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.