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Sectarian tensions lead to riots and school closures in Northern
Ireland
By Julie Hyland
14 January 2002
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Sectarian tensions caused serious rioting and led to the closure
of several schools in north Belfast last week.
The trouble flared on January 9, following a confrontation
between a Catholic and a Protestant woman outside the Holy Cross
Catholic primary school on the Ardoyne Road. Access to the school
had been the focus of a bitter sectarian dispute last year lasting
over four months.
The Ardoyne Road is a so-called interface area,
where predominantly Catholic and Protestant residential areas
meet, with the main entrance to Holy Cross situated in what is
effectively a Protestant enclave.
The school first became a flashpoint in June last year, when
loyalists and nationalists both alleged that the other side was
using the school route to launch attacks. Catholic parents said
they were being intimidated if they tried to enter the school
by the front gate, whilst Protestants claimed they were being
denied access to local amenities at the nationalist end of the
Ardoyne Road.
In September the dispute escalated, as loyalist protestors
attempted to stop parents using the contested Ardoyne Road entrance.
For 12 weeks, hundreds of police and British soldiers formed a
daily security cordon, as the schoolgirls and their parents were
forced to run a gauntlet of hate. The protest was called off at
the end of November, when community representatives and politicians
agreed to hold a series of meetings to address the various grievances,
but a heavy security presence has remained in the area ever since.
According to press reports about Wednesdays incident,
violence broke out when police intervened in a dispute between
the two women, and attempted to arrest a Protestant woman. Crowds
gathered, and cars and windows were smashed. As the situation
deteriorated Holy Cross School was forced to close early, and
bus its pupils home. That afternoon, a pupil at the Protestant
Boys Model Secondary School was taken to hospital after
the school bus he was travelling on was attacked.
Later in the evening, rioting broke out in loyalist and nationalist
areas of the Ardoyne Road, Crumlin Road and Brompton Park in Belfast.
Up to 500 people were involved in the disturbances, which were
mainly directed against police and security forces. According
to police accounts, more than 136 petrol bombs, acid bombs and
bricks were thrown at the security forces, injuring 48 officers,
in what were described as prolonged and orchestrated attacks.
Police fired eight baton rounds (plastic bullets).
The following morning, masked loyalist thugs, one armed with
a gun, ran amok through the grounds of Our Lady of Mercy Catholic
girls secondary school, just 500 yards from Holy Cross.
While one kept watch at the gate, six others set about parked
cars with crowbars. Up to 20 cars were damaged while pupils and
their teachers looked on in terror from the school building. When
news of the attack broke, horrified parents rushed to the school
to collect their children.
Later that day, police used armoured vehicles to escort schoolboys
from the Protestant Boys Model Secondary School through
nationalist crowds that had gathered on the Crumlin Road. Other
schools in the area also closed early.
Despite a major security operation, serious violence continued
Thursday evening in the mainly Catholic Ardoyne area. Reports
state that 300 nationalist youths fought with police and troops,
and cars and vans were torched.
British, Irish and American politicians issued anxious appeals
for calm, claiming that the violence jeopardised the great
gains made by the 1998 Good Friday Agreement, which established
the power-sharing Northern Ireland Assembly.
Northern Ireland Secretary John Reid said he utterly
condemned the violence, whilst Sinn Fein MP and Education
Minister in the Assembly Martin McGuinness described events at
Holy Cross as deeply disturbing.
This violence is traumatising our children and sowing
the seeds of sectarian hatred and division in future generations.
The only way to resolve differences is through dialogue,
McGuinness said.
Local MP Nigel Dodds, from the Democratic Unionist Party (DUP),
which opposes the Good Friday Agreement, said, Clearly there
are those with a political agenda who are intent on causing trouble,
and the community must not fall into that trap.
Many commentators have noted that most of those involved in
the rioting are teenagersthe very ones, according to the
politicians, who would enjoy a more prosperous and peaceful future
as a result of the new power-sharing arrangements. Contrary to
the official pronouncements, the Good Friday Agreement has done
nothing to resolve the historic issues at the heart of Northern
Irelands sectarian divide. Aimed primarily at creating a
more stable framework for the transnational corporations, the
Agreement, drawn up between the British, Irish and US governments,
has largely benefited big business and its political representatives.
To enable the loyalist and nationalist parties to take up positions
within the new arrangements, the Agreement enshrines sectarianism
as the basis of political life. The constitutional provisions
of the Northern Ireland Assembly recognise the loyalist and nationalist
parties as the legitimate representatives of two essentially opposed
religious communities, by giving them a mutual veto on all major
legislation.
Within this framework, the new structures have only encouraged
a competition between Catholic and Protestants for already scarce
social and economic resources. Many young people, from both religious
denominations, have seen no real social gains from the Agreement,
nor any moves to integrate the two communities.
The various paramilitary organisations have sought to strengthen
their de facto control over certain districts, by deliberately
provoking sectarian tensions. Loyalist terror gangs are responsible
for two-thirds of all recent sectarian attacks, and there is evidence
showing that the Holy Cross dispute has been fanned by internecine
feuding between rival loyalist groups, the Ulster Defence Association
(UDA) and the Ulster Volunteer Force (UVF)both opponents
of the Good Friday Agreement.
According to the nationalist newspaper An Phoblacht/Republican
News, turf warfare between the two elsewhere in Belfast had
led to a large number of UDA members being displaced into the
formally UVF-controlled Glenbryn area. The dispute over access
to Holy Cross originally began when a Catholic parent objected
to UDA flags being erected outside the school, the paper claimed,
Amidst the ensuing paramilitary rivalry, a campaign of anti-Catholic
sectarianism, including the blockade of Holy Cross, acted as recruiting
sergeant for the UDA.
At the weekend, the UDA announced that it was responsible for
the murder of a Catholic postman in Newtownabbey. Twenty year-old
Daniel McColgan was shot by UDA gunman as he arrived at his depot
on Saturday morning. A statement issued by the Red Hand Defendersa
cover name used by loyalist paramilitariessaid all Catholic
postal workers were now considered legitimate targets.
The group had early issued a similar threat to Catholic teachers
and others working at Catholic schools.
See Also:
Sectarian divisions widen in Northern
Ireland
[7 January 2002]
Northern Ireland: Catholic
girls school becomes focus for sectarian violence
[5 September 2001]
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