P10 Layout 1

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

P10 Layout 1 INTERNATIONAL TUESDAY, AUGUST 9, 2016 Irish priest who waved white handkerchief on ‘Bloody Sunday’ dies BELFAST: The priest who waved his white accurate in a 2010 inquiry that concluded Britain’s most notorious miscarriages of justice bloodstained handkerchief at British troops that the civilians had been killed without before being acquitted in 1991. on “Bloody Sunday” in 1972 in what became justification, prompting an apology from “Bishop Edward will be remembered as a one of the enduring images of the Northern Prime Minister David Cameron. The 1972 fearless peace-builder,” Archbishop of Irish conflict, died yesterday aged 82, the killings changed the course of the Ireland Eamon Martin said in a statement. Irish Catholic church said. Edward Daly, who “Troubles” that erupted in the late 1960s, “His untiring advocacy ... earned him went on to become a bishop and peace boosting the Irish Republican Army’s violent respect from some, suspicion from others.” campaigner, was shown on television campaign for Northern Ireland to secede Northern Ireland Deputy First Minister around the world leading a group of men from the United Kingdom and become part Martin McGuinness, who has admitted to carrying a dying youth past British troops of the Republic of Ireland. being an active Irish Republican Army who had opened fire at a crowd of Catholics A 1998 peace deal, brokered after more member on Bloody Sunday, said Daly had after a protest march, killing 13. than 3,600 had died, has largely ended the been “a constant right through the course Daly, who went on to spend 19 years as conflict that pitted mostly Catholics, who of the last 40 odd years,” noting he had Bishop of Derry and decades as a peace wanted a united Ireland, against Unionists, been critical of the IRA as well as all other campaigner, died early on Monday, the Irish mostly Protestants, who wanted it to remain sides in the conflict. James Brokenshire, Bishops’ Conference said in a statement. His part of the United Kingdom. Daly cam- Britain’s Secretary of State for Northern testimony about the events Bloody Sunday paigned for innocent victims of the “Troubles”, Ireland, said: “He was an iconic figure in civic helped garner public opinion to the side of including the Birmingham Six, who were BELFAST: In this June 14, 2010 file photo, a mural depicts Edward Daly waving a life, and he will long be remembered as a the protesters. It was rejected by the British wrongly convicted of bombing two pubs in white handkerchief as he led Jackie Duddy away from danger on Bloody cleric who worked tirelessly to promote authorities at the time, but was proved the city and spent 16 years in jail in one of Sunday, in the Bogside area of Derry, Northern Ireland. — AP peace for all.” — Reuters Germany and Netherlands to test joint missile defense operations Test could ease deployments in eastern Europe COLOGNE: Germany and the Netherlands will in an exercise at a NATO site in Crete in early The new German-Dutch concept of operations October test joint operations of their Patriot air October that will include 300 German and 100 uses the Surface to Air Missile Operations Centre, and missile defiance systems in what could be a Dutch soldiers, as well as 10 US soldiers and a US which was initially developed by Airbus Group SE model for multilateral deployments to Poland or Aegis destroyer, according to German and US for the German Air Force. The SAMOC system can the Baltic states in coming years, a top German officials. After the test, German and Dutch mili- now manage all air defiance equipment operated general said. Brigadier General Michael tary officials plan to declare their Bi-national Air by NATO members, although Soviet-style surface- Gschossmann said joint operations enabled by & Missile Defense Task Force ready for combat, to-air missile systems still used by Poland and the new approach could help NATO reassure and will offer it to NATO for future deployments. other eastern European states as a legacy of their Baltic member states and Poland, which are Baltic state officials welcomed US deployment of Communist past cannot be fully automated and clamoring for more defenses after Russia’s a Patriot battery to eastern Europe during a requires a human in the loop. annexation of Ukraine’s Crimea region. series of exercises earlier this summer, but the The German-Dutch air and missile defiance Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia say they fear symbolic value would be greater if the deploy- cooperation, signed in January and known as Russian aggression should Moscow’s relations ment involved more than one country, Project APOLLO, is part of a broader series of with the US-led Atlantic alliance deteriorate fur- Gschossmann said. steps that have closely bound the two countries’ ther. The