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Conflict
in Northern Ireland during the 20th century |
The following text deals with the development
of the conflict in Northern Ireland since the independence of a part of Ireland
in 1920. The roots of the continuing troubles in Northern Ireland between its
Catholic and Protestant sections, however, can be traced back much further than
this. You will find a page documenting Irelands history in brief on a page
entitled history.
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Independence
and the separation of Ireland... |
In 1920,
when Ireland was granted home rule, six of the nine counties of the
province of Ulster, northernmost of the four Irish provinces, were given
the opportunity to separate politically from the rest of Ireland and
remain part of the United Kingdom. Under the Government of Ireland Act
of 1920, which effected the partition of Ireland, the six counties
became a separate political division of the United Kingdom, known as the
province of Northern Ireland, with its own constitution, parliament, and
administration for local affairs. The Irish Free State (later Éire, and
now the Republic of Ireland) did not accept the separation as permanent,
and the reunification of the island remained an element of the
constitution until the referendum of May 1998. The Protestant majority
in Northern Ireland has consistently refused to consider a reunion. The
boundary between the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland was fixed
in 1925. Most people in Northern Ireland saw partition from the Roman
Catholic south and union with the United Kingdom as the safeguard of
their Protestant religion and dominant political, economic, and social
position. For many Irish Catholics, the creation of Northern Ireland was
simply the latest of a very long line of British injustices inflicted
upon the people of Ireland. |
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The
beginning of terror... |
In 1949,
when Éire became the Republic of Ireland, the British parliament
affirmed the status of Northern Ireland as part of the United Kingdom
unless its own parliament were to decide otherwise. Although the
Republic still claimed the six northern counties, its withdrawal from
the Commonwealth of Nations was deemed a tacit acceptance of the
partition. In 1955, however, the IRA began a campaign of terrorism aimed
at securing the union of Northern Ireland with the Republic. Terrorist
acts, mainly in border areas, continued through 1957 and 1958, gradually
becoming less frequent in the early 1960s. In 1962 the government of the
Republic of Ireland condemned terrorism as a means of achieving
unification.
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Civil
rights movement and the disadvantaged Catholic minority... |
After
partition, Catholics in Northern Ireland were a disadvantaged minority
in matters of employment, housing, education, and effective cultural and
political participation—a situation which the British government
failed significantly to address. In 1968 an active and articulate civil
rights movement emerged to protest against this discrimination, often
provoking violent reactions within the Protestant community. Moderate
Protestants recognized a need for governmental reform, but were strongly
opposed by a right-wing faction of the ruling Ulster Unionist Party.
British troops, sent to Northern Ireland in 1969 partly to help the
beleaguered local police, and partly to offer protection to the Catholic
communities, became a permanent presence. They maintained British
authority but also became the focus of terrorist attacks and growing
resentment. In 1971 internment (imprisonment without trial) was
introduced in Northern Ireland as a measure to counter terrorism. The
following year the British government suspended the Northern Ireland
parliament and imposed direct rule. The move followed the incident that
became known as "Bloody Sunday", when on January 30, 1972,
British troops fired on civil rights protestors in Londonderry/Derry,
killing 13.In a 1973 referendum, largely boycotted by Roman Catholics,
the voters of Northern Ireland again chose to remain part of the United
Kingdom rather than join the Irish Republic. In 1974 a 15-member
Northern Ireland power-sharing executive, made up of both Protestants
and Roman Catholics, was quickly abandoned when it provoked a general
strike led by Protestant extremists. IRA bombs killed 21 and injured 120
in two Birmingham pubs in the same year. Two Belfast women, Mairead
Corrigan and Betty Williams, received the Nobel Peace Prize in 1976 for
working to reconcile Northern Ireland’s religious communities. Their
work, however, foundered in the face of the failure of attempts to bring
the two factions together. |
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The
chain of violance and an attempt at peace... |
The
Provisional IRA (the hard-line faction that broke away from the official
IRA in 1969) maintained steady terrorist pressure. Protestant extremists
matched them outrage for outrage. In August 1979 the Provisional IRA
assassinated Earl Mountbatten of Burma and, on the same day, ambushed a
party of British soldiers, killing 18 of them. In one day in July 1974
more than 20 IRA bombs, many of them car bombs, were detonated in Belfast.
In 1981 a number of Provisional IRA prisoners in
Long Kesh (the Maze) prison began a hunger strike; the first of 11 to die
was Bobby Sands. The division between the Northern Irish communities
remained as sharp as ever, with no solution in sight. The
intergovernmental conference established in 1985 was welcomed by many as
an important step towards cross-border cooperation on security, economic,
and social issues, and eventual peace. Protestant Unionists and some Irish
nationalists, however, denounced the accord. As
the 1990s began, British troops were still patrolling the streets of
Londonderry/Derry and Belfast, and the IRA continued to launch sporadic
terrorist attacks on British civilians and military personnel in the
British Isles and continental Europe. On August 31, 1994, the IRA
announced a complete cessation of its military operations, ending 25 years
of fighting. In October of that year, the Loyalist terrorist
paramilitaries followed suit. In December 1994 the British government,
despite strong opposition from the Democratic Unionists and other
Protestant groups, held its first public talks with Sinn Fein; secret,
often indirect, talks had gone on with the IRA for some time previously. |
[Taken from: Microsoft®
Encarta® 97 Encyclopedia]
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