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IRA statement

 
 
Not Here Still
12:01 / 28.07.05
The IRA have just released this statement.

The leadership of Oglaigh na hEireann has formally ordered an end to the armed campaign.

This will take effect from 4pm [1600 BST] this afternoon.

All IRA units have been ordered to dump arms.

All Volunteers have been instructed to assist the development of purely political and democratic programmes through exclusively peaceful means.

Volunteers must not engage in any other activities whatsoever.

The IRA leadership has also authorised our representative to engage with the IICD [Independent International Commission on Decommissioning] to complete the process to verifiably put its arms beyond use in a way which will further enhance public confidence and to conclude this as quickly as possible.

We have invited two independent witnesses, from the Protestant and Catholic churches, to testify to this.

The Army Council took these decisions following an unprecedented internal discussion and consultation process with IRA units and Volunteers.

We appreciate the honest and forthright way in which the consultation process was carried out and the depth and content of the submissions.

We are proud of the comradely way in which this truly historic discussion was conducted. The outcome of our consultations show very strong support among IRA Volunteers for the Sinn Fein peace strategy.

There is also widespread concern about the failure of the two governments and the unionists to fully engage in the peace process.

This has created real difficulties. The overwhelming majority of people in Ireland fully support this process.

They and friends of Irish unity throughout the world want to see the full implementation of the Good Friday Agreement.

Notwithstanding these difficulties our decisions have been taken to advance our republican and democratic objectives, including our goal of a united Ireland.

We believe there is now an alternative way to achieve this and to end British rule in our country. It is the responsibility of all Volunteers to show leadership, determination and courage.

We are very mindful of the sacrifices of our patriot dead, those who went to jail, Volunteers, their families and the wider republican base.

We reiterate our view that the armed struggle was entirely legitimate. We are conscious that many people suffered in the conflict.

There is a compelling imperative on all sides to build a just and lasting peace. The issue of the defence of nationalist and republican communities has been raised with us.

There is a responsibility on society to ensure that there is no re-occurrence of the pogroms of 1969 and the early 1970s.

There is also a universal responsibility to tackle sectarianism in all its forms.

The IRA is fully committed to the goals of Irish unity and independence and to building the Republic outlined in the 1916 Proclamation.

We call for maximum unity and effort by Irish republicans everywhere. We are confident that by working together Irish republicans can achieve our objectives.

Every Volunteer is aware of the import of the decisions we have taken and all Oglaigh are compelled to fully comply with these orders.

There is now an unprecedented opportunity to utilise the considerable energy and goodwill which there is for the peace process.

This comprehensive series of unparalleled initiatives is our contribution to this and to the continued endeavours to bring about independence and unity for the people of Ireland.


[Note for moderators: the only other thread I could find vaguley relevant wasn't, I felt, relevant enough or worthwhile resuurecting. But do so if you wish...]
 
 
uncle retrospective
12:06 / 28.07.05
Well thank god for that, they should have done that back in '94. I'd love to say this will change things but I don't believe that the gangster side of the IRA will stop. There is far too much money involved.
It will be intresting to see what the UUP have to say.
It's a bad time to be a terrorist folks.
 
 
Not Here Still
12:10 / 28.07.05
There's been some talk of this being prompted by a schism between the more political side of the IRA and the organsied crime/ gangster elements, particularly after the Northern Bank raid and the Robert McCartney business. This led to internal debate, which led to today's statement.
 
 
Tryphena Absent
14:39 / 28.07.05
I think they realised that the McCartney sisters were more hardcore than any IRA member, which is a relief because it was certainly obvious to me that if anything else happened the short one with dark hair was going to hunt IRA members down with a sniper and take them down one by one.
 
 
Our Lady Has Left the Building
20:14 / 28.07.05
This presumably won't stop IRA members from keeping a few guns in the shed behind the paint tins 'just in case'? Or the IRA from having a few super-secret weapons cases? After all, the IRA are presumably still at some level of risk from the Unionist paramilitary groups neh?

Still, it's welcome, especially at it puts Ian Paisley on the back foot again. He'll probably insist there can be no surrender until the IRA denounce Popery in all it's forms and turn the metal of their weapons into gold and share it out amongst all the families of all their victims.
 
