*Videos:*
**
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JxLQfcde18U

Bobby Sands Funeral

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=395QgYExbmY&feature=related
-----------------------
http://www.marxist.com/ireland-30-years-since-death-of-bobby-sands.htm
 Ireland: Thirty years since the death of Bobby
Sands<http://www.marxist.com/ireland-30-years-since-death-of-bobby-sands.htm>
Written by In Defence of Marxism Thursday, 05 May 2011
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On the 30th anniversary of the death of Bobby Sands, who died on May 5, 1981
after 66 days of a heroic hunger strike in the H-blocks in Long Kesh prison
we remind our readers of Gerry Ruddy's article  On the 25th Anniversary of
the Irish Hunger Strikes of
1981<http://www.socialist.net/on-the-25th-anniversary-of-the-irish-hunger-strikes-of-1981.htm>and
Alan Woods' Ireland:
Republicanism and Revolution - Part
Ten<http://www.marxist.com/ireland-republicanism-and-revolution-part-ten.htm>,
which analyses the hunger strikers' struggle from a Marxist point of view.
Ten hunger strikers died in total, and 30 years later we must remember their
heroism but also learn the lessons of that experience.

------------------------

http://www.socialist.net/on-the-25th-anniversary-of-the-irish-hunger-strikes-of-1981.htm

  On the 25th Anniversary of the Irish Hunger Strikes of 1981  [image:
Print]<http://www.socialist.net/index2.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=2437&pop=1&page=0&Itemid=28#>

Monday, 25 September 2006



It has been twenty five years since the hunger strikes of 1981 resulted in
the tragic deaths of  Republican prisoners fighting for elementary
democratic and human rights. It is our duty on this anniversary to look back
to those events, to learn from them, to draw out all the necessary lessons
from then, and all that has happened since, in order to advance the struggle
for which they gave their lives, the struggle for Ireland's freedom and for
socialism.

During the early days of the civil rights movement in the North of Ireland
republicans had gained “special category” status through a long hunger
strike in 1971 by republican prisoners in Crumlin Road Jail."Special
category status," allowed them to be treated as prisoners of war, providing
them with the ‘privileges’ of POWs such as those specified in the Geneva
Convention. But in the mid-seventies the British Labour government having
failed to face down a loyalist lockout in 1974 was determined to face down
Irish Republicanism and, under Roy Mason, the Northern Ireland Secretary of
State, special category prisoner status was abolished for all offences
committed after 1st March 1976. Henceforth all prisoners were regarded as
criminals by the state.

The prisoners, convicted by non-jury courts, presided over by judges
appointed by the Unionist establishment, after interrogations and torture
from RUC Special Branch - who were collaborating with loyalist murder gangs
- were transferred to the H-blocks of the renamed Maze prison.

Women republican prisoners, who suffered the same conveyor belt justice,
were held in Armagh jail. Although there were two republican groups, (the
IRA (Provisional) and the INLA)i and the prisoners were divided into
different H blocks, they were united, as prisoners, as blanket men and
women, and as republicans, in opposition to British criminalisation. By 1978
over 300 republican prisoners were refusing to wear prison clothing or do
prison work. Prison guards tried to halt the protest by beating the Blanket
Men when they went to shower or use the toilets.

In March 1978, the prisoners responded by refusing to leave their cells, no
longer washing and using buckets as toilets. The guards then stopped
bringing buckets to the cells, the prisoners replied with the "Dirty
Protest". This lead to excrement smeared to the walls of the cells and
prisoners wearing only a blanket languishing in bare, freezing cells in
winter.

