3. Northern Ireland in the 70s COPY Flashcards
When was Internment introducted?
August 1971
What was internment and its aims?
- Arresting suspected troublemakers and holding them without trail
- it’s aim was to remove troublemakers from their communities and reduce sectarian tensions
Results of internment?
- Did opposite of aim
- alienated Catholic pop and made them feel persecuted.
- Increased tension between London and Dublin govs.
- Broke the cross-party agreement in House of Commons - opposed by many Labour MP’s, veiwed it as ethical and wrong.
Bloody Sunday date
30th Jan 1972
Bloody Sunday events
British soldiers opened fire on a civil rights march against Internment in the Bogside, Londonderry
Bloody Sunday casulties and injuries
13 unarmed civvilians killed + 13 injuried.
Bloody Sunday Inquirey
- By Lord Widgery - blamed shots that had been fired at the British Army for the casulties.
- Published may ‘72, condemned by Irish republicans as a ‘white wash’.
- SO, the British embassy in Dublin was burned down + Support for the IRA grew and they were able to raise funds in the USA.
1972 deaths, explosions and shooting incidents
Deaths = 480
Explosions = 1,382
Shooting incidents = 10,628
Martin McGuiness
- Member of Provisional IRA in early 70s, claims to have left in 1974.
- Elected as MP for Sinn Fein in ‘97 but didnt tke his seat.
- Sinn Fein’s cheif negotiator at talks that led to good friday agreement 1998.
- Later became deputy first minister in devolved Northen Ireland Assembly after 2007.
John Hume
- Involved in Irish civil rights movement in 60s.
- Co-founded Social Democratic Labour Party (SDLP), became leader 1979.
- Worked w/ Sinn Fein to bring about IRA ceasefires in 90s + brining him and British gov together to talk.
- Won nobel peace prize for Good friday agreement involvement.
Ian Paisley
- Led loyalist opposition to Catholic civil rights movement in 60s + involved in setting up loyalist orgs.
- Evangelical Protestant, outspokenly criticised Catholics.
- Famously denouned the Pope as Antichrist.
- Formed Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) 1971
Unionist and loyalist parties:
- Ulster Unionist Party (UUP)
- Democratic Unionist Party (DUP)
- Allience
Naionalist and republican parties
- Social Democratic Labour Party (SDLP)
- SInn Fein (radical, IRA)
What was direct rule?
Northern Ireland to be ruled from London rather than having its own separate parliment.
When was direct rule introduced?
- March 1972
- after he suspended the Stormont parliament.
under direct rule, who was appointed secretary of state?
Willie Whitelaw
What with Heaths aim for direct rule?
To try defeat the IRA but also look for a permenant political solution that would ensure peace.
direct rule problems?
Problems arise due to the differences between the two parties and their difference in political ideology (it was hard to negotiate and come to an agreement).
Protestant fears:
- Afraid they’ll lose their privileges.
- Worried it will lead to Nationalist victory (through compromise)
- The British Army’s presence - hostility towards the Army, Bloody Sunday= less likely to comply with Whitelaw
- Direct Rule itself = unfamiliar and unelected leaders people of Ireland against it.
Who came up with the Sunningdale agreement? Backed by?
Whitelaw and Heath
Backed by Westminister, Dublin, SDLP and UUP
1973
What did the Sunningdale agreement propose?
- power sharing executive of both nationalists and unionists - both garenteed representation.
- new NI Assembly elected under system of propertional representation.
- Council of Ireland that would have some ipput from the Republic of Ireland.
Who denounced and opposed the Sunningdale agreement?
Denounced = republicand + loyalists
Opposed = UVF + UDA
UUP voted to pull out Jan 1974
Failures of Sunningdale agreement?
- prospects of settlement further undermined by miners strike + 74 election.
- the parties which opposed put up a single candidate in each constituency.
- pro-Sunningale voters were spilt.
- 11/12 constituencies returned candidates that opposed the agreement.
- Concern about the agreement meant tory party couldn’t reply on UUP suppoirt thus preventing them from continuing in government.
Events in NI troubles 74-79
14th may 1974
Ulster Workers Council strike = suported by Ian Paisley, UDA, UVF. Paramilitary org ensured strike was supoorted by unionists + at same time set off bombs in Republic of Ireland and attacked Catholic civillians.
* severly limited telecommunications and Britain decalred state of emergency.