The brutal murder of young Michael McIlveen in Ballymena is just the latest
in a long and unbroken line of such attacks. Victims of these attacks don't
fit in to the narrative the media seek to impose on the six Counties and are
thus ignored. Similarly the political establishment have no interest in
confronting this scourge. Michael McDowell found time to meet Willie Frazier
but on two occasions when victims of collusion and loyalist violence visited
Leinster House he declined to meet them. For McDowell and his ilk there is
simply no percentage in representing the victim of British/unionist
violence. We all know it would be a totally different story had nationalists
or republicans had been linked to such a crime.
The MP for the area has condemned the killing, however, this is a man that
regularly refers to the pope as the anti Christ. His party refuse to talk to
Sinn Féin who represent the majority of the nationalist community. What kind
of example is this to his constituents. Indeed Ian Paisley has played a,
over the years, a big role in the creation of conditions that foster the
sickening and brutal sectarianism behind this murder.
This issue has been ignored for long enough. It is high time for those with
responsibility to face up to the facts.
Wayne Donnelly
Ballymun
Dublin.
Coalition
A chara,
I thought Colm Bhreatnach's contribution to last week's paper was certainly
of interest and I hope readers gave it some thought even if its basic
premise, that coalition with the right is never justified in any
circumstances is more than a little naïve. Coalition with the extreme right
is not an optional added extra in the Good Friday Agreement, but a basic
requirement of power-sharing as part of a process of conflict resolution.
The position of the Campaign for an Independent Left on the Good Friday
Agreement, on the issue of national sovereignty for that matter, seems to be
missing. But perhaps, like many an ultra-left group in the South of Ireland,
the socialism of the Campaign for an Independent Left stops at the border.
What would Connolly have thought?
Sineád Ryan,
Co Wexford.
A chara,
If there is one argument that should be taken from Colm Bhreatnach's article
last week it is that, "It is not simply a question of being a party of
protest or of power, but recognising that power does not solely or even
primarily lie in Leinster House or Stormont". For republicans facing into a
possible Dáil coalition debate at this election or the next one, it is never
anything less than vital that we understand the distinctions between
electoral and political strength. Arguably, Sinn Féin is strong, and growing
stronger, in terms of electoral strength, but our political strength, our
ability to mobilise people onto the streets, to radicalise our communities,
to prosecute and succeed in campaigns and to build alliances with
progressive left wing groups is lagging behind.
I think Mr Bhreatnach underestimates the ability of Leinster House to
deliver some change, to shape the political context in which the more
important political struggles outside of the Dáil can take place, but his
article is a useful and thoughtful contribution to the development of the
Irish left and to be welcomed.
Jim Nolan,
Co. Galway.
Garda threat
A chara
The threat from the Garda Representative Association to become involved in
politics by targeting key constituencies represents a dire threat to
democracy. If this threat is carried out or indeed if it is successful and
the reserve falls then a frightening precedent will have been set. Make no
mistake about it this is a challenge to a democratically elected government
by the security services.
The Gardaí are a force which have operated in a climate of impunity.
Successive justice ministers, including the present one, have allowed
scandal after scandal to go unchecked. This might have seemed like a good
idea during the conflict in the North but clearly it has now come back to
haunt them. That the Gardaí now feel confident to make such threats gives
you an idea of how much they feel untouchable.
It is worth noting here that the reason they are so much opposed to a
reserve force are firmly routed in the corrupt nature of that force. If
civilians were to get an insight into what goes on in Garda stations around
the country there would be uproar. If they succeed in this challenge then
you can forget the notion of Gardaí accountability. They will be a force
beyond democratic control.