Saturday, September 13, 2008

UPDATE ON RAFFLE , SUNDAY EVENING 14th SEPTEMBER 2008: All went well, as planned! The full compliment of tickets was sold, but we only had one 'in-house' winner (congrats Alyce , and Tony B. , for having sold her the ticket!) and , already , all 600 tickets for the October raffle (for CABHAIR) have been distributed. Today's winning numbers were 482, 242, 109, 626, 269, 97, 136 and 145. The reason why tickets are sometimes numbered over the 600 figure is due to the fact that some ticket sellers have their tickets removed from them by the political police and 'new/replacement' tickets,numbered from 601 to 6--, are put in in there place.
The extra prize of the wood-burn Portlaoise plaque could have been sold many times in the pub for at least €50 , but was not: instead , as intended, it was raffled in a separate
(free) draw and was won by one of three locals who had just dropped-in to the Club for a game of pool/snooker! The same crew of Republicans that run this monthly raffle for the Movement are now in the process of helping to finalise arrangements for the next event - the Annual Eve Of All-Ireland Rally. Hope to see you there!
Thanks!
Sharon.
-----------------------------------------------------


" GET THE LAST OF THE TICKETS , NOW....! "

Since the mid-1970's , a dedicated group of Irish Republicans in the Dublin South-West/Mid-West area of Dublin have held a monthly raffle , on the second Sunday of each month : approximately 600 tickets are sold each month by this dedicated team , and the money made from one raffle is given to the Dublin Comhairle ('Executive') of Republican Sinn Fein whilst the money made from the next such monthly raffle is handed-over to the CABHAIR organisation .

Over €400 is handed-out as prize money in each raffle -


- and , occasionally , extra prizes are included , with no increase in ticket price : the Sunday 14th September 2008 raffle , for instance , will include an extra prize of a wood-burn plywood print , which was made this year in Portlaoise Gaol by Republican prisoners -


- so : this wee blog would like to say a big 'Go raibh maith agaibh!' to all concerned in this long-standing fund raiser - between ye all , you have helped pay the bills in Head Office and take some of the pressure off the families of imprisoned Republicans.
Thank you all for that !
Sharon.






Wednesday, September 10, 2008

....and we're back..!

We had a wild time over the last few days :
Tipsy Bride!

:from Dublin to Wexford , where the Church ceremony took place , and then down the 'Copper Coast' road into Waterford , where the party continued : having abandoned the kids [and all sense of decency ;-)!] I did at least keep one of my fingers on the camera button !
We came across this beautiful monument on a wind-swept cliff top , where we stopped to stretch our legs -


-with this inscription plaque at its base :


By now , our thirst was well quenched but the hunger was on us , so we went looking for somewhere to get a wee bit of grub -

-but quickly decided to settle for a few more pints of cider and a bag of Tayto crisps instead !

On a more sombre note , we came across this IRA Memorial Plaque ,on that same Coast Road, dedicated to the memory of IRA Volunteer Jack (John) Cummins -
"Ballyvoile (6th June 1921)On the 6th June 1921, a military cycling column of about 30 men were ambushed at Ballyvoile. Tom Keating of Comeragh, a brother of Pat‘s who was killed at the Burgery was in charge of the ambushing party. It was first decided that the enemy should be attacked at Kilminion, near Stradbally, where the County Council quarry now operates. They lay in waiting for a time, but then received word that the British were returning by the lower Coast Road. The Volunteer party hurriedly made their way across country and had just reached Ballyvoile, when a volley of shots rang out. Evidently the (British) military had seen them moving into position. Two of the soldiers moved into higher ground and opened fire again, and this time, Jack Cummins of Stradbally was shot just as he was getting over a barbed wire fence. The Volunteers returned the fire forcing the (British) military to take cover.The fight lasted about half an hour and then the Volunteers had to withdraw due to lack of ammunition. A plaque to the memory of Jack Cummins can be seen at Ballyvoile..."

-where we said a prayer for the man , and for the many brave Irish men and women that followed in his tracks and that do so today.

Anyway ... although we're back , we haven't got our usual '3-in-1' post ready just yet , and have instead decided to post it next Wednesday (17th September 2008), as we need the time to concentrate on a major Republican raffle which is taking place this coming Sunday (14th) in a Social Club on the Dublin/Kildare border and also to prepare for the Annual Eve Of All-Ireland Rally in Dublin (Saturday September 20th next- pics and report on last years Rally can be obtained here)-


- so we'll leave it at that for now , but will soon be back to 'normal'.
Thanks!
Sharon.






Wednesday, September 03, 2008



THE IRA : the new IRA is younger , more radical and has seen little of life other than violence.......
By Ed Moloney.
From 'Magill' magazine, September 1980.

Recruits are also given anti-interrogation training on a scientific basis : simulation is never employed but IRA leaders have isolated a dozen interrogation techniques used by the British which the IRA instil into their recruits . Cell members are also encouraged to adopt false identities and discouraged from habituating known Republican haunts .

The British Army reckons that the Provisional IRA campaign and related political activity now costs the organisation some £2 millions a year - in 1978 British General Jim Glover estimated that it cost £780,000 and that income exceeded that amount by £170,000 , which was all spent on arms and explosives . He drew the Provisionals 'profit and loss account' as follows - ' Income: Theft in Ireland £550,000/ Racketeering £250,000/ Overseas Contributors £120,000/ Green Cross £30,000 = Total £950,000. Expenditure: Pay (@ £7,500 per week) £400,000/ Travel and Transport £50,000/ Newspapers and Propaganda £150,000 / Prisoners' Welfare £180,000/ Surplus £170,000 = Total £950,000.

It's impossible to verify the claim by the British that inflation has more than doubled the Provo's costs since 1978 ; one source says that a spin-off benefit from the slimmed down re-organisation was a saving of money . However, there are one or two errors in Glover's calculations which as a result seriously understate the amount the IRA has left for arms spending . It could be the case that the Provos have a lot more to spend on weapons than the Brits realise.......

(MORE LATER).




RESISTANCE ON ALL FRONTS.......
IRIS talks to a spokesperson authorised to speak on behalf of the Irish Republican Army.
From 'IRIS' magazine , July/August 1982.