Baltic states are linked to the rest of navies and ground forces together in recent NATO only by a narrow strip of land running ‘Reassurance’ years. Gschossman said Germany and the KANO: In this file photo Boko Haram’s leader Abubakar Shekau speaks to the cam- between Belarus, a staunch ally of Russia, and “We could offer even more reassurance and Netherlands also plan to jointly develop an air era. A struggle in Nigeria’s Islamic extremist group Boko Haram is playing out in pub- Kaliningrad, the heavily militarized Russian send a political signal if we took a mixed task defiance system operated directly by their lic with a new leader named by the Islamic State group accusing longtime leader coastal enclave. The October test will validate a force with German, Dutch and US Patriot sys- armies to replace the Stinger guided missile, Abubakar Shekau of killing his own people and living in luxury while fighters’ babies new joint concept of operations for air and mis- tems - a purely defensive asset - and set it some- which must be phased out in the next decade. starve. — AP sile defense developed by Germany and the where in Poland or the Baltic states.” Dutch, Dutch Defense Ministry spokesman Jeroen de Netherlands over the past year, the first of its German and US Patriot missile systems were Vries said the two countries were looking into Boko Haram’s shadowy leader kind in Europe, Gschossmann, commander of rolled out separately in Turkey for two years from integrating the Dutch and German Patriot mis- ground-based units for Germany’s Air Force, told January 2013, where they helped protect fellow sile systems. “The task force can be deployed vows to fight on in new video Reuters in an interview. alliance member Ankara’s air space against the within NATO as capacity to protect alliance terri- More than 40 interceptors will be fired during possibility of missile attacks from war-torn Syria. tory,” he said. — Reuters KANO: Boko Haram’s shadowy leader had been deposed as Boko Haram’s chief. Abubakar Shekau has appeared in a new Barnawi’s appointment was contained in video vowing to fight on, shrugging off an a magazine issued by the Islamic State apparent split in the hardline jihadist group group, to which Boko Haram pledged alle- blamed for thousands of deaths since 2009. giance in March last year. Shekau dismissed “I... Abubakar Ash-Shakawy (Shekau), the Barnawi as an infidel who condoned living leader of Jama’atu Ahlissunnah Lidda’awati in an un-Islamic society without waging Wal Jihad, made it a duty for myself (to jihad. Shekau became leader after Nigerian fight) Nigeria and the whole world,” Shekau security forces killed the group’s founding said in the video released on Sunday, using chief Mohammed Yusuf in 2009. Omar the group’s name since it declared alle- Mahmood, a security analyst with US-based giance to the so-called Islamic State. Foreign Policy Research Institute who has Last week, Shekau said in an audio mes- spent the past five years researching Boko sage he was still head of the group despite Haram, said Shekau was removed because his purported replacement by Sheikh Abu of his highhandness and ruthlessness. Musab Al-Barnawi, a former Boko Haram “One thing that has remained constant, spokesman. “We have no desire to fight our however, is the focus on attacks against Muslim brethren,” Shekau, who last regional security forces, with Muslim civil- appeared in March, said in the 24-minute ian deaths still ignored. This aspect seems video. Shekau ridiculed suggestions that he to be a key concern for IS propagandists,” was dead, and looked more composed and Mahmood said. “By contrast, Abu Musab energetic than in previous appearances. al-Barnawi, the man announced as the new “I’m alive by the permission of Allah,” he leader, clearly stated in his al-Naba inter- said in his speech in Arabic and Hausa, view that attacks against Muslim civilians, adding that he would only die when his mosques and markets will not be a staple time came. of his leadership.” In the video he is wearing camouflage Sources close to Boko Haram said gear and holding a machine gun, standing Barnawi, aged in his early twenties, is none between two Islamist fighters in balaclavas other than Habib Yusuf, the eldest son of armed with rocket-propelled grenade group founder Yusuf. They said he was put launchers. He taunted President under Shekau’s care following the death of Muhammadu Buhari’s administration and his father, but the pair fell out over ideolog- condemned Western countries including ical and operational differences. Boko the United States, France, Germany and Haram has been blamed for some 20,000 “the tyrants of the United Nonsense (UN)”. deaths and displacing more than 2.6 mil- At the end of his speech-apparently filmed lion people since it launched a brutal insur- in Boko Haram’s stronghold in the Sambisa gency in Nigeria in 2009.