 
STOATIE LIEKS CHOCOLATE MILK
11:50 / 29.07.05
Not having a thread for "inappropriate responses" for this, I apologise in advance for the threadrot, but...

...for the first time ever, I feel sorry for Tony Blair. In another world, one in which we didn't invade Iraq, he'd go down in history as "the prime minister who was incumbent when the IRA renounced violence". I like to think he's aware of this.
 
 
_Boboss
12:03 / 29.07.05
everyone's very definitely not saying 'so negotiation's how you defeat terror then' aren't they? that would, for much of our political class, be a statement far too chummy with notions like operational truth and moral intelligence* to be of much use to them.



*whatever they are. sound good though.
 
 
Not Here Still
12:10 / 29.07.05
Stoatie: That's not threadrot as far as I'm concerned - I made the abstract pretty wide for a reason. And I agree.

Andrew Marr (in his last day in the job) was suggesting this could be Tony's 'legacy' moment. Which, as you say, seems less likely now...

Meanwhile, a unionist they interviewed (think he was DUP not UUP but not 100%) was making noises that the statement talks about a cessation of military activity - not necessarily other activities which might be criminal. Will be interesting to see how it all pans out.
 
 
Not Here Still
12:14 / 29.07.05
(This may well be threadrot though)

One thing this has done which I never thought would happen is make me feel sorry for Norman Tebbit. He did a piece on the Today programme this morning which was very moving, all the more so for its complete lack of Tebbo bombast...
 
 
Regrettable Juvenilia
12:27 / 29.07.05
everyone's very definitely not saying 'so negotiation's how you defeat terror then' aren't they?

Didn't you get Tony's memo? The IRA and the people responsible for the London bomb attacks are apparently two entirely different species of terrorist, and you can reason with the former, but not the latter. Also, the IRA's bombs had ickle flowers in them, because they were a bit nicer.
 
 
Our Lady Has Left the Building
12:58 / 29.07.05
I suspect that Blair's energies will be diverted to trying to ensure that this IS seen as his legacy... Next time he's quized about the whole Iraq thing, down a shot if he brings up Ireland...
 
 
Not Here Still
13:19 / 29.07.05
I suspect that Blair's energies will be diverted to trying to ensure that this IS seen as his legacy...

And Gordon's. Cos the sooner Blair has his legacy, the sooner he goes.
 
 
_Boboss
13:22 / 29.07.05
i heard the tebbit thing too. his descriptions of his wife's plight were very moving, but, i dunno, maybe this is just the eggy pad in me, does he really think his wife's suffering is worth mentioning as a point in an 800 year old process of imperial occupation and resisitance, which might be finally leaving its violent phase behind for good (except the national/institutional violence that maintains the ulster border)? that one wheelchair-bound woman's pain should be invoked to balance the millions* of dead irish men, women and children?

*okay, possibly less than millions depending which famines and that you want to pick, but lots and lots.
 
 
Not Here Still
13:27 / 29.07.05
Oh, I agree entirely. But I never thought I'd feel sorry for Norman Tebbit, thats all...
 
 
STOATIE LIEKS CHOCOLATE MILK
13:46 / 29.07.05
Flyboy- exactly.

two entirely different species of terrorist

Of course. You can negotiate with Christians.
 
 
Our Lady Has Left the Building
17:17 / 03.08.05
Good to see Ian Paisley doing his usual thing and being a complete gitweavil. Ian Paisley today said uncompromisingly there could be no role for Sinn Féin in Northern Ireland's power-sharing administration.

Seeing as Ian Paisley's sole reason to continue existing on this planet is to incite Republican violence rather than do anything vaguely positive, can someone please lock him up for supporting terror by blocking moves to a peaceful settlement in Northern Ireland and insist that the Unionists elect someone who isn't a spiteful ball of hate? The wanker.
 
 
Our Lady Has Left the Building
14:11 / 27.09.05
Internationally agreed witnesses say the I.R.A. have decommissioned their weapons, D.U.P. cry 'foul!' again. Seeing as the D.U.P. are going to block any attempts for Sinn Fein to retake their positions in the power-sharing executive, is now the time for everyone else to concentrate on a Loyalist decommisioning and for them to put their weapons beyond use as well?
 
  
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