IRIS : "The general tendency within the Republican Movement , especially over the past year , seems to be towards a massive upsurge in internal and external education . To what degree has this affected the average IRA Volunteer in terms of his or her politicisation and understanding of republican goals ? "

IRA: "If you're talking about new recruits since the [1981] hunger-strike , I think the honest answer to that is that it's too early to say how well the education process has been taken in . It will take several more months to assess . As for longer-established Volunteers , their politicisation has been going on for over ten years , inside and outside jail . The current education process will only be formalising it for them . " ('1169..' Comment : ....the question has since been asked re the education of Volunteers and Sinn Fein members as to how some of them have confused mere 'civil rights under the rule of Westminster' with true Republican objectives as outlined by Irish Republicans ?)
(MORE LATER).




THE UNDAUNTED WOMEN IN ARMAGH.......

The full story of the republican prisoners in Armagh Jail has yet to be told. It has yet to be sung , and properly described , other than as an after-thought in public speeches - "...and of course the women in Armagh.." Republicans have a right to be proud of those women who, from the Divis Flats grandmother doing six months for what an Orange judge called "riotous behaviour" to the young IRA Volunteer inside for the second time and not yet 25-years-old , have managed, whether they numbered 12 or 120 , to maintain their resistance to the most vicious prison system in Europe. The words that follow , says writer Patricia Collins , were written to encourage more of those women to come forward and tell their story , and are based on conversations with several
ex-prisoners , and on visits and letters from those women presently imprisoned. They were written in the hope of jogging the memory of all those women who wrongly think their contribution to Ireland's future peace is not worth mentioning.

From 'IRIS' magazine , August 1984.

August 9th 1971 : internment re-introduced in the Occupied Six Counties . Hundreds of men from Nationalist areas were thrown in jail , most of them after severe beatings , some after horrific torture . Some internees were put in Armagh Jail at first but , by mid-1972 , all internees had been transferred to Long Kesh or Magilligan Prison.

On the outside , women began to take a more active and direct part in the armed struggle and in 1971 two republican women received long sentences for taking part in bombings - Margaret O' Connor (sentenced to 9 years) and Susan Loughran , (12 years) . In May and June 1972 sentenced republican prisoners went on hunger-strike for political status in Crumlin Road and Armagh Jails : their protest was successful and sentenced women POW's were to insist successfully that those hard-won rights be extended to them .

However their conditions improved more dramatically after the arrival of the first women internees at the beginning of 1973 . This is when the name Liz McKee came to the forefront.......

(MORE LATER).

(PLEASE NOTE : blogging will be 'light' over the next week or so and , indeed , we may even be late next Wednesday (10th) in posting our usual '3-in-1' article: we are leaving Dublin this Friday for Wexford to attend a wedding which will be taking place on Monday . However - this being an Irish wedding , celebrations begin on Saturday and will probably only finish the following Thursday . Somewhere in between those two days the happy couple may indeed find time to get married , but the celebrations will definitely be held regardless...!))






Saturday, August 30, 2008

Corrupt political institution turns its naval force on its own people....

RSF members and supporters at a 'Shell-To-Sea' protest demonstration in Dublin , February 24th , 2007.

'It would now appear that the 26-County government are willing to lock up its citizens whilst at the same time allowing Shell to dictate the energy and environmental policy of the 26 Counties...'
- Ruairi O Bradaigh, July 2005.

Part of the State Navy has been ordered , by State politicians , to move against its own people...

"Ask anyone you know how much royalties Shell Oil and its partners are paying the country to take our gas from the Corrib Field. I tried this over the past few days and I got answers ranging from fifty per cent to probably very little.
Nobody came up with the correct answer, which is not a single penny.
Did you know that? Did you know that the energy consortium, whose pipeline is being forced past protesters by hundreds of our own police, pays nothing at all to this country for taking our natural resources...?"

(From here.)

What we are witnessing with the 'Shell-To-Sea' outrage is the absolute moral corruption of a millionaire political elite who are completely reckless and shameless when it comes to lining their pockets with even more ill-gotten financial gains . They and their type are a free-loading cabal of non-productive leeches who will bend or break any moral , political or humane code of conduct that they see fit to ride roughshod over in order to further secure and enhance their moneyed lifestyle. I have wiped better than them from the sole of my shoe and had more respect for it : pond scum is more valuable.
Sharon.






Wednesday, August 27, 2008



THE IRA : the new IRA is younger , more radical and has seen little of life other than violence.......
By Ed Moloney.
From 'Magill' magazine, September 1980.

A vital element in the new structures is recruitment : the old days when virtually anyone could join the IRA are seemingly over . One IRA leader says that vetting of potential recruits is now so thorough that only 2 out of every 13 applicants are accepted and sent on for training and then placed into the 'cell' structure. The IRA also says that the average age of new recruits is 18 or 19 , an assertion that would seem to back IRA claims that the organisation has passed through the generation gap problem that has always spelled defeat for past campaigns .

However , it's clear from a number of recent arrests such as that of an M60 ambush team in Belfast this year that the IRA is still heavily dependant on what British General James Glover called "...the intelligent, astute and experienced terrorist.." . The IRA also claims that less than 50 per cent of new recruits join up for the personal motive of seeking revenge for British Army violence and that most are politically committed to a socialist republic . Not even the IRA can know that for sure but if it is true then the policy of 'Ulsterisation', involving gradual withdrawal of troops from Nationalist areas will have less of an effect on the Provos than the architects of that policy hoped .

Once a recruit is accepted by the IRA he or she is taken along with three or four other recruits for training across the Border in 'specialism' ie assassination , sniping , bombing etc that his/her cell will later employ . In contrast to the past , when whole IRA Companies could be trained without firing a shot , all recruits are now trained using live ammunition , which has enabled IRA members to 'sight' sniping weapons more accurately : it is claimed that this sort of practice accounts for the success of the M60 machine gun in Belfast ambushes . When the M60 appeared on the scene in 1978 it was considered a propaganda weapon and too cumbersome and inaccurate for urban use but , in fact , the M60 has been responsible for the deaths of 8 members of the British 'security forces' since then.......

(MORE LATER).



RESISTANCE ON ALL FRONTS.......
IRIS talks to a spokesperson authorised to speak on behalf of the Irish Republican Army.
From 'IRIS' magazine , July/August 1982.

