| Violence Issue Discussed on Irish Media
Program: DTR News at 12.00
Date and time 13.8.03
Subject Omagh
ROBERT SKATES
Security Minister, Jane Kennedy, is meeting with relatives of those
killed in the Omagh bombing. Earlier, Ms. Kennedy, accompanied by Lord
Filkin from the Department of Constitutional Affairs, visited the town¹s
memorial garden. Last week, the Government announced it was giving the
Omagh families £800,000 to help fund a civil action against those
allegedly involved in the bombing. Ms. Kennedy says she is still confident
the police investigation will lead to convictions.
JANE KENNEDY
We have a very serious live police investigation continuing into what
is one of the worst atrocities of the period in Northern Ireland. And that
investigation remains live. That investigation is continuing on a number
of fronts, and I¹m confident and positive, based upon the briefings
that I have received from the police, that their investigation will bear
fruit.
Program: TALKBACK
Date & Time 13.8.03 12.26
Subject Calm on the Streets
DAVID DUNSEITH
It has been a very quiet summer. How did we get here? I have Frankie
Gallagher on the line who speaks for the Ulster Political Research Group
and Eoin O’Broin is with me in the studio, Sinn Fein councillor for North
Belfast.
Eoin O’Broin, it has been, I don’t think, there’s no, okay, we have
the pipebombs this morning reported and we have got lots of complaints
about increases in paramilitary activity, but talking specifically about
on-street violence. That seems to have calmed down a bit and that just
didn’t happen by accident did it?
EOIN O’BROIN
No and I think it’s more than just this summer. I mean in reality, particularly
in the likes of North and East Belfast, the two years preceding last September
were probably some of the most violent in terms of interface violence we
had seen for some time, and since September there has been a marked down
turn in the level of violence.
Sinn Fein views that as a result of a number of factors. First of all
we think that there are things happening within the UDA, the feud being
one. But there are other things happening there as well that meant that
the UDA’s campaign that was particularly being run by North Belfast and
South East Antrim Brigades has stopped from September.
The feud is one, the Criminal Assets Recovery Bureau is another etc.
I also think there has been a growing argument for dialogue. We’ve been
putting forward this argument for quite some time. Obviously last night’s
meeting was a very positive development, and in North Belfast last year
those areas where dialog was taking place between political representatives
on either side or between community representatives in interface violence
was an issue we were able to resolve.
It was in those interfaces where there was a refusal to talk or an unwillingness
to talk that problems got out of hand, particularly where the UDA was involved.
I have to say I think the establishment of the Protestant Interface Network
earlier this year, which most nationalists and republicans regarded with
a huge degree of skepticism, has in parts of the city had a very positive
effect and I have to acknowledge that.
I have been on interfaces where I have physically seen people involved
in that interface network on the opposite side of an interface calming
the situation down. I think what we need to do at this point is very clear.
We need to build on what has been quite a summer in many years.
We need to encourage more of the types of dialog that we saw last night.
We need the likes of the UPRG to engage directly in dialogue with elected
representatives like ourselves.
DAVID DUNSEITH
It’s still not happening.
EOIN O’BROIN
It’s still not happening, and we need to have a situation where interface
by interface people of influence in the political sphere and the community
sphere and the religious sphere are sitting down talking and resolving
the problems, and I think if we do that then we can build on this very
positively.
There are trouble spots still. There is a low level campaign of violence
going on in Dunmurry and Lisburn. Our own councillor out there Paul Butler
had a kind of a device of some description thrown at his house there last
week. That’s very worrying.
We believe the UDA locally is behind that, but at the same time if people
get their heads around the need to engage, particularly with those people
they don’t agree with and they don’t trust, then I think we could build
very positively.
DAVID DUNSEITH
Frankie Gallagher what’s your handle on this? Why do you feel that things
have calmed down a bit?
FRANKIE GALLAGHER
It’s our analysis that there certainly, if we could stop the tit for
tat street violence we would go a long way to finding out the causes behind
the street violence in the first part.
It’s also our analysis that a great deal of the violence of this last
four to five years is part of a political strategy to destabilize loyalism
at the height of very important and key political moments. And now that
we’ve done that, the advent of the Protestant Interface Network, the UPRG
work on the ground. I can’t agree with everything that the councillor has
said, South East Antrim and North Belfast, we think the factors as well
that have come is that there were people on the loyalist side manipulating
the situation as well.
If you go into other people’s areas pipebombs etc, not doing on their
own doorstep, but going into other people’s areas and causing this type
of situation.
DAVID DUNSEITH
Yes, I know, members of the public who are listening will say they accept
that on both sides, whatever side of the interface, there are obviously
people who are going to cause trouble.
I mean we can throw mud at each other til the cows come home as they
say, but they know that there are people who are out for trouble, and if
they’d been up the road they’d be out in the streets as well. What about
this business of direct dialogue? We seem to have gone some way down that
line but there’s still this little gap. Can that be closed?