Slowly, very slowly, street protests in support of the prisoners began to
gather adherents. Relatives Action Committees were formed in nationalist
areas to support the prisoners leading eventually to the establishment of
National H-Block Armagh Committee, which made steady progress in gaining
support for the prisoners. That committee was composed of republican
activists, trade unionists, socialists and human rights activists. It had
the active support of the IRSPii and other radical bodies. Six members of
that Committee were shot - five dead at the hands of loyalist and British
intelligence agents. The demands of the prisoners were not extraordinary.
They were reasonable and were fixed around five points:

1 The right to wear their own clothes.

2 The right to abstain from penal labour.

3 The right to free association.

4 The right to recreational and educational facilities in conjunction with
the prison authorities.

5 The restoration of remission (lost because of the Dirty Protest).

Eventually the patience of the prisoners ended in October 1980. Seven went
on hunger strike including INLA prisoner John Nixon. The strike began on
October 27th and ended after 53 days when apparent concessions were made
including civilian type clothes being worn by the inmates.

But the so-called concessions were a sham and, feeling betrayed, the
prisoners began the second hunger strike.On Sunday 1 March 1981 Bobby Sands,
then leader of the Provisional Irish Republican Army (PIRA) in the Maze
Prison refused to take food. Over the next weeks and months other prisoners
joined the hunger strike in a staged fashion. Thatcher, the British Prime
Minister, decided that no concessions must be made to the prisoners. With
cold, calculated cruelty, she and her clique decided to allow them to die.
Even despite Bobby Sands being elected to Westminster in the Fermanagh/South
Tyrone by-election, the Thatcher administration remained obdurate. Margaret
Thatcher stated: "We are not prepared to consider special category status
for certain groups of people serving sentences for crime. Crime is crime is
crime, it is not political." The only change it made was to publish
proposals to change the Representation of the People Act making it
impossible for prisoners to stand as candidates for election to parliament!

The hunger strike continued to grow, and on May 5, Sands became the first of
the prisoners to die, after 66 days on hunger strike. He was 26 years old.
On Thursday 7 May 1981 an estimated 100,000 people attended the funeral of
Bobby Sands in Belfast. Far from intimidating Republicans the death provoked
a wave of revulsion and fury. In many nationalist areas riots became a
regular occurrence.Nine other deaths followed, including that of three
members of the Irish National Liberation Army (INLA), Michael Devine, Patsy
O Hara and Kevin Lynch, in the hunger strikes. Michael Devine had been a
former member of the Young Socialists in Derry City where both he and Patsy
had been politically active on working class issues.

Events were laying the base for a mass movement of protest. Unfortunately,
the Provoiii leadership had no use for the mass movement, except as an
auxiliary to the “armed struggle”. Their leadership regarded themselves as
the legitimate Government of Ireland and they saw little need to form
alliances with lesser beings. They still had the illusion that the British
army could be forced to pull out by bombing and shooting.

The mass movement around the hunger strikes showed enormous promise, but
once again the opportunity was thrown away. Caught between appealing only to
the nationalist population or to the wider masses of people throughout the
island, including the wide working class movement, the leaderships of the
H-block campaign proved incapable of involving wider sections. Sinn Fein
seeing the political opportunities, seized control of the H-block struggle
outside, and while posing as radical leftists, marginalised the genuine
republican left and working class radicalsiv. Thus began their long march
from republicanism to nationalism.

The left itself was confused about the hunger strike and little effort was
made to influence the rapidly growing ranks of nationalist youth towards
socialist thought. Action was the way forward or so the nationalist youth
thought. Of course that action was perceived only in terms of armed
struggle.

Little or no thought was given to reaching out to working class radicals
from the protestant working classes, nor how to win allies within the broad
trade union movement. Indeed some republicans became anti-trade union
because the paid leadership of the Irish Congress of Trade Unions in the
North was closely allied with the British establishment. Instead of working
to win over natural allies in the working class movement many republicans
retreated into working within “our communities” which was a euphemism for
solely working within catholic communities. Given the serious divisions that
had already existed between the PULv and the NRCvi, the community approach
itself became a self-fulfilling prophecy, which became institutionalised in
the Good Friday Agreement.

The Republican Socialist Movement itself could not resist the emotions of
the time and the INLA upped its armed struggle whilst the then leadership of
the IRSP veered between left nationalism and republicanism. While recruits
flooded into both Party and Army little was done to politically educate the
new wave of cadres. This was to have almost fatal consequences for the whole
movement in later years.