IRIS : " The hunger-strike period was generally a time when nationalist commitment to the struggle was heightened and refreshed . But since then there have been concerted enemy efforts to confuse and demoralise * the nationalist population , through the use of informers , psychological operations and black propaganda . ( * '1169..' Comment - ...and , at that time, these two efforts to "confuse and demoralise" were only around the corner..) What impact on the immediate post-hunger-strike increase in support has this had , within the Movement and on external supporters ? "

IRA : " I think you have to deal with two separate circumstances . It had little effect internally because people who are actively involved understand the situation and what the enemy is trying to achieve . The use of paid agents by the RUC did initially have some psychological impact on nationalist supporters , but this has been quickly eroded as they have deepened their understanding of the situation , and by virture also of a number of IRA operations carried out at the time when RUC Chief Constable John ('Jack') Hermon was making his infamous "...the IRA are reeling.." statement."

(MORE LATER).



THE UNDAUNTED WOMEN IN ARMAGH.......

The full story of the republican prisoners in Armagh Jail has yet to be told. It has yet to be sung , and properly described , other than as an after-thought in public speeches - "...and of course the women in Armagh.." Republicans have a right to be proud of those women who, from the Divis Flats grandmother doing six months for what an Orange judge called "riotous behaviour" to the young IRA Volunteer inside for the second time and not yet 25-years-old , have managed, whether they numbered 12 or 120 , to maintain their resistance to the most vicious prison system in Europe. The words that follow , says writer Patricia Collins , were written to encourage more of those women to come forward and tell their story , and are based on conversations with several
ex-prisoners , and on visits and letters from those women presently imprisoned. They were written in the hope of jogging the memory of all those women who wrongly think their contribution to Ireland's future peace is not worth mentioning.

From 'IRIS' magazine , August 1984.

The Prison Governor in the 1970's was a Stanley Hilditch who was to torture the blanketmen some years later in the H-Blocks. Hilditch at first didn't know how to cope with the new situation posed by women political prisoners - Anne Maguire recalls : " When the Governor comes into your cell , you're supposed to stand up but we just sat down , anywhere, on the bed , on the chair . The same in the exercise yard . The Screws would get flustered , the other prisoners would stare at us..."

After four or five weeks , Hilditch copped-on . The women weren't allowed to talk to other 'classes' of prisoners : juveniles in red , or the ones in green . But two of the young ones were republican too - the women would not comply . Their ration of 20 cigarettes would then be held up , and a lot of petty harassment took place . Strip-searching was used in a few instances .

In July 1971 , Maire Drumm joined the women in Armagh Jail : earlier that month , she had made a fiery speech at Free Derry Corner- " It is a waste of time shouting 'Up the IRA' . The important thing is to join." She was bound over to keep the peace for two years on a surety of £500 , refused to sign and got six months for 'promoting the objects of the IRA' . A few days after Maire Drumm 'came in' to Armagh Jail , internment 'broke out' on the outside.......
(MORE LATER).







Monday, August 25, 2008

Dick Roche , State Minister for EU Affairs.


From this (in mid July 2008)..... "It is far, far too early to be talking about a referendum or about some specific policy to go forward (after the 12th June 2008 'NO' vote to the Lisbon Treaty/Constitution) , that’s not the way to formulate a policy in response to a referendum...."

....to this - 'A second referendum on the Lisbon Treaty would “ultimately” be required and ratifying key elements by legislation was not a viable option, Minister of State for European Affairs Dick Roche said at the weekend...'

A few days ago , John from this blog was on Newstalk Radio talking about matters political :one of the issues he raised was the strong rumour in political circles that the wasters in Leinster House were preparing to hold a second vote on the Lisbon Treaty/Constitution on the same day as the vote on the EU elections in June 2009 - this possibility was dismissed out of hand by the Presenter of the show as "unlikely" . It now appears that Dick Roche has been sent out by his political masters to 'fly a kite' regarding this issue ie 'soften-up' the public to expect such a second vote in the near future . This blog done what little it could in calling for a 'NO' vote in the first Lisbon referendum -



- and will do so again when the political incompetents in Leinster House try , yet again, to secure an even cosier future for themselves in Europe by fostering a second Lisbon vote on the electorate in this State. So much for the mantra which those politically useless leeches throw at Irish Republicans as often as they can - " You must respect the will of the people...."
Sharon.






Friday, August 22, 2008

From the 'e-Thursday' section of the 'Business Week' supplement of the 'Irish Independent' , 21st August 2008 .

" 1169 And Counting is a wealth of information on our Republican past and present , and demonstrates how the Irish political landscape , like that of any nation, will never be a black and white issue."
A good review , we feel (...even if we do say so ourselves!) , from a good column ('Blog Digest') in a newspaper we otherwise wouldn't read as we don't agree with the political slant (anti-Republican) propagated by it on a daily basis.
But the review we can live with...!

--------------------------


Political Fat Cats...

'Fundraising operations made up less than €200,000 of the party's
income in the republic (sic) last year.... "the primary source of donations to (P) Sinn Fein in the south comes from each of the party's TD's (sic) and MEP who each donated €6,000...'
and... 'Despite the Dail (sic) sitting for fewer than 100 days a year, the TDs' (sic) pay bill now stands at €20.3m -- an average of €122,000 each.....'

Could you live on a wage of €2416 a week ?
From here.

--------------------------

Inappropriate spam...
I received this a few days ago :

'QUEEN ELIZABETH FOUNDATION
WOODSLANDS ROAD
LEATHER HEAD COURT
LEATHERHEAD
SURRY
KT22 0BN.
PIN NO:QEF/GD/555-2247/2008

Attn: Beneficary
================

Congratulations,The Queen Elizabeth's Foundation has chosen you as one of
the final recipients of a cashGrant/Donation for your own personal,
educational, and business development.To celebratethe 30th anniversary
program, We are giving out
a yearly donation of £150,000,00(One Hundred And Fifty Thousand Pounds
Sterling). to 40 lucky recipients, as charity donations/aid from the Queen
Elizabeth's Foundation,ECOWAS, E.U,UNICEF and the U.N.O in accordance with
the enabling act of Parliament, which is part of our promotion. To file
for your claim you are to fill out below information and send it to MR
TREVOR CHAMBERS The Executive Secretary Via his email contact address
Bellow.