Recommended publications
  • 'Triptych', from Seamus Heaney's Field Work
    An In-Depth Study of ‘Triptych’, from Seamus Heaney’s Field Work An In-Depth Study of ‘Triptych’, from Seamus Heaney’s Field Work Martin Connolly This paper focuses critical attention on ‘Triptych’, the sequence of three poems in Seamus Heaney’s 1979 collection Field Work. The sequence directly follows the opening poem ‘Oysters’, and by virtue of position alone commands attention. It is the first of a number of poems in the collection to address the conflict in Northern Ireland, and can be seen as a kind of public poetry, very different in tone, theme and style from early Heaney. This exploration derives from attempts to provide satisfactory answers to questions concerning elements within the sequence which resist smooth interpretation. My method of approach is largely chronological, in the sense that I go through the poems starting at the beginning and plough through to the end, stanza by stanza, sometimes line by line, attempting to guide the reader toward an understanding of the poem derived from apparent textual evidence. Early on, however, I do state what I think the poetic sequence is designed to be, and this argument informs my interpretation throughout. Yet, at every point, I provide what I consider a coherent rationale and logic for my critical opinions. I would certainly welcome debate on each and every point. The conclusions I have come to in regard to this poetic sequence, are, at times, negative, but not exclusively so. I have looked at this poetic sequence up close and - 129 - found it to be problematic in a number of areas.
    [Show full text]
  • Irish History Links
    Irish History topics pulled together by Dan Callaghan NC AOH Historian in 2014 Athenry Castle; http://www.irelandseye.com/aarticles/travel/attractions/castles/Galway/athenry.shtm Brehon Laws of Ireland; http://www.libraryireland.com/Brehon-Laws/Contents.php February 1, in ancient Celtic times, it was the beginning of Spring and later became the feast day for St. Bridget; http://www.chalicecentre.net/imbolc.htm May 1, Begins the Celtic celebration of Beltane, May Day; http://wicca.com/celtic/akasha/beltane.htm. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ February 14, 269, St. Valentine, buried in Dublin; http://homepage.eircom.net/~seanjmurphy/irhismys/valentine.htm March 17, 461, St. Patrick dies, many different reports as to the actual date exist; http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/11554a.htm Dec. 7, 521, St. Columcille is born, http://prayerfoundation.org/favoritemonks/favorite_monks_columcille_columba.htm January 23, 540 A.D., St. Ciarán, started Clonmacnoise Monastery; http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/04065a.htm May 16, 578, Feast Day of St. Brendan; http://parish.saintbrendan.org/church/story.php June 9th, 597, St. Columcille, dies at Iona; http://www.irishcultureandcustoms.com/ASaints/Columcille.html Nov. 23, 615, Irish born St. Columbanus dies, www.newadvent.org/cathen/04137a.htm July 8, 689, St. Killian is put to death; http://allsaintsbrookline.org/celtic_saints/killian.html October 13, 1012, Irish Monk and Bishop St. Colman dies; http://www.stcolman.com/ Nov. 14, 1180, first Irish born Bishop of Dublin, St. Laurence O'Toole, dies, www.newadvent.org/cathen/09091b.htm June 7, 1584, Arch Bishop Dermot O'Hurley is hung by the British for being Catholic; http://www.exclassics.com/foxe/dermot.htm 1600 Sept.
