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uimh 164 nollaig — december 2000 60p(usa$l 3 3 don't join new police the function of any british police force in ireland is to maintain daithl 6 conaill commemoration 1oth anniversary new year's day january 1 , 2oo1 glasnevin cemetery assemble at gates 1 2.45pm republican sinn fein in its public statements at and since the 96th ard-fheis in dublin during november has repeated its call that irish people should not join the new british police force the british government has always relied on coercive laws and armed militarised police to maintain its rule in ireland the primary function of any armed british police force in ireland — ric ruc or psni - has always been to uphold and maintain british rule here by physical force with the passing into law of the british police bill in november the framework for the renamed ruc has been set regardless of symbols uniforms names badges structures or the sectarian composition of the force the underlying reality will not alter what we will have is a force recruited trained motivated armed and paid by the british government that is why no young irish person who gives allegiance to ireland should have anything to do with it and why the gaa should continue to ban british colonial police personnel from membership of the association lest we forget the ruc has the dubious distinction of being the only western european police force since the german nazi gestapo to be found guilty of the torture of prisoners in their care by the european commission on human rights this was the police force in the 1970s that fr denis faul opponent of torture and human rights activist described along with the udr as sectarian terrorist forces the same denis faul in a letter to the irish news november 24 now wants nationalists to join the renamed ruc to join with the torturers of irish people and assist them in perpetuating british rule here history has shown us that english rule in ireland cannot be sustained without the use of such methods it is worth noting that the british government-appointed hunt commission in 1 969-70 was an earlier attempt at updating the ruc in april 1970 it recommended that military duties be removed from the ruc and that it be partially disarmed a new • fr denis faul what advice will he give nationalists if the new look ' ruc comes under attack in thefuture bh'e uniform was also recommended the ruc was without some of its arms for about a month before it very quickly rearmed and the force reverted to its former role the irish saying springs to mind cuir sioda ar ghabhair agus beidh se irta ghabhar i gconai there is no dressing up of a british colonial force in ireland as anything but that in recent days commentators have been lining up to accuse the british government of gutting and completely rejecting the patten proposals in the police bill 2000 among the critics are a former patten commissioner from canada clifford shearing paddy hillyard mike tomlinson and brendan o'leary the sunday business post november 26 editorial detailed how patten was gutted to give moi power and less accountability to tr ruc chief constable permitting hi to prevent inquiries into polk behaviour and restricting the inllueni of the much-vaunted local polk partnership boards the dublin paper said nobody should be surprised that the british are almost congenitally incapable of honouring then commitments and treaties . . . within hours it was clear that the range of british commitments on policy demilitarisation and judicial reform were not worth the paper they were written on the sdlp and the provisionals are seemingly waiting for the implementation plan before joining denis faul maurice hayes and chris patten in urging young irish people to join the renamed ruc in the future if the new-look ruc comes under attack will denis faul and maurice hayes advise these young people to leave or stay on and carry out their role as defenders of british rule after all the old ric was 80 roman catholic yet it was the backbone of british rule in ireland until it was defeated in the early 1920s republican sinn f6in warns of the danger of young irish people becoming the cannon-fodder of a more updated british imperialism here under filre nua the police service would be administered by powerful local district councils with the avoidance of the potential conflict involved in people from one area policing another this would be in the context of a british withdrawal and a federal and four provincial parliaments including one for the nine counties of ulster republican calendar 2001 20th anniversary of 1981 h-block hunger strike 3 each 4 including p&p order now from 223 parnell street dublin 1 telephone 872 9747 e-mail saoirs se@/o/./e nollaig fe shean is fe mhaise dar leitheoin go leir
Object Description
| Title | Issue 164, Saoirse: Irish Freedom (December, 2000) |
| Subject |
Dublin (Ireland) -- Newspapers Northern Ireland--Politics and government--Periodicals |
| Headline | Don't join new British police |
| Issue Number | 164 |
| Date | December, 2000 |
| Place of Publication | Dublin, Ireland |
| Publisher | Sinn Féin Poblachtach |
| Issue of | Saoirse : Irish Freedom |
| Language | English and Gaelic |
| Type | Newspaper |
| Digital Date | 2006 |
| Digital Publisher | IUPUI University Library |
| Format and Resolution | Full View: 400 dpi jpg 2000 ; Archived: 400 dpi tiff |
| Scanner | Minolta PS 7000 open book scanner |
| Usage | http://www.ulib.iupui.edu/copyright |
| Digital Collection | Saoirse - Irish Freedom Newspaper (http://indiamond6.ulib.iupui.edu/irishnews/) |
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