Your Pin Number falls within our United Kingdom Claim office booklet and
you are directed to contact the Executive Secretary MR TREVOR CHAMBERS in
charge of your
Donation prize / File. Please contact him Via Email /Phone number Bellow
immediately.

Claims Requirements:
===================

1. Full Name:
2. Address:
3. Nationality:
4. Age: Date of Birth:
5. Occupation:
6. Phone: .Fax:
7. State of Origin: Country:

The Executive Secretary:
=======================
MR TREVOR CHAMBERS
Woodlands Road
Leatherhead Court
Leatherhead
Surrey
KT22 0BN.
Tel: +447024043101
Fax +448715288885
E-mail:winning@National-Champs.com

YOURS TRULY,
MRS.TINA GRAY.
Co-ordinator(Queen Elizabeth Foundation
cashGrant/Donation).'


Thanks anyway , Tina , but if my friends , colleagues and comrades heard that I was in receipt of payment from the British Exchequer I would have to re-locate to the hallowed halls inhabited by those I mentioned in the 'Fat Cats' piece , above! And I don't think much of the circles they 'move' in....






Wednesday, August 20, 2008



THE IRA : the new IRA is younger , more radical and has seen little of life other than violence.......
By Ed Moloney.
From 'Magill' magazine, September 1980.

Some areas , like Belfast , are co-ordinated by an IRA Brigade Staff , while other areas are co-ordinated by local Commands , a 'watered-down' version of a Brigade Staff , whereas other areas are so weak that they can only support one or two cells and they are directly co-ordinated by the IRA Northern Command . One area still retains the IRA Battalion structure , and the three Battalions in that area report to , and are co-ordinated directly by , the Northern Command .

It's a confused and mixed structure whose features seem to be determined entirely by area strength . The effect though is to make British Army and RUC penetration extremely difficult - its principal advantage seems to be increased security and secrecy for the IRA cells but its 'Achilles Heel' is that it is highly dependent on good co-ordination at local IRA Brigade and Command level as well as at Northern Command level , what the British Army terms 'middle management' . The arrest and imprisonment of a small number of leaders would seriously impair the organisation - hence demands from senior British Army officers after Warrenpoint for the introduction of selective internment .

Although British Army sources claim that the IRA structure has now been penetrated in Belfast and East Tyrone , the 'successes' that the Brits have had this year seem to be the result more of increased undercover surveillance and disruption of IRA communications and co-ordination than from information supplied by informers . Indeed , one Brit source complains that they haven't received one decent bit of inside information from the Northern IRA for more than a year.......
(MORE LATER).



RESISTANCE ON ALL FRONTS.......
IRIS talks to a spokesperson authorised to speak on behalf of the Irish Republican Army.
From 'IRIS' magazine , July/August 1982.

IRIS : " In recent months the IRA has employed car bombs extensively , often with devastating success but also with an apparently high risk to civilians . Does the IRA intend to continue with its use of car bombs , and how would you answer this criticism ? "

IRA: " Yes , we intend to continue with the car bomb tactic . Because of the length of warning we give on a car bomb prior to its detonation , if the enemy act on the warning there's no danger to civilian lives . The car bomb is used on property only , and this is accepted even by the British Army and RUC . It is not an anti-personnel bomb , that's why we give warnings . It does not serve our cause to inflict civilian casualties , and all our operations , whether against military or commercial targets , are planned and conducted with this in mind."
(MORE LATER).



THE UNDAUNTED WOMEN IN ARMAGH.......

The full story of the republican prisoners in Armagh Jail has yet to be told. It has yet to be sung , and properly described , other than as an after-thought in public speeches - "...and of course the women in Armagh.." Republicans have a right to be proud of those women who, from the Divis Flats grandmother doing six months for what an Orange judge called "riotous behaviour" to the young IRA Volunteer inside for the second time and not yet 25-years-old , have managed, whether they numbered 12 or 120 , to maintain their resistance to the most vicious prison system in Europe. The words that follow , says writer Patricia Collins , were written to encourage more of those women to come forward and tell their story , and are based on conversations with several
ex-prisoners , and on visits and letters from those women presently imprisoned. They were written in the hope of jogging the memory of all those women who wrongly think their contribution to Ireland's future peace is not worth mentioning.

From 'IRIS' magazine , August 1984.

On February 26th 1971 , 38 women and six men were arrested outside Chichester Street Court in Belfast on one of the 'combat jacket' pickets , organised to protest at the arrest of republicans who had been wearing uniforms at the funerals of Volunteers . Another similar protest was to take place two days later in Beechmount Avenue , Belfast . All those arrests resulted in a dozen women being sentenced to six months in jail .

The stance taken by those women was based not so much on a family tradition of republicanism as born of the Civil Rights marches , the ensuing backlask of the loyalists and the increasingly threatening presence of thousands of British troops on Irish streets . Yet there was no special status for those women . Therefore , in 1971 , women like Rose MacAllister from Ardoyne , Rita O' Hare from Andersonstown and Anne Maguire from Ballymurphy had to wear the prison uniform . For the first-timers , the prison uniform was coloured blue - blue tweed skirt , blue sweater and polka-dot blouse . Prisoners under 21 years of age wore red , and green for those who had been in before .

Women prisoners , political or otherwise, were put in 'A1' Wing and were 'entitled' to one visit a month . Prison work was for all - laundry , cleaning and sewing , yet those nationalist women were quick to stand up to the system and to assert their dignity , refusing to be institutionalised . The Prison Governor at that time was to go on to 'make a name' for himself by allowing for the torture of POW's in his later years.......
(MORE LATER).







Sunday, August 17, 2008

BRIEF REPORT AND A FEW PICS RE THE EAMONN CEANNT COMMEMORATION HELD IN CRUMLIN , DUBLIN , ON SUNDAY 17th AUGUST 2008 :

Between the 75mm of rain that fell on this isle last night and in the early hours of this morning (Sat 16th/Sun 17th) and the threatened 'at-least-75mm-more' that the forecasters have said is on the way in the next few hours - we not only had a dry spell for the Eamonn Ceannt Commemoration in Crumlin , Dublin , on Sunday afternoon but actually enjoyed 21 degrees sunshine as well!