But as recruits flooded into republican organisations the hunger strike
itself was slowly grinding to a halt. Sickened by the growing number of
deaths and with no sign of concessions the families of those remaining on
hunger strike began to intervene to take their sons off the hunger strike
once they neared the point of death. The INLA, following the death of Mickey
Devine, announced on September 4th that it was no longer putting volunteers
forward for the Hunger strike. Eventually on Saturday October 3rd at 3.15 in
the afternoon those remaining on hunger strike ended their fast. 10
republican hunger strikers had died and 62 others were killed during that
turbulent period. A hunger strike is a desperate measure, which should only
be undertaken when there is no other alternative. The death of cadres in the
prisons is a very high price to pay. Was too high a price paid? There is no
doubt that the prisoners having endured the blanket and dirty protest for so
long felt that they had no alternative. Even today 25 years afterwards the
consequences of that hunger strike are still being felt and that question
still has not been satisfactorily answered.

What seemed at the time a major defeat for the prisoners soon became seen as
a victory when following the ending of the strike the British introduced a
new regime in the prison that effectively gave into the prisoners’ demands.
On 6 October 1981 James Prior, then Secretary of State for Northern Ireland,
announced a series of measures, which went a long way to meeting many
aspects of the prisoners' five demands.

This year, 2006, has seen a multitude of commemorations, celebrations and
fundraising banquets all around Ireland to “honour” the hunger strikers. To
sell commemorative plates, blankets and arrange dinners all around the theme
of the hunger strikes show just how cynical the current leadership of
Provisional Sinn Fein is. In a massive attempt to rewrite history most of
the events staged managed by Provisional Sinn Fein tried to justify their
present political stance. They claimed that the hunger strikers would have
endorsed the peace process strategy of Sinn Feinvii.

They tried to airbrush out the INLA participation in the hunger strike. They
used commemorations to highlight their election candidates. But some truths
are hard to hide. During the hunger strike the Provos were in direct contact
with a Foreign Office contact known as the “mountain climber”viii.  He
outlined to them in July, before the 5th hunger striker died, essentially
the same concessions that Jim Prior outlined in October. Why did the Provo
leadership not accept these terms then? The leadership of the INLA were
never informed there was such an offer and neither were the INLA prisoners
or hunger strikers. The strong suspicion remains that for electoral reasons
the Provo leadership outside the jail wanted the hunger strike to
continue.With the ending of the hunger strike Sinn Fein’s electoral rise
continued until today they have replaced the SDLP as the largest nationalist
party in the North. Their leaders now strut the world stage as
‘peacemakers’. But the actual reality on the ground points out the total
failure of their strategy.

It is well to remind ourselves of exactly what the Sinn Fein peace process
strategy has produced. Northern Ireland is now more deeply divided than it
was during the conflict. Since the acceptance of the Good Friday Agreement
walls dividing working class communities have gone up, not down. Sectarian
attacks occur on a daily basis mostly directed against Catholics. Sectarian
hatred has risen among both catholic and protestant youth. Politics is now
polarised around the so-called “two communities”.Gerry Adams wants Ian
Paisley as First Minister. MI5 are taking control of political policing.
Sinn Fein have accepted a partitioned settlement and accepted the sectarian
nature of the northern state. Sinn Fein, in a power sharing executive,
introduced privatisation into both the health and education state sectors.
Crime rates have soared in working class areas as has the suicide rate, drug
taking, alcohol abuse and poverty. Most ironic of all, the gains won by the
dead hunger strikers were negotiated away during the Good Friday Agreement
talks. Contrast all that with what the prisoners, particularly the ten dead
hunger strikers, were in opposition to 25 years ago:

1) Criminalisation;

2) a reformed local assembly at Stormont;

3) the unionist veto (so called consent principle);

4) a British police force enforcing the law of the British state in any part
of Ireland;

5) British claims to sovereignty in Ireland.

