scarface
08-10-2007, 09:25 PM
Provo collaboration will not be judged kindly.
9 Lúnasa/August 2007
Despite RUC Chief Hugh Orde being unable to visit Derry recently due to the level of opposition in the city, the Provos have sought a photo opportunity ostensibly to raise concerns in relation to an upcoming Loyalist parade as part of their ongoing attempts to pressurise Nationalists into collaborating with the British Forces of Occupation. And comments made by the Provo Stormonteer for North Antrim, D ith McKay, objecting to the continuing activities of the British Crown Forces in the area are hypocritical in the extreme given his membership of the RUC Board.
The Brits' Operation Banner may have been renamed Operation Helvetic but the stark reality of British Occupation continues unabated. Five-thousand British soldiers remain in Ireland with the power to assist the British Colonial Police as and when necessary. The RUC is to provide the first line of defence for English rule in Ireland.
The Provos should drop all pretence that they are acting in the interests of Irish Republicanism, and should also have the honesty and decency to cease all use of the name Sinn Féin an organisation which their party parted with nearly twenty-one years ago. They should also realise that history does not judge those who collaborate with enemy forces kindly.
Sinn Féin Poblachtach
9 Lúnasa/August 2007
Despite RUC Chief Hugh Orde being unable to visit Derry recently due to the level of opposition in the city, the Provos have sought a photo opportunity ostensibly to raise concerns in relation to an upcoming Loyalist parade as part of their ongoing attempts to pressurise Nationalists into collaborating with the British Forces of Occupation. And comments made by the Provo Stormonteer for North Antrim, D ith McKay, objecting to the continuing activities of the British Crown Forces in the area are hypocritical in the extreme given his membership of the RUC Board.
The Brits' Operation Banner may have been renamed Operation Helvetic but the stark reality of British Occupation continues unabated. Five-thousand British soldiers remain in Ireland with the power to assist the British Colonial Police as and when necessary. The RUC is to provide the first line of defence for English rule in Ireland.
The Provos should drop all pretence that they are acting in the interests of Irish Republicanism, and should also have the honesty and decency to cease all use of the name Sinn Féin an organisation which their party parted with nearly twenty-one years ago. They should also realise that history does not judge those who collaborate with enemy forces kindly.
Sinn Féin Poblachtach