    [Show full text]
  • CNI -March 26
    March 26 ! CNI Two retired bishops who had served in Londonderry received the freedom of the city ! Retired Derry bishops receive freedom of the city Catholic bishop Dr Edward Daly and his Church of Ireland counterpart James Mehaffey were praised for their cross community leadership. They were honoured by the council as ‘leaders of our society’. The former Bishop of Derry and Raphoe, Dr James Mehaffey, has spoken of his pride at being granted the Freedom of the City of Derry, along with his long–time friend, retired Bishop of Derry Dr Edward Daly. The ceremony, in Londonderry’s Guildhall, was one of the last [email protected] Page !1 March 26 formal acts by Derry City Council before it merges with neighbouring Strabane next month. Representatives of the four main political parties were in the chamber, with councillors joined by the Foyle MP Mark Durkan, the Nobel peace laureate John Hume, the Deputy First Minister Martin McGuinness and members of the Mehaffey and Daly families. The recipients’ successors, Bishop Ken Good and Bishop Donal McKeown, were also in attendance, along with leading figures from the civic life. It was a doubly historic occasion, with the formal presentation being made by the last ever Mayor of the city, Councillor Brenda Stevenson. Bishop Mehaffey told the meeting that he was a Freeman of the City of London, “but being a Freeman of the City of Derry means so much more”. He thanked Bishop Daly for his friendship and support over the last 35 years. “During my entire episcopal ministry in the Diocese, Bishop Daly has been a true friend and colleague.
    [Show full text]
  • Dealing with the Past in Northern Ireland
    Fordham International Law Journal Volume 26, Issue 4 2002 Article 9 Dealing With the Past in Northern Ireland Christine Bell∗ ∗ Copyright c 2002 by the authors. Fordham International Law Journal is produced by The Berke- ley Electronic Press (bepress). http://ir.lawnet.fordham.edu/ilj Dealing With the Past in Northern Ireland Christine Bell Abstract This Article “audits” Northern Ireland’s discrete mechanisms for dealing with the past, with a view to exploring the wider transitional justice debates. An assessment of what has been done so far is vital to considering what the goals of addressing the past might be, what future developments are useful or required, and what kind of mechanisms might successfully be employed in achieving those goals. DEALING WITH THE PAST IN NORTHERN IRELAND Christine Bell* INTRODUCTION The term "transitional justice" has increasingly been used to consider how governments in countries emerging from deeply rooted conflict address the legacy of past human rights viola- tions.' While the term has a pedigree dating back to the Nuremburg Tribunals, three contemporary factors have reinvig- orated interest.2 The first factor is the prevalence of negotiated agreements as the preferred way of resolving internal conflicts. Premised on some degree of compromise between those who were engaged militarily in the conflict, these compromises affect whether and how the past is dealt with. As Huyse notes, the wid- est scope for prosecutions arises in the case of an overthrow or "victory" where virtually no political limits on retributive punish- * Professor Bell is the Chair in Public International Law, Transitional Justice Insti- tute, School of Law, University of Ulster, and a former member of the Northern Ireland Human Rights Commission.
    [Show full text]
  • Farewell to a Man, and to an Era
    September 2009 VOL. 20 #9 $1.50 Boston’s hometown journal of Irish culture. Worldwide at bostonirish.com All contents copyright © 2009 Boston Neighborhood News, Inc. FAREWELL TO A MAN, AND TO AN ERA Cardinal Sean O’Malley, Archbishop of Boston, walked around the casket with incense before it left the church after the funeral Mass for Sen. Edward M. Kennedy at Our Lady of Perpetual Help Basilica in Boston on Sat., Aug. 29. (AP Photo/Brian Snyder, Pool) BY CAROL BEGGY the United States Senate” that family was celebrated for its bors on Caped Cod to world to come to Boston,” Cowen told SPECIAL TO THE BIR stretched from his corner of deep Irish roots. As the Boston leaders including Irish Prime the Boston Irish Reporter’s Joe From the moment the first Hyannis Port to Boston, Wash- Globe’s Kevin Cullen wrote, Minister Brian Cowen. Leary at the Back Bay Hotel, news bulletins started crackling ington, Ireland, the home of his the senator himself was slow “We’re very grateful for the formerly the Jurys Hotel. on radios and popping up on ancestors, the British Isles, and in embracing his Irish heritage, great dedication of Senator Ken- Michael Lonergan had barely BlackBerries late on the night beyond. but once he did, he made it his nedy to Ireland and its people,” sat in his seat as the new Consul of Tuesday, Aug. 25, the death This youngest brother of the mission to help broker peace in Cowen said at an impromptu General of Ireland in Boston of Senator Edward M.
