 THE COALISLAND STORY : British Torture In Ireland....... From 'The United Irishman' newspaper,  January 1958 .The British authorities
THE COALISLAND STORY : British Torture In Ireland....... From 'The United Irishman' newspaper,  January 1958 .The British authorities   have turned 
  East Tyrone   into a terror-area : scores of young men have been 
  arrested , interrogated , beaten , released , re-arrested - and the torture process repeated to force 'confessions' .   This is the story of four such young men who are now held in 
 pre-trial detention  - no charges have yet been preferred against them -  in 
  Crumlin Road Jail in Belfast.  This did not happen in Hungary , Algeria or Cyprus . It happened in Ireland . Now read it and  
 see what the 26-County administration is co-operating with by using their forces to protect British rule in Ireland : Four 
  Coalisland , County Tyrone ,  youths - 
 Kevin Mallon , James O' Donnell , Francis Talbot and John O' Neill ,   were arrested at various times on 
  Monday November 18 , 1957 ,  and 
  Tuesday , November 19 ,   by 
  the RUC.   They were taken to 
  Dungannon RUC Barracks   where the first 
  interrogations   began at 7.30pm on 
  November 19 , 1957 ,   and lasted until midnight . The young men received no meals and a request for a cup of tea was ignored . 
They were questioned continuously by relays of three men and in the course of the first questioning were 
  beaten with fists , punched in the stomachs and face , caught by the hair and their heads banged against the wall .  Then , shortly after midnight , the four young men were handcuffed
.......(MORE LATER).   A PORTRAIT OF IRELAND ,
A PORTRAIT OF IRELAND , by 
 Saoránach....... First published in the   Republican Bulletin - Iris Na Poblachta ,  November 1986. Ellen Hazelkorn   wrote : 
 " Through clientelism , the State has actively sought to deflect incipient conflict by channelling it instead into well-established clientele networks , controlled by parties of the dominant classes . Clientelism is institutionalised within the very fabric of the state , and reinforced by a consistent effort to exclude questions that refer to class differences . In this manner , protest is curtailed and the status quo enforced. " This is how the 26-County state is run . This is how the masses are manipulated and kept docile .  Our job is to find ways and means of changing it and this must surely begin as a process of education . 
 'Class , Clientelism and the Political Process in the Republic Of Ireland'   is a book worth reading and studying . It is a serious but readable book and each chapter would provide an ideal basis for discussion in groups - if you cannot afford the price 
 (or do not get a book token for Christmas!) then ask your local library to get it for you .
[END of  'A PORTRAIT OF IRELAND'](NEXT: 'King Of The Yuppie Heartland' - from 1987)  THE EAMON BYRNE CASE .Eamon Byrne , a 19-year-old Dubliner , was shot dead by a garda detective during an attempted robbery at the B+I terminal in November 1982 . For his family , obtaining justice , or simply the truth , could be a long and expensive process.From 'The Phoenix' magazine , July 1983 .Eamon Byrne ,
THE EAMON BYRNE CASE .Eamon Byrne , a 19-year-old Dubliner , was shot dead by a garda detective during an attempted robbery at the B+I terminal in November 1982 . For his family , obtaining justice , or simply the truth , could be a long and expensive process.From 'The Phoenix' magazine , July 1983 .Eamon Byrne ,  the 19-year-old Dubliner who was 
  shot dead by a garda detective   during an attempted robbery at 
  the B+I terminal  in November 1982 , has been disposed of by due bureaucratic process. But it's unlikely we've heard the last of the matter . The dead youth's teenage widow , Elizabeth , is currently considering an action against the Garda Commissioner and the Officers directly involved in the incident .
A lot of questions remain unanswered . The coroner's jury 
 (handpicked by the gardai) returned , on 
  July 5th , 1983 ,   an ambiguous verdict that 
  Eamon Byrne died of wounds sustained when he was wounded by a detective garda . Verdicts don't come much more open-ended than that ,   but there is unlikely to be any follow-up by the authorities into 
 precisely  what happened on the Dublin Docks 
 on the morning of November 22nd , 1982 , when Eamon Byrne was shot . The new facts established at the inquest only deepen cause for concern . Byrne , for instance , 
  was not armed at the time he was shot .  Two detective gardai were grappling with him on the ground when the gun of one of them 
 "...struck Byrne's head.." and went off , accidentally killing him
....... (MORE LATER).