About thirty people were at the Eamonn Ceannt Memorial Stone in the park named after the man , between 1pm and 2pm , as the Commemoration Chairperson , Andy Connolly , Dublin, welcomed them and gave a brief outline of Eamonn Ceannt's involvement in the on-going struggle for national liberation . Following a minutes silence and the dipping of flags by the Colour Party in honour of Eamonn Ceannt , the Oration was delivered by Tomás Ó Cléirigh , who went into some detail concerning Ceannt's earlier life and the tribulations he endured as a direct result of his republicanism .

Following the laying of a wreath , the Chairperson drew comparisons between that which Eamonn Ceannt believed in and suffered for and that which republicans face today - the same objective is being fought for and the same methods employed by a like-minded foe , both native and foreign , to prevent that outcome :
" But to no avail , as the Cause now is as just as it was then and the same Spirit is in today's republicans as was present in Eamonn Ceannt and his comrades..."

Those present were thanked for making the journey and the proceedings were brought to a finish by Andy singing Amhrán na bhFiann.

The makings of a Commemoration...

...RSF Colour Party..

...Andy Connolly , Chairperson.

A full report of this Commemoration will be carried in the September 2008 issue of 'Saoirse' , which will be available on Wednesday 3rd of that month . More pics can be seen here and on this thread .

Thanks!

Sharon.






Friday, August 15, 2008

(Eamonn Ceannt Commemoration , Sunday 17 August 2008)


HYPOCRISY......
" To regret one's own experiences is to arrest one's own development. To deny one's own experiences is to put a lie into the lips of one's own life. It is no less than a denial of the soul."
(Oscar Wilde)



Bush condemns China over its Human Rights record...



Mary Harney (PD) .
When this female millionaire was State Minister for Health in 2006 she declared - "No one , particularly no older person , should sleep overnight on a trolley in a hospital corridor . I am determined to put an end to that for good . People who need to be admitted will have beds , not trolleys , and the basics for human dignity . This will be put in place in the coming months."
It still hasn't happened . Not surprising when you consider that since 2005 the total number of new hospital beds provided by the State for sick people is ten (10) !


Martin McGuinness (centre!) , British politician in the Six Occupied Counties of Ireland.
"I can give a commitment on behalf of the leadership that we have absolutely no intention of going to Westminster or Stormont......I reject any such suggestion and I reject the notion that entering Leinster House would mean an end to Sinn Fein’s unapologetic support for the right of Irish people to oppose in arms the British forces of occupation......the war against British rule must continue until freedom is achieved......don’t go my friends. We will lead you to the republic." (From here)

We would deeply appreciate any assistance you could give us in our fight against these , and other , political hypocrites.....
Thanks!
Sharon.






Wednesday, August 13, 2008



THE IRA : the new IRA is younger , more radical and has seen little of life other than violence.......
By Ed Moloney.
From 'Magill' magazine, September 1980.

The process of IRA re-organisation started , by some accounts, in the Spring of 1977 and according to one leading IRA source is still going on . Belfast , where the successes of the RUC were most evident , was the first to be re-organised largely under the direction of a former Belfast IRA Commander and a former IRA Brigade Adjutant . Most of the old Companies were gradually dissolved and their least-known members re-trained and passed into the new four-person cells , and were joined there by new recruits .

The old Battalion staffs were also dissolved and the Belfast Brigade assigned the task of co-ordinating the new cells . The Belfast Brigade still has three Battalions but they are composed of known IRA members who passed into the new civil and military Administration wing of the organisation . The other seven areas of IRA activity in the North of Ireland - Fermanagh , East Tyrone , South Derry , South Down , North Armagh , Derry City and South Armagh , were with varying success re-organised during the latter part of 1977 and most of 1978 .

South Armagh , where the IRA had always operated what amounted to a form of cellular structure , was the last to be re-organised in the Spring of 1979 . In fact little was changed in South Armagh except the area's relationship to the new Northern Command . The captured British Army intelligence assessment of the IRA which fell in to the hands of the IRA in January 1979 (it was studied for several months before release to the Press Association in May 1979) demonstrated the dearth of information about the new IRA structures in British intelligence circles : in a 'tentative order of battle' , the document's author , British General Jim Glover supposed that all the new IRA Cells were directly co-ordinated by the Northern Command . In fact it seems that there are a number of structures interposed between the Northern Command and the Cells.......
(MORE LATER).



RESISTANCE ON ALL FRONTS.......
IRIS talks to a spokesperson authorised to speak on behalf of the Irish Republican Army.
From 'IRIS' magazine , July/August 1982.

IRIS : " After the massive explosion at Springfield Avenue in West Belfast, in June 1982, in which local homes were devastated by the Brits' detonation of IRA explosives which were being temporarily stored in the area and which the Brits had uncovered , the IRA stated that the explosives had been unprimed and could have safely been removed from the area without detonating them ; that is, the Brits detonated the explosives in an attempt to discredit the IRA in nationalist eyes . Immediately afterwards , the Housing Executive chairman , Charles Brett, appeared to participate in this black propaganda campaign by saying that the effect of the bomb damage would be to delay the West Belfast housing programme , that is , again blaming the IRA by implication .What is your attitude to the Housing Executive's apparently growing collaboration with the British military and their objectives , and the similar collaborationist attitude of other semi-governmental and public bodies ? "

IRA: " Firstly , I think it's important to clarify the background to the explosion you mention . We have suspected for several months that the Brits are working at defusing our bombs before they have cleared the area , that they are deliberately ignoring bomb warnings and the locations given for bombs . In other words , they are deliberately jeopardising civilian lives , knowing that injuries or deaths can be blamed on the IRA . We don't travel with primed bombs , we don't store primed bombs , they are always primed 'on target' . It's not a big job , only a matter of flicking a switch . Timers , also, would not be attached to explosives until they are planted on the target . Unprimed explosives are little different from having a can of petrol in your back yard -it's safe till someone puts a match to it . The kind of explosives we use cannot detonate by friction , by being knocked about , by freezing up or being too warm . A detonator on its own will not detonate it . The only thing that can is a primer of higher velocity explosives than those being primed . In short , they cannot explode on their own , they're probably the safest explosives that there are .