    [Show full text]
  • Copyright by Judith Hazel Howell 2011
    Copyright by Judith Hazel Howell 2011 The Report Committee for Judith Hazel Howell Certifies that this is the approved version of the following report: Waiting for the Truth: A Re-examination of Four Representations of Bloody Sunday After the Saville Inquiry APPROVED BY SUPERVISING COMMITTEE: Supervisor: Elizabeth Cullingford Wayne Lesser Waiting for the Truth: A Re-examination of Four Representations of Bloody Sunday After the Saville Inquiry by Judith Hazel Howell, B.A. Report Presented to the Faculty of the Graduate School of The University of Texas at Austin in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Master of Arts The University of Texas at Austin May 2011 Abstract Waiting for the Truth: A Re-examination of Four Representations of Bloody Sunday After the Saville Inquiry Judith Hazel Howell, M.A. The University of Texas at Austin, 2011 Supervisor: Elizabeth Cullingford On January 30, 1972, in Derry, Northern Ireland, British soldiers opened fire on Irish citizens participating in a peaceful civil rights march, killing thirteen men and injuring as many others. This event, called “Bloody Sunday,” was the subject of two formal inquiries by the British government, one conducted by Lord Widgery in 1972 that exonerated the British soldiers and one led by Lord Saville, which published its findings in June 2010 and found the British troops to be at fault. Before the second investigation gave its report, a number of dramatic productions had contradicted the official British version of events and presented the Irish point of view. Two films and two plays in particular—the drama The Freedom of the City (1973), the filmed docudramas Bloody Sunday and Sunday (both 2002), and the documentary theater production Bloody Sunday: Scenes from the Saville Inquiry (2005)—were aimed at audiences that did not recognize the injustices that took place in Derry.
    [Show full text]
  • A Troubled See: Memoirs of a Derry Bishop Free
    FREE A TROUBLED SEE: MEMOIRS OF A DERRY BISHOP PDF Edward Daly | 288 pages | 15 Sep 2011 | Four Courts Press Ltd | 9781846823121 | English | Dublin, Ireland A Troubled See: Memoirs of a Derry Bishop - Edward Daly - Google книги To post in this forum you need to become a member. Click HERE to register. It's free! Please use appropriate caution and notify us of inappropriate ads. You can also control the ads that appear on your computer. Click the "Ad Choices" arrow at the top of Google advertisement blocks. From our archives: a commentary worth reading again Welcome to A Troubled See: Memoirs of a Derry Bishop catholica Main Forum. The welcome message from the top of this forum is now archived HERE. RSS Feed of thread. This site was developed and is maintained by www. Catholica Home Page A Troubled See: Memoirs of a Derry Bishop. Enter your search terms Submit search form Catholica Web. Back to the forum index. Open in thread. A Troubled See: Memoirs of a Derry Bishop Main Forum by DesiAustralia, Friday, December 02,days ago Peter Ryan The Derry Bishop; "I believe," he wrote, "that we must formulate and communicate a theology of struggle against oppression, a theology of nonviolent struggle, a theology of justice, a theology of tolerance and accommodation of different ideals and ideas specifically addressed to our situation. Just wondering. Peter I think that it's the statement of a retired bishop! He now works as a chaplain in Derry's Foyle hospice. Search the Main Catholica Forum:. Around the World in 80 Books - Books Set in Europe: Northern Ireland Showing of 16 He attended the Pontifical Irish College in Rome to prepare for the priesthood.
