02-15-2005, 11:03 AM
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#57 (permalink)
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Terrorism Q&A: IRA
Quote:
What is the conflict in Northern Ireland about?
Following a 1916 uprising and years of guerrilla war led by the legendary Irish nationalist Michael Collins, the British government decided in 1920 to split up Ireland, which it had ruled as a colony for centuries. An independent state was created in the island’s predominantly Catholic south; a smaller, northern district called Ulster, with a Protestant majority, remained part of the United Kingdom.
Gerry Adams, leader of Sinn Fein,
the IRA's political wing,
Belfast, 2001.
(AP Photo/Peter Morrison)
Since then, many Catholic “republicans” (also known as “nationalists”) have complained of feeling like second-class citizens in Ulster and have backed the IRA’s quest for a united Ireland free of British rule. On the other side, Protestant “unionists” (also known as “loyalists”) want to stay loyal to the British crown; backed by their own paramilitaries, the unionists have opposed the IRA’s attempts to expel the British. More than 3,200 people on both sides have died since what the Irish call “the Troubles” began in 1969.
How did the IRA become an important force in Northern Ireland?
The IRA rose to prominence after rioting and clashes between Catholics and Protestants in Ulster in the summer of 1969. British troops were eventually deployed to restore order, but many Catholics resented the British presence and felt that the security forces did not do enough to come to their aid. The group (then known as the Provisional IRA) began conducting guerrilla operations against the British Army and police. During riots in Londonderry on January 30, 1972—now remembered as “Bloody Sunday” —British paratroopers killed 13 unarmed Catholics, accelerating a cycle of IRA violence, loyalist reprisals, and security crackdowns that has continued, with some fits and starts, for more than three decades. One milestone in the conflict was the 1981 deaths of ten IRA prisoners led by Bobby Sands, all of whom died during hunger strikes.
What kind of attacks has the IRA carried out?
Since the late 1960s, the IRA has killed about 1,800 people, including about 650 civilians. The IRA’s primary targets were British troops, police officers, prison guards, and judges—many of them unarmed or off-duty—as well as rival paramilitary militants, drug dealers, and informers in Ulster. Major IRA terrorist attacks include:
* the July 1972 bombing spree known as Bloody Friday, in which downtown Belfast was rocked by 22 bombs in 75 minutes, leaving nine dead and 130 injured;
* the 1979 assassination of Lord Mountbatten, Queen Elizabeth II’s uncle;
* the 1984 bombing of a Brighton hotel where then British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher and her cabinet were meeting, which wounded several British officials and killed four other Britons;
* a 1993 car bombing in London’s financial district that killed one person and caused $1 billion of damage;
* mortar attacks on the British prime minister’s 10 Downing Street residence and London’s Heathrow Airport in the early 1990s;
* and high-profile bombings of civilian targets, including pubs and subway stations, in Northern Ireland and mainland Britain throughout the 1970s, 1980s, and 1990s.
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Looks like Catholics vs Protestants to me. The point being that Christianity isn't as peaceful as some might claim.
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