The last person to be killed by unstable IRA explosives was Volunteer Jack McCabe, as far back as 1971 . Any accidents caused by explosives since then have been manual failures by Volunteers . The explosives in Springfield Avenue were not primed and could not have exploded . The Brits primed them and detonated them as part of a classic counter-insurgency move . As always , we regret the damage to working-class homes but while the people of the area are understandably annoyed by the devastation to their homes - and while we share their annoyance - we are confident that people reject the Brits' version of events , if only because they know the Brits of old , that they've lied on a hundred occasions about a hundred different things . The same politicians who gasped in horror after the explosion have also lied about sundry other things whereas , for good or ill , the IRA admits what it does .

On the second part of your question , we know that all British government and semi-government agencies are being used in line with Kitson's theory that all government structures , at all levels , have to be used against insurgents . All these people will be treated like any other enemy of the Irish people . "

(MORE LATER).



THE UNDAUNTED WOMEN IN ARMAGH.

The full story of the republican prisoners in Armagh Jail has yet to be told. It has yet to be sung , and properly described , other than as an after-thought in public speeches - "...and of course the women in Armagh.." Republicans have a right to be proud of those women who, from the Divis Flats grandmother doing six months for what an Orange judge called "riotous behaviour" to the young IRA Volunteer inside for the second time and not yet 25-years-old , have managed, whether they numbered 12 or 120 , to maintain their resistance to the most vicious prison system in Europe. The words that follow , says writer Patricia Collins , were written to encourage more of those women to come forward and tell their story , and are based on conversations with several
ex-prisoners , and on visits and letters from those women presently imprisoned. They were written in the hope of jogging the memory of all those women who wrongly think their contribution to Ireland's future peace is not worth mentioning.

From 'IRIS' magazine , August 1984.

Armagh women's prison : a Victorian granite building in the loyalist centre of Armagh city . Before 1969 virtually unknown , yet it had housed 18 republican women internees during the Second World War , and one during the Border Campaign of 1956-1961. By 1969 however , Armagh Jail's population consisted of a few destitute women , some short-term male prisoners and borstal boys .

Bernadette Devlin brought Armagh Jail into public focus when she was sentenced to six months for rioting in Derry's Bogside: she lost her appeal and started her sentence on June 26th 1970, a month after having been elected MP for Mid-Ulster for the second time in two years . Until her release in October 1970 , having served four months of her sentence , she was treated in effect as a political prisoner, and made a few representations to the prison governor on behalf of ordinary prisoners .

By the beginning of 1971 more nationalist women came to be sent to Armagh Prison , usually on six-month sentences . 'Riotous behaviour' was the usual label affixed by the British judge . " Assaulting a British Army patrol with an offensive weapon - a yard brush ..." , is how Anne Maguire from Ballymurphy describes her 'offence' . She recalls that, at the time, a 60-year-old granny from Divis Flats got six months for hitting a Brit with a bin lid .......
(MORE LATER).







Tuesday, August 12, 2008

FIGHT BACK!

This post is dedicated to our friends and colleagues in the Shell2Sea and Tara campaigns , and to our comrades in the Republican Movement. They may well be out-financed , out-'peopled' and out-'spun' by the various 'establishments' pitted against them , but they keep on pushing back as best they can. So : in praise of us little people who fight back - a Dublin song....

The Inner City Song.

The old man sits and wonders just what can he do
He's lived here in the neighbourhood since 1922
He's forced to leave his home to make way for their plans
And he knows that they dont care or give a damn

So he takes a stroll down Monto whats left of it today
Remembering his childhood and the games he used to play
Now all he's got are memories and they are but few
And it seems the money grabbers want them too


[Chorus]
And living in a one room slum ain't easy
Raising seven children on the dole
No place for kids to play while you build your motorway
Is Loughlin house the playground of today

Dublin's inner city is a sorry sight to see
A mass of filty buildings strife and poverty
The people find it hard to make ends meet most of the time
And you're surprised that they should turn to crime

And living in a one room slum ain't easy
Raising seven children on the dole
No place for kids to play while you build your motorway
Is Loughlin house the playground of today

The greedy speculators are trying to move in
With their lawyers and their legal talk the chances are they'll win
They make their public speeches and give the people some old line
But you know we wont be fooled so easily next time

And living in a one room slum ain't easy
Raising seven children on the dole
No place for kids to play while you build your motorway
Is Loughlin house the playground of today... "



(Our thanks to Mickjoe , who likes to go walking hand-in-hand along Sandymount Strand, for that little Gem!)

Meanwhile , those rich, greedy and immoral bastards carry-on enriching themselves at the expense of future generations , blind even to the damage they do to their own off-spring . Callous , black-hearted gombeens .
Sharon.






Saturday, August 09, 2008

RSF TO PUBLICLY REMEMBER EAMONN CEANNT.
Eamonn Ceannt:1881-1916.


"I shall die, like a man, for Ireland's sake."
-note written by Éamonn Ceannt to his wife, May 7th, 1916 , the day before he was executed by the British .

Éamonn Ceannt was an uileann piper, a member of the IRB Military Council and a signatory of the 1916 Proclamation. He was stationed in the South Dublin Union during the Rising of 1916. As a member of the Provisional Government he was executed by the British Army in Kilmainham Gaol on May 8th 1916.
A Republican Commemoration to honour Éamonn Ceannt will be held in the Crumlin area of Dublin , in a 42-acre park named after the man, on Sunday August 17th 2008. Those attending are asked to assemble at 'Superquinn' on the Sundrive Road at 12.45PM.

All Welcome!



On a point of interest: two of our recent [repeat] visitors (click to enlarge) :


(See 'Visitor Number' 10 and 18)

We know why that particular administration would be interested in us ie they would view that which we represent [Irish Republicanism] as a threat . However - could we ask you , the reader, to do something likewise and tell Mick why it is that you like us !
Thanks!
Sharon.






Wednesday, August 06, 2008

(Please help this blog NOT to become a four-out-of-four 'winner' : tell Mick why ya love us...!)



THE IRA : the new IRA is younger , more radical and has seen little of life other than violence.......
By Ed Moloney.
From 'Magill' magazine, September 1980.

The true cost of the Provisional IRA's campaign can never be established but the available figures show a depressingly upward trend for the British-
Financial cost to the British(click to enlarge).

Another factor prominent in IRA thinking is the belief that the longer the war goes on the more of an embarrassment the North of Ireland situation will become internationally . This is especially so in America but also in Europe where left-wing leaders of the IRA believe it will cause increased pressure on Westminster to arrange a long term solution capable of providing stability and security for profitable foreign investments in Ireland. IRA leaders also believe that the longer the war continues the greater the chances of another Loyalist reaction.