    [Show full text]
  • Diocese of Derry
    Diocese of Derry Diocesan Directory 2014 DIOCESE OF DERRY DIRECTORY 2014 www.derrydiocese.org Editorial Office: Diocesan Offices, St. Eugene’s Cathedral, Derry, BT48 9AP Email: [email protected] Printed By: iPrint Design Front Cover: Rev Brendan Collins, Rev James Devine, Rev Patrick Lagan, & Rev Micheál McGavigan Photo courtesy of Rev Peter O'Kane CONTENTS DIOCESAN BODIES DIOCESAN ADMINISTRATION……………………………………………………………. 2 DIOCESAN FINANCE AND PROPERTY …………………………………………........ 4 DIOCESAN COMMITTEES AND COMMISSIONS ………………………………….. 6 DIOCESAN CHAPLAINS & THOSE WITH SPECIAL RESPONSIBILITIES…… 10 PARISHES OF THE CITY OF DERRY ………………………………………….………..… 12 PARISHES OUTSIDE THE CITY ………………………………………….. OF DERRY . 35 RELIGIOUS CONGREGATIONS……………………………..……………………………. 102 ORGANISATIONS PASTORAL ORGANISATIONS ……………………………………………………….… 108 COLUMBA COMMUNITY …………………………………………………………….… 114 MARRIAGE & FAMILY SUPPORT SERVICES ……………………………….….… 116 SPIRITUAL ORGANISATIONS ……………………………………………………….… 119 CLERGY ORDINATIONS ………… .…………………………………………………………………… 122 OBITUARIES ……………………………………………………………………………….…. 125 ALPHABETICAL INDEX OF CLERGY …………………………………………………. 128 DIOCESE OF DERRY DIOCESAN ADMINISTRATOR The Very Reverend Francis Bradley Ordained priest 7 July 1996; Elected Diocesan Administrator 25 April 2013 BISHOPS The Most Reverend Séamus Hegarty DD Bishop Emeritus of Derry Ordained priest on 19 June 1966; Ordained Bishop of Raphoe on 28 March 1982; Appointed Bishop of Derry on 1 October 1994; Installed as Bishop of Derry on 6 November 1994; Retired as Bishop of
    [Show full text]
  • Bishop Edward Daly
    Sunday 21st Aug 2016 Twenty-First Sunday in Ordinary Time BISHOP EDWARD DALY Last week, our beloved retired Bishop, Edward Daly, returned to God. It has been a time to remember Bishop Daly’s faithful service of God and the people of this diocese. Over the days many people shared their experiences of meeting with Bishop Edward and the kindness and compassion he showed, in actions both great and small. It was my privilege to lead the Funeral Mass and burial rites. I thank you, the people of this diocese, for your overwhelming response to the death of Bishop Edward, for attending his wake, the liturgies which were celebrated and his funeral. In prayer, we now entrust Bishop Edward’s soul to our Eternal Father, that he may be welcomed into his Heavenly Kingdom. May he rest in peace. + Donal McKeown Bishop of Derry Cemetery Sunday 2016 Never abandon prayer, even Recent Wedding Killyclogher: Sunday 4th September at 3pm when it seems pointless to pray Congratulations to the following couple: Knockmoyle: Sunday 11th September at 3pm Pope Francis Catherine Tierney & Sean McGrenaghan Knockmoyle Cemetery Sunday will include A Students Prayer “Love is the measure of faith” (Pope Francis) Mass outside (weather permitting). Loving Father, I stand before You in the midst Recent Deaths Please note: No 10am Mass in Knockmoyle on of confusion & complexities of life. We extend our sympathy to the family of: Sun 11th September. My future sometimes seems distant & Agnes Kelly, Ardmore & Sperrin Pk unknown. Give me, O Lord, the vision to see May she rest in peace Derry Diocesan Society the path You set before me.