FRANKIE GALLAGHER
I think as long as there’s a sustained period of calm and there’s no
violence on the street I think that barriers will come down. I think the
future would look brighter the longer period of time that peace and stability
prevails. What is difficult at the moment is that myself and many other
people within my constituency have only recently received death threats
supposed to be from the Provisional IRA.
They have gathered intelligence etc on myself and many others. It’s
very difficult to sit down and enter into dialogue with someone who you
know is gathering intelligence on you, to set you up for a future assassination.
There’s a lot of trust to build, there’s a lot of dialogue to be done within
our own communities because, let’s be honest, if we get our own doorstep
sorted out first and I think that’s what’s happened this year, it’s not
all down to UDA, there was republicans involved in the violence.
The republican community seems to have got that under control. The loyalist
community seems to have got their situation under control. We’ve all got
different factors and that’s the way forward.
DAVID DUNSEITH
Yeah, what about this Eoin O’Broin from Frankie Gallagher who . I’m
sorry is a bit reserved, he’s not saying no to dialogue eventually but
there are these threats hanging over him?
EOIN O’BROIN
Well let me say a couple of things. I mean Frankie and I are both elected
representatives. We both have an electoral mandate and we both have a responsibility
to go that extra mile to resolve the problems. I don’t think it’s acceptable
for us in our positions of local leadership to say well let’s wait until
it calms down and then talk.
I have had two UDA death threats communicated to me in the last 18 months
by the PSNI. I will meet Frankie Gallagher after this radio show, (1) To
try and deal with the issue of current UDA threats against Sinn Fein councillors,
but more importantly to see how do we resolve precisely the types of problems
which are negatively effecting our own communities.
We are not going agree on the causes of these problems. We are not going
to agree on the analysis but we have a political responsibility. There’s
no point talking to people who you agree with. We need to talk to precisely
those people who we have most to fear from, and I would urge Frankie and
those people within his sphere of influence who are in favor of dialogue
to go that extra mile.
Because if we’re not going to talk, I mean if there’s an interface,
for example, let’s take North Queen Street and Tigers Bay. One of the really
frustrating things for those of us on the nationalist and republican side,
who last year were trying to resolve the problem, is the UDA personnel
in that area and the DUP personnel who are obviously the kind of main political
reps, DUP people who will speak to us day in and day out, and city councillors
that have all sorts of other issues, will not sit down with us privately
and say let’s sort this problem out. If political reps won’t do that, the
problems aren’t going to get solved by itself and that’s why we need to
take that responsibility.
DAVID DUNSEITH
What about this Frankie Gallagher on the invitation there from Eoin
O’Broin. You’re got to sort it out with people like Eoin O’Broin? There’s
no point in talking to somebody within your own group because you agree
with them, they’re no threat to you, as you would say, so you’ve got to
get together on it?
FRANKIE GALLAGHER
I agree that people within, from elected representatives especially
have to take political risks and have to move forward and have to enter
into dialogue, but we’re at an impasse now which we are working on, where
the nationalist community could make a gesture for example of recognizing
the Protestant culture, to be able to walk on their own streets, the same
way that the Protestant community has recognized the civil rights and the
rights of people in Londonderry when they wanted to walk on their own streets.
I think I could go back to my constituency and find out is there threats
to these people, is this true or is there some sort of mixing going on,
and I think if that councillor goes back and does the same in his community
well then we can move a large way forward and I’m doing that day and daily
but you know it’s very difficult when people say one thing and want to
meet in private, yet those same people are there denying us our rights,
our culture and our heritage, and won’t even recognize this as a people.
DAVID DUNSEITH
Well, I’ll just ask you a brief final question on that Eoin O’Broin.
I mean it is, there are so many negative things that we cover from time
to time in the program. It’s nice to have positive language as we’ve heard
here today, but there’s the question as Frankie Gallagher mentions there
about parades and all that sort of thing. Can that be sorted out?
EOIN O’BROIN
Without question. Now let me say, I mean I’ve already said on this program
that I have physically seen the positive impact of the Protestant Interface
Network in parts of North Belfast and there’s many of my constituents who
won’t be happy with me saying that, but I think we need to acknowledge
it. The reality is and again Frankie’s kind of saying let’s have a gesture
before we solve the problem. The marching issue needs to be resolved. The
lesson of the Apprentice Boys..
DAVID DUNSEITH
This is a good time to start now before next ..
EOIN O’BROIN
Absolutely but the lesson of the Apprentice Boys and the Bogside Residents
in Derry is that if you begin with dialogue, private and then public, you’ll
be able to resolve the issue, and they have resolved that substantially.
Sinn Fein has been arguing for a long time and encouraging residents to
do the same, to approach loyal institutions, to have dialogue and resolve
those problems, and if there are solutions we won’t be found wanting.
But it’s unreasonable for anybody to say let’s have this before we talk.
Talking is the beginning of the process to solve these problems and I would
encourage Frankie and anybody else to do what is required to encourage
community workers or political representatives, privately or publicly,
to get into dialogue so we can solve all these problems. If people refuse
to talk they are preventing the solutions from being developed.

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