Although the IRA could start a terrible and bloody civil war in the North with a dozen or so well-placed bombs it hasn't done so and will not do so as it would certainly be the loser in that situation , but the IRA has applied steady pressure on the loyalist community mainly through the shooting of part-time and 'ex'-UDR soldiers . In this respect the possible reaction of loyalist leaders like Ian Paisley is particularly important : as one independent observer and confidant of IRA leaders put it - " They hope that by shooting loyalists in the security forces they'll cause Ian Paisley to have another brainstorm and start another loyalist strike. The hope then is that Thatcher, the 'Iron Lady' , wouldn't do a 'Harold Wilson'
but give the loyalists an ultimatum . In which case it's all up for grabs !"


Ian Paisley , by that reckoning , is one enemy the Provos would prefer to keep alive : these are some of the 'new tactics' as operated by the 'new' re-organised IRA.......
(MORE LATER).




RESISTANCE ON ALL FRONTS.......
IRIS talks to a spokesperson authorised to speak on behalf of the Irish Republican Army.
From 'IRIS' magazine , July/August 1982.

IRIS : " Although IRA activity is frequently intensive and highly successful in any particular week or over a period of weeks , there are other periods of little or no apparent activity . Why does this 'unevenness' exist? "

IRA: " Well , I think that the answer to that is that this is the nature of guerrilla warfare . Vietnam is the one guerrilla war that people refer to as the textbook guerrilla operation but , in fact , prior to the Tet Offensive hardly a shot had been fired . After that , of course, everything changed . If you take the Algerian struggle , actions were few and intermittent , Cyprus was the same . In Malaya there were very few Brits killed over a three-year period .

The IRA suffers from a number of drawbacks . Firstly , unlike many liberation movements there is no government supporting us militarily or financially . We have a small land area in which to fight , and are one of the few guerrilla armies that lives and fights in the occupied area . We are fighting a major world force which has massive resources , and at our backs is a hostile collaborationist government
* spending millions of pounds trying to help defeat us . We have political enemies throughout the world trying to cut our lines of supply . In the occupied area we have over fifty per-cent of the population collaborating with the enemy. ('1169..' Comment * .....and now these same Provos are salaried and suited to share space with those same collaborators.)

Our biggest single asset is the nationalist people who by and large support us to varying degrees . All our support today lies with our own people , just as in 1916 - the Proclamation said that the Irish people were relying for the most part on their own strength . So , in the light of all the minus points , we do have periods when we have an inability to strike and to keep momentum going but , if you look back, say over a two-year period , you'll see that we do have continuity and we do continue to strike . Also , it should be stressed that while there is a natural ebb and flow caused by logistical problems etc it is a mistake to judge the intensity of the struggle using solely the level of operations as a guideline . While operational levels will fluctuate , political work in IRA-based areas like education , recruitment and expanding the support base all continue on a daily basis."
(MORE LATER).



The Class Of '76:(Top row L. to R.) Charlie Fagan (Arthur's brother) , Dickie Glenholmes (Jnr) , Ciaran 'Zack' Smyth (served 9 years in jail) , Philip Rooney (served 8 and a half years) , Seany McVeigh (served 10 years). (Bottom row L. to R.) Eugene Gilmartin (serving life in the H-Blocks) , Arthur O Faogain.

SHEDDING DREAMS.......
The ghettos of Belfast and Derry are filled with stories such as this one. It is not unique. Young men and women, because of the partition of this country by the British, are killed, imprisoned and maimed.
By Artur O Faogain.
From 'IRIS' magazine , October 1987.

" Those romantic dreams have been erased by both time and experiences . Nine years of hating the system , the blanket protests, the no-wash protest and hunger-strike have changed them from capricious teenagers to formidable opponents of British rule . On the outside , I too have shed my teenage dreams that a liberation war can be a romantic event and , although my experiences over the years have been different from theirs , my conclusions are similar.

We must not give Britain the chance to ruin other generations as it did ours
* . We must never make ceasefires with the British while their soldiers patrol our streets . Sectarianism is an evil that is best attacked by removing the Brits ** . ('1169...' Comment *...the present mis-named 'Peace Process' , which still leaves Westminster in jurisdictional control of six Irish counties, is guaranteed to "ruin other generations" as it simply passes the conflict on to our children and their children / ** ...."removing the Brits" , yes - but not assisting them in their 'rule' of those six Irish counties.)

When we all meet again in a couple of years to talk and laugh , I wonder how many of us will remember that night in January 1975 . Teenagers then with dreams , now grown men with a purpose . The Brits did not break us with their system of oppression . Instead they created revolutionaries out of naive teenagers. "

[END of 'Shedding Dreams']
(Next : 'The Undaunted Women In Armagh' - from 1984)






Friday, August 01, 2008


EIGHT IRISH REPUBLICAN COMMEMORATIONS/FUNCTIONS IN THIS , THE EIGHT MONTH OF 08.....

(UPDATE : the President of Republican Sinn Fein, Ruairí Ó Brádaigh, will be interviewed by journalist Tom McGurk on RTE Radio One - in a rare but welcome breach of that radio stations 'Section 31' mentality - next Saturday , August 9 , 2008 , between 9am and 10am . RTÉ Radio One is available to listen to online using Windows Media Player or Real Player)

1) August 9th : on the Anniversary of Internment (August 9th [Saturday]) a white-line picket will be held on the Falls Road in Belfast in support of the POW's in Maghaberry Jail.

2) August 10th : the annual Goss and Gaughran Commemoration will be held on Sunday August 10th at 2.30pm in St Patricks Cemetery in Dundalk , County Louth. The Lisdoo Arms is the assembly point , and Des Dalton is the main speaker .

3) August 10th : the unveiling of the Memorial to IRA Captain Michael Danford will take place on Sunday August 10th at Ballysimon Road in Limerick . The event is organised by 'The Limerick Republican Graves Association' .

4) August 16th : a Republican Commemoration will be held in Croom , County Limerick , on Saturday August 16th , where Seamus Ó Suilleabháin will be the main speaker . The assembly point is in Croom Village at 3pm.