    [Show full text]
  • Irish America and the Making of US Policy Toward Northern Ireland
    Her Majesty’s Most Disloyal Opposition: Irish America and the Making of US Policy Toward Northern Ireland Undergraduate Research Thesis Presented in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for graduation with Honors Research Distinction in International Studies in the undergraduate colleges of The Ohio State University by Abi McGowan The Ohio State University May 2020 Project Advisor: Professor Joe Parrott, Department of History 1 Table of Contents Abbreviations ……………………………………………………………………………………………………2 Introduction ……………………………………………………………………………………………………4 Chapter I Irish Nationalism, Irish Diaspora ……………………………………………………………………………………………………9 Chapter II The Education of Irish America ……………………………………………………………………………………………………40 Chapter III The Carter Initiative ……………………………………………………………………………………………………60 Epilogue Missed Opportunities: When Politics Impedes Progress ……………………………………………………………………………………………………79 Bibliography ……………………………………………………………………………………………………84 2 Abbreviations AOH - Ancient Order of Hibernians BIS - British Information Services FCO - Foreign and Commonwealth Office DOJ – Department of Justice NIO - Northern Ireland Office DFA - Department of Foreign Affairs HMG - Her Majesty’s Government GOI - Government of Ireland DUP - Democratic Unionist Party ECHR - European Court of Human Rights INAC - Irish Northern Aid Committee (NORAID) MP -Member of Parliament NICRA - Northern Ireland Civil Rights Association P/IRA - Provisional Irish Republican Army (Provos) ROI -Republic of Ireland SDLP - Social Democratic and Labour Party USG - United States
    [Show full text]
  • Bloody Sunday 1972 4
    Bloody Sunday 1972 THE TROUBLES IN Read the article below and answer the questions that follow. NORTHERN IRELAND The sources below chart the events of Bloody Sunday. Source 1 is an article from the Irish Independent, while Source 2 is from the official report into the events of Bloody Sunday. LSource 1 Monday, 31 January Thirteen men were killed and at least 17 others injured when soldiers of the Parachute Regiment appeared to fire indiscriminately on a crowd of demonstrators in Derry yesterday. British opposition MPs were last night calling the callous killings ‘a Bloody Sunday’ and ‘mass Analysing Sources murder by the army’. Analysing Sources Dr Edward Daly, a Bogside parish priest, said: ‘The British Army should hang its head in shame after today’s disgusting violence. They shot indiscriminately and everywhere around them without any provocation’. The crowd was listening to speeches at Free Derry corner after their bid to march to Guildhall Square was blocked by soldiers using a water cannon, rubber bullets and CS gas. The British Labor peer, Lord Fenner Brockway was just beginning a speech when bullets ripped into the crowd, causing widespread panic. Demonstrators dived for cover as troops stood at the end of Rossville Street firing their automatic weapons. When the shooting finally stopped, blood- strewn figures could be seen on the ground. The commander of land forces in the North, General Ford, said his men had come under attack from snipers from a nearby building, but, even if true, this does not explain the killing of unarmed civilians. In a statement, a group of Catholic priests, who had witnessed the events, said the paratroopers had engaged in ‘willful murder’.
    [Show full text]
  • Bishops 2004 Carl Milofsky Bucknell University, [email protected]
    Bucknell University Bucknell Digital Commons Northern Ireland Archive Sociology & Anthropology 2004-5 Bishops 2004 Carl Milofsky Bucknell University, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: http://digitalcommons.bucknell.edu/northernirelandarchive Recommended Citation Milofsky, Carl, "Bishops 2004" (2004). Northern Ireland Archive. 1. http://digitalcommons.bucknell.edu/northernirelandarchive/1 This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the Sociology & Anthropology at Bucknell Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in Northern Ireland Archive by an authorized administrator of Bucknell Digital Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Bishops 2004 Page 1 Bishops 2004 6.6.04 0:09 Bill Flacks introduces the talk that will be given by retired Catholic Bishop of Derry, Edward Daly, and retired Anglican Bishop of Derry, James Mehaffey. The Bucknell in Northern Ireland Program invited the two men to speak in three successive years for which we have tapes (2003, 2004, 2005). Each talk began with the men giving their personal history in a short statement and then the floor was opened for student questions and their reflective answers. 0:50 Daly begins with his personal history. A fuller time code summary is given in the notes for the 2005 presentation. Bishop Daly began his work as a priest in Derry before moving away and then returning as Bishop. 4:20 Explains that June 6 (the date of this talk) is always a significant day in Derry because /it is the celebration of the patron saint of Derry, St. Columb whose name means “the dove of the church”.
    [Show full text]