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AFP
AFP
World
Jitendra JOSHI

N.Ireland marks 50 years since 'Bloody Sunday'

A British soldier drags a Catholic protester during Northern Ireland's "Bloody Sunday" killings on January 30, 1972. ©AFP

Londonderry (United Kingdom) (AFP) - Relatives of 13 civil rights protesters shot dead in Northern Ireland by British soldiers 50 years ago demanded justice on Sunday, as they commemorated one of the darkest days in modern UK history.

The "Bloody Sunday" victims' names were read out under a leaden sky to the mournful notes of an Irish flute, as the relatives and hundreds of supporters gathered for a memorial event in the city of Londonderry -- known as Derry to pro-Irish nationalists.

Earlier, many had retraced a peaceful march through the divided city that ended in carnage on January 30, 1972.

Michael McKinney, whose brother William was among those killed, said the UK government was "scared" of allowing any prosecutions of the soldiers for fear of what a trial might uncover.

But addressing the remembrance service, he stressed: "We will not go away and we will not be silenced.

"We shall overcome," McKinney added, invoking the US civil rights message that was sung by the marchers in 1972, in pressing their demands for Catholic rights against Londonderry's Protestant minority.

At the head of Sunday's procession were 14 children each bearing a white rose -- a 14th man who was shot died months later, although an official inquiry said his death was unrelated to his wounds.

The children were followed by older relatives carrying portraits of those killed when members of the British Parachute Regiment fired more than 100 high-velocity rounds into crowds.

Still no closure

The yearly memorial service was attended for the first time by an Irish premier, as Taoiseach Micheal Martin joined other dignitaries in laying a wreath at an obelisk commemorating the 14.

"I believe that the full process and justice of the courts should be deployed," Martin told reporters after meeting the relatives in private.

"It is important because time is moving on too for many, many families, and families need closure."

Some of the "Bloody Sunday" victims were shot in the back, or while on the ground, or while waving white handkerchiefs as the shots ripped through narrow streets and across wasteland in the city's Catholic Bogside district.

At the entrance to the Bogside, a wall normally proclaims in large writing: "You are now entering Free Derry." This weekend the mural read: "There is no British justice."

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson this week called "Bloody Sunday" a "tragic day in our history".

But his government is pushing legislation that critics say amounts to an amnesty for all killings during Northern Ireland's three decades of sectarian unrest, including by security forces.

After an initial government report largely exonerated the paratroopers and authorities, a 12-year inquiry found in 2010 that the victims were unarmed and posed no threat, and that the soldiers' commander on the ground violated his orders.

The mammoth inquiry, whose report ran to 5,000 pages, prompted then prime minister David Cameron to issue a landmark apology in parliament. 

He agreed with its finding that the killings were "unjustified and unjustifiable". 

'Reckless' Johnson

One paratrooper, "Soldier F," was charged with murder in 2019.But prosecutors dropped the case last year after determining that the evidence against him would not be permissible in a court.

Michael McKinney is seeking a judicial review of the prosecutors' decision.

Charlie Nash, now 73, saw his 19-year-old cousin William Nash killed on "Bloody Sunday".

"It's important for the rest of the world to see what they done to us that day.But will we ever see justice?" he told AFP.

"Never, especially not from Boris Johnson," Nash added.

In Northern Ireland, new tensions today surround the UK's fractious divorce from the European Union.

Protestant unionists want Johnson's government to scrap a protocol governing post-Brexit trade for the province, which treats Northern Ireland differently from the UK mainland.

The government, which is in protracted talks with the EU on the issue, is sympathetic to their demands.

"Northern Ireland finds itself again in the eye of a political storm where we appear to be collateral damage for a prime minister whose future is hanging in the balance," said professor Deirdre Heenan, a Londonderry resident who teaches social policy at Ulster University.

She said that Johnson, facing demands to resign over allegations of lockdown-breaching parties in Downing Street, was ill-equipped to stand up to unionist hardliners.

"The government's behaviour around the peace process has been reckless in the extreme," Heenan added.

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