cptaidan88
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- 8 Dec 2008
- Messages
- 4,290
Some tremendously ill-informed whataboutery going on in here.
In hindsight it would probably have been better to close the book completely at the time the GFA was concluded.
A peaceful civil rights march where both sides had guns and used them doesn't seem very peaceful to me.....what were the orders they were following? It started as a peaceful civil rights march...to say they were just following orders is to suggest they were told to fire on a peaceful civilian march.
You need to really look at the context of the situation....this isnt about soldiers being charged whilst terrorists get away with it. This is about innocent civilians being shot at and killed by the Army. It wasnt a battle or a war. It was a civil rights march.
And no, im not a terrorist sympathiser, my Dad was in the UDR ffs...i know ex-servicemen on this very forum who served over here and they are my friends....but what happened in Derry was murder.
Thats the "on the run" letters
A peaceful civil rights march where both sides had guns and used them doesn't seem very peaceful to me.
Well your interpretation is incorrect.
Who knows for sure who’s is correct
Perhaps the 12 year Saville Inquiry?
Bloody Sunday (Irish: Domhnach na Fola)[1][2]—sometimes called the Bogside Massacre[3]—happened on 30 January 1972, in the Bogside area of Derry, Northern Ireland. In this event, 26 unarmed civil-rights protesters and people who were watching were shot by soldiers of the British Army. Thirteen males, seven of whom were teenagers, died immediately or soon after. A fourteenth man died from his injuries four-and-a-half months later. Two protesters were also run down by army vehicles.[4] Five of the wounded were shot in the back.[5] The incident happened during a Northern Ireland Civil Rights Association march. The soldiers involved were members of the First Battalion of the Parachute Regiment (1 Para).[6]
Two investigations have been held by the British government. The Widgery Tribunal, held soon after the event, said that the soldiers and British authorities were almost reckless. Critics said the report made it seem like the British did nothing wrong. [7][8][9] The Saville Inquiry was held in 1998 to investigate the events a second time. The inquiry took 12 years. The report was made public on 15 June 2010. The report said that some soldiers were wrong to have shot the protesters.[10] The report found that all of the people shot were unarmed, and that the killings were "unjustified". When the Saville report was published, the British prime minister, David Cameron, said sorry to the victims.[11]
The Provisional Irish Republican Army's (IRA) war against the partition of Ireland had begun in the two years before the incident. The incident helped the IRA to recruit new members.[12]Bloody Sunday remains among the most important events in the Troubles of Northern Ireland. The reason it is seen as so important is because those who died were shot by the British Army rather than paramilitaries.[3]
Try and imagine this happening in Manchester....a huge part of your population discriminated against and holding a demonstration against it....then, (in their opinion) a foreign army...opens fire on them...killing many, as described above.
Its easy, from England, with no association to what happened to say "ah they mush have been terrorists, or the must have been shooting at the Army."...but this shit happened, the Army indiscriminately and deliberately shot at unarmed civilians with the intention of killing them.
Again, imagine YOUR army and/or police force doing that in Manchester.
what about the IRA using civilians as shields?