They were also strongly in favour of a Socialist Republic on the island of
Ireland. The contrast could hardly be greater. What lessons can Republicans
and socialists take from the experiences of the hunger strike? Clearly the
hunger strike is a weapon that should rarely, if ever, be used for, when
carried to its ultimate conclusion, valued and valuable comrades are lost to
the struggle. Ireland has too many maytrys.

It is now clear in retrospect that many who threw themselves into the
struggle had no real grounding in revolutionary politics or brought a
Marxist understanding of how society works into politics. They then became
influenced by whatever became the latest fad. One day it’s the gun, then
it’s the ballot box, then it’s the media and now it’s spin. Those who once
claimed they would lead us to the “Republic” now are preparing to administer
British rule in Ireland. Former anti-imperialists now pay homage to Bush and
his administration. Republicans who once claimed to be non-sectarian now
play the sectarian card. Over the past generations many republicans simply
ignored the existence of the protestant working class writing them off
simply as a reactionary bloc. Yet today in a few parts of the North  young
people in “kick the pope”ix  bands are being exposed to the ideas of James
Connolly and other Irish republicans. Comrades from the IRSP have spoken to
groups of young protestant workers as wellx.

In times of high emotion, such as during the hunger strike, nationalism can
exert a powerful attraction. Republicanism in all its forms failed to resist
that attraction and so lost its way during and after the hunger strikes.

Irish republicanism has always had an internationalist tendency and today
that internationalism is best expressed through a firm commitment and
grounding in Marxist ideas. There is no easy road to Socialism in Ireland.
But with the growing interest in Marxist ideas worldwide more and more young
people in Ireland are being attracted to the revolutionary ideas of James
Connolly and other internationalist Marxists. The turning of those young
people into a hardened revolutionary cadre is the task of today’s comrades.
That is the only path that radical republicanism can take. It is a case of
back to James Connolly and forward to socialism.

Notes

i  IRA is the Irish Republican Army (provisional) or PIRA - INLA refers to
the Irish National Liberation Army

ii  IRSP Irish Republican Socialist Party - political wing of INLA in 1981

iii  Provo- Popular nickname for PIRA

iv After the hunger strikes were over PIRA prisoners in the Maze began a
campaign of undermine and absorb against INLA prisoners and refused to
recognise them as political prisoners

v PUL- Unionist Loyalist Protestant

vi NRC-Nationalist Republican Catholic.

vii Speech by Martin McGuiness  in Derry 2006

viii *Blanketmen* by Richard O’Rawe, Published by New Island 2005

ix 'Kick the pope' bands are anti-catholic bands composed of young working
class protestants.

x Too much should not be read into these meetings but the fact that they
have taken place shows the possibilities that could exist.

--------------------

http://www.marxist.com/ireland-republicanism-and-revolution-part-ten.htm
 Ireland: Republicanism and Revolution - Part
Ten<http://www.marxist.com/ireland-republicanism-and-revolution-part-ten.htm>
Written by Alan Woods Wednesday, 08 September 2010
[image: 
Print]<http://www.marxist.com/ireland-republicanism-and-revolution-part-ten/print.htm#>
 The prisoners' struggle

Before 1976 republican prisoners had what was called "special category
status," allowing them to be treated as prisoners of war, and providing them
with the ‘privileges’ of POWs such as those specified in the Geneva
Convention. Special category status had been won through a long hunger
strike in 1971 by republican prisoners in Crumlin Road Jail and included:

1. The right to wear their own clothes;
2. The right to abstain from penal labor;
3. The right to free association;
4. The right to educational activities; and
5. The restoration of remission.

In order to undermine the morale of Republicans, London decided to attack
the prisoners. In 1975, the British government began phasing out this
status, declaring that anyone convicted after March 1, 1976 was to be
treated as a common criminal - an ODC, or "Ordinary Decent Criminal" (!).

The relatives and supporters of the prisoners formed the Relatives' Action
Committees to protest against this policy of criminalization. But the
strongest protest came from inside the prisons, from the prisoners
themselves. On September 15, 1976, the "blanket protest" began, when
Republican prisoners refused to wear prison uniform. By March 1979, a
quarter to a third of all sentenced Republican and Republican Socialist
prisoners had joined the blanket protest.

