2am, we received
109 emergency 999 calls. This resulted in our firefighters attending 78
operational incidents, 37 of which were bonfire related. "During this
period, the number of emergency calls received was down 25% when compared to
2023." On Wednesday evening, hundreds of people gathered to watch a
bonfire burn in Moygashel in County Tyrone. It featured a mock police car on
top of the structure. The bonfire was also adorned with a Republic of Ireland
flag and an Irish-language banner reading Saoirse don Phalaistin (Freedom for
Palestine). In 2023, a boat was placed on top of the fire in Moygashel, themed
as an anti-Northern Ireland Protocol bonfire.
Why are bonfires lit over the
Twelfth? Hundreds of bonfires are lit every year in unionist communities
across Northern Ireland on the eve of the Twelfth of July, the main date in the
annual parading season. The date commemorates the Battle of the Boyne in
1690 when the Protestant King William III - also known as King Billy and
William of Orange - defeated Catholic King James II. Bonfires were lit
to welcome - and guide - William. Historically, a much smaller number of
bonfires were lit in mainly nationalist areas on 15 August to mark the Catholic
feast of the Assumption, a tradition that was replaced in some places by
bonfires to mark the anniversary of the introduction of internment - or
detention without trial - on 9 August 1971. The Craigyhill bonfire in
Larne has been the largest in NI in recent years. In 2022 it reportedly
reached about 202ft (62m) in height.
^ I'm not sure why anyone in
Northern Ireland is surprised that there is violence and hate during The
Twelfth.
Since the 1800s the whole purpose
of The Twelfth is for Protestants across Northern Ireland (and all of Ireland
until 1922) to show how much their hate Catholics.
The Protestants spend weeks
building these Bonfires (I saw them being build when I was in Belfast and
Derry/Londonderry in June 2010) and then burn any Catholic symbol (Pictures of
Catholic Politicians, Pictures of the Pope, etc.)
The Protestants then march in
large numbers through Catholic Neighborhoods to "remind" the
Catholics of their place at the bottom in Northern Ireland.
Note: Northern Irish Catholics
only received the same Equal Rights as Northern Irish Protestants, the Welsh,
the Scots and the English in 1998 - after the Good Friday Agreement. ^
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cn381p87vylo
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