5) August 22nd : the Thomas Harte Cumann of Republican Sinn Fein has booked the ballad group 'The Foggy Dew' to play at a social function on Friday August 22nd . The venue is 'The Forester's Club' , North Street , Lurgan in County Armagh . All Welcome!

6) August 24th : a Commemoration in honour of all 22 Hunger Strikers will be held in the Garden Of Remembrance in the Old Jail in Wexford on Sunday August 24th at 3pm.

7) August 29 : a 'Welcome Home!' function will be held on Friday August 29th in Bundoran in County Donegal for Gerard Mooney - details to follow at a later date.

8) August 30th : the Annual H-Block Hunger Strike Commemoration will be held on Saturday August 30th in Bundoran in county Donegal . The assembly point is the East End , it starts at 3pm and the Speakers are Dan Hoban, Micheál Óg Lavelle and Bob Loughman.

(Postscript: in order not to ruin our snappy (!) headline , we are only now mentioning two other August '08 events - a Social Function in aid of the County Roscommon IRA Commemoration Committee , held on Friday August 1st in the Croghan Bar in County Roscommon and the monthly Dublin Raffle , organised by 'The Second Sunday Crew' , which will be held in a Social Club on the Dublin/Kildare border on Sunday August 10th next . The aforementioned 'snappy' headline took our 'Junior' hours to conjuer up and we hadn't the heart to ruin it on him ;-) ....)

Thanks!
Sharon.






Wednesday, July 30, 2008



THE IRA : the new IRA is younger , more radical and has seen little of life other than violence.......
By Ed Moloney.
From 'Magill' magazine, September 1980.

Another principal , if rarely admitted reason for switching to a long war of attrition strategy is that support for widescale IRA activity has declined significantly in recent years . The war-weariness and pessimism evident in the nationalist areas of the North is also reflected in the attitudes of many in the Movement itself who see little to be gained by continuing the fight * . (* '1169..' Comment : that whole paragraph should be read with the author's name firmly in mind - Moloney had indeed got his contacts in the Movement but was not of the Movement.)

But that sort of thinking is less true of the new IRA ; they are the younger , more radical types who have seen little of life other than violence , dawn raids , interrogations , rioting , shooting and bombing . They have taken over the mantle of militant republicanism from the men and women of the 'forties , 'fifties and 'sixties and are increasingly impatient with what many of them see as conservative political and military elements in the old Dublin leadership . And the IRA they have created is much more ruthless and doesn't need mass popular support .

With the prospect of a 'long war' in front of them what then keeps the IRA going ? Prime among the motives for continuing the campaign is the hope that in the harsh economic climate of the 1980's the cost of the North of Ireland to the British will get so high that they will be forced into looking for a way out . There's no doubt that the cost of shoring up a degenerating economy in the North combined with the damage caused by the Provisional IRA's campaign and the cost of the security and prison services has become increasingly burdensome for the British - last year's subvention to the North from Westminster (ie the money the British have to find to make up the difference between income from taxes and public spending in the North) was equivalent to the five year refund demanded from the EEC budget by Margaret Thatcher.......
(MORE LATER).



RESISTANCE ON ALL FRONTS.
IRIS talks to a spokesperson authorised to speak on behalf of the Irish Republican Army.
From 'IRIS' magazine , July/August 1982.

IRIS: " Recently there was considerable publicity given to alleged IRA attempts to obtain sophisticated heat-seeking missiles . To what extent does the present lack of such weaponry limit the IRA's operational capacity in rural areas ? "

IRA: " I would say that if that type of weapon was available to IRA units you would find that we would be able to physically clash with the British face-to-face , that is, do what they are always saying we can't do - 'stand up and fight' . There would be a whole new phase of the war , a totally new game altogether. At present there are massive areas of the occupied territory , such as in South Armagh and in parts of Fermanagh , particularly around Lisnaskea , Donagh and Maguiresbridge , where the Brits don't use vehicles at all . They supply all their outposts by helicopter . The same applies to large areas on the Fermanagh/Donegal and West Tyrone/Donegal borders. Without helicopters , which this kind of missile is designed to attack , there would be a complete inability to continue supplies without mounting a massive operation to secure the area using hundreds of men . So the effect of our lack of this weapon is obvious ."
(MORE LATER).



The Class Of '76:(Top row L. to R.) Charlie Fagan (Arthur's brother) , Dickie Glenholmes (Jnr) , Ciaran 'Zack' Smyth (served 9 years in jail) , Philip Rooney (served 8 and a half years) , Seany McVeigh (served 10 years). (Bottom row L. to R.) Eugene Gilmartin (serving life in the H-Blocks) , Arthur O Faogain.

SHEDDING DREAMS.......
The ghettos of Belfast and Derry are filled with stories such as this one. It is not unique. Young men and women, because of the partition of this country by the British, are killed, imprisoned and maimed.
By Artur O Faogain.
From 'IRIS' magazine , October 1987.

" We all looked forward to Christmas that year , as we did every year . Sitting together , glasses filled, we enjoyed each other's company . Shaking the cold from my legs I opened the door to rejoin them . There they sat , laughing, oblivious of the coming nightmare . Blasted against a wall of the bar , I twisted and broke . 'I'm sorry , son,' my father said when I awoke . 'Your legs...' . 'I know' , I replied . Luckily no-one else was seriously hurt . I didn't go out much in my wheelchair . Friends would call up and we'd talk for hours . I felt so cheated.

The British Government announced that political status would end on March 1st 1980 , but I don't think any of my friends took much notice of the announcement . Frank Stagg died that February and the IRA finally admitted the ceasefire was over . Hardly a week went by without the arrest of one of my friends - Castlereagh Interrogation Centre had just finished refining its methods and , with the arrival of the enthusiastic dictator, Roy Mason, in September , its efficiency became infamous . The ghettos of Belfast and Derry suffered as Mason proved his policies 'worked' : people awoke to find neighbours or friends in Castlereagh , and everybody feared that early morning knock . By 1977 the British system of oppression was complete .

Judges sounding like parrots , seated on benches repeating 'Guilty!' , endorsed Castlereagh's methods with a mass of convictions that imprisoned my generation . Listening to the news , the long sentences depressed me . Their time for release would never come , I thought , and, visiting them over the last number of years I have observed how different they have become . No longer the wide-eyed teenagers with adventure in mind......."

(MORE LATER).