Prison guards tried to halt the protest by beating the Blanket Men when they
went to shower or use the toilets. In March 1978, the prisoners responded by
refusing to leave their cells, no longer washing and using buckets as
toilets. The guards then stopped bringing buckets to the cells, the
prisoners replied with the "Dirty Protest".

The Relatives' Action Committee's campaign soon drew broad-based support and
what had began as a struggle waged within the isolation of the jails, by the
prisoners themselves, was developing into a mass movement. On October 21,
1979, the National H-Block/Armagh Committee was established at a conference
held in the Andersontown area of Belfast. The new organization swiftly grew
into a mass organization, which attracted the support of the IRSP, People's
Democracy, Sinn Féin, Trade Unionists, and independent activists of various
political stripes in the campaign previously waged almost exclusively by the
prisoners' families.

Despite the participation of many of its rank-and-file members, Sinn Féin
initially remained somewhat aloof from the growing movement at an
organizational level, until the H-Block/Armagh struggle had gained such
widespread support that to remain outside it threatened to eclipse their
dominance on the Irish republican political landscape.

The H-Block prisoners prepared to take whatever steps were necessary to win
their five demands.



Knowing that the only means to avert a hunger strike was to force Britain to
concede the prisoners demands, the activists of the National H-Block Armagh
Committee waged a tireless struggle to increase the political pressure on
Britain to relent. The mass movement began to score notable successes in
exposing the brutality of the authorities. This led to reprisals both by the
British imperialists and the Loyalist death squads.
The 1980 Hunger Strike

To attain their five demands, which fundamentally reinstated special
category status, the prisoners in the H-Blocks prepared to begin a hunger
strike, but on October 23, 1980, the Northern Ireland Office (NIO) announced
that the men would be permitted to wear civilian clothes (the women in
Armagh had never lost this right, but had joined the protest to demonstrate
their solidarity). However, the concession was a sham, the clothes intended
were to be prison-issue civilian clothes, simply exchanging one uniform with
another. Outraged over Britain's attempt to deceive them, seven prisoners
embarked on a hunger strike.

Both the IRSP and Sinn Féin were opposed to the hunger strike, believing it
to be too dangerous a form of protest. They had believed that a broad front
protest was the only way to focus worldwide attention on the prison struggle
and embarrass London into renewing political status, thereby ending the
protest. Despite the H-Block/Armagh Committees having been able to focus
international attention on the prisons, the British remained unrelenting,
and the prisoners decided, over the objections of their movements outside,
that the hunger strike could no longer be delayed, as no other option seemed
available to them.

On Sunday 1 March 1981 a new Hunger Strike Began with the refusal of Bobby
Sands, then leader of the Provisional Irish Republican Army (PIRA) in the
Maze Prison, to take food. It later became clear that the Provo leadership
outside the prison was not in favour of a new hunger strike following the
outcome of the 1980 strike. The main initiative came from the prisoners
themselves. The strike was to last until 3 October 1981 and was to see 10
Republican prisoners starve themselves to death in support of their protest.
The strike led to a heightening of political tensions in the region. It was
also to pave the way for the emergence of Sinn Féin (SF) as a major
political force in Northern Ireland.

Thatcher decided that no concessions must be made to the prisoners. With
cold, calculated cruelty, she and her clique decided to allow them to die.
On Tuesday 3 March 1981 Humphrey Atkins, then Secretary of State for
Northern Ireland, made a statement in the House of Commons in which he said
that there would be no political status for prisoners regardless of the
hunger strike.

Eventually the leadership of Sinn Féin (SF) decided to put forward a
candidate for election to highlight the situation, and on 26 March 1981
Bobby Sands was nominated. Margaret Thatcher, the then British Prime
Minister, paid a visit to the North and denied claims that the
constitutional position of Northern Ireland would be threatened by the
on-going talks between the British and Irish governments.

Even when Bobby Sands was elected to Westminster in the Fermanagh / South
Tyrone by-election, the Thatcher administration remained obdurate. Margaret
Thatcher stated: "We are not prepared to consider special category status
for certain groups of people serving sentences for crime. Crime is crime is
crime, it is not political." The only change it made was to publish
proposals to change the Representation of the People Act making it
impossible for prisoners to stand as candidates for election to parliament.
The hunger strike continued to grow, and on May 5, Sands became the first of
the prisoners to die, after 66 days on hunger strike. He was 26 years old.

This act of wanton cruelty on the part of Thatcher and her government showed
not only callousness but also crass stupidity. Far from intimidating the
Republican community, it provoked a wave of revulsion and fury.. Following
the announcement that Bobby Sands had won the Fermanagh / South Tyrone
by-election there were celebration parades in many Republican areas across
the six counties. In Belfast, Cookstown and in Lurgan these celebrations
ended in rioting. The announcement of his death sparked riots in many areas
of the north, and even in the south.

Other deaths followed. Three members of the Irish National Liberation Army
(INLA), Michael Devine, Patsy O’Hara and Keven Lynch, died in the hunger
strikes. Proportionate to their numbers, their losses were heavier than
those of the Provisional IRA.

On Thursday 7 May 1981 an estimated 100,000 people attended the funeral of
Bobby Sands in Belfast. The size of the crowd reflected the impact the
hunger strike was having. The hunger strikes continued. Joe McDonnell, then
a Provisional Irish Republican Army (PIRA) prisoner in the Maze Prison,
joined the hunger strike to take the place of Bobby Sands. On Tuesday 12 May
1981, after 59 days on hunger strike, Francis Hughes (25), a Provisional
Irish Republican Army (PIRA) prisoner in the Maze Prison, died. Hughes'
death led to a further surge in rioting, particularly in Belfast and Derry.
In Dublin a group of 2,000 people tried to break into the British Embassy.

Events were laying the base for a mass movement of protest. Unfortunately,
the Provo leadership had no use for the mass movement, except as an
auxiliary to the "armed struggle". They still had the delusion that the
British army could be forced to pull out by bombing and shooting. The mass
movement around the hunger strikes showed enormous promise, but once again
the opportunity was thrown away.
Results of the hunger strike

One prisoner after another was allowed to die. Margaret Thatcher, then
British Prime Minister, paid a visit to the north where she claimed that the
hunger strike was the "last card"' of the Provos. In reality, by taking the
stand it did, the British government was acting as the best recruiting
sergeant for the Provisionals, who gained a new lease of life from these
tragic events. The Provisional Irish Republican Army (PIRA) also stepped up
its attacks on members of the security services. The British government had
to send in 600 extra British troops. To make matters worse the British
government faced extensive international condemnation for the way in which
it had handled the hunger strike. The relationship between the British and
Irish government was strained to breaking point.

A hunger strike is a desperate measure, which should only be undertaken when
there is no other alternative. The death of cadres in the prisons is a very
high price to pay. There also is a limit to how far a hunger strike can go.
This hunger strike finally ended in October 1981, when those Republican
prisoners who had been still refusing food decided to end their fast. The
prisoners took their decision when it became clear that each of their
families would ask for medical intervention to save their lives. Ten
Republican prisoners had died inside the Maze Prison as a result of the
strike. Another 62 people were killed in demonstrations and clashes with the
police.

Despite the high cost in lives, the Republican movement had achieved a huge
propaganda victory over the British government and had obtained a great deal
of international sympathy. More importantly, the hunger strike shook masses
of people in the 26 Counties out of their lethargy, and brought huge crowds
out onto the streets of the North. The hunger strike also won large numbers
of new recruits to the PIRA and INLA, as well as Sinn Féin and the IRSP.
International support organizations for the Irish national liberation
struggle sprang up where they had not been before, and grew where they had
already existed. The struggle also got an echo in Britain. In September 1981
the British Labour Party's annual conference a motion was passed committing
the party to "campaign actively" for a United Ireland by consent.

The hunger strike of 1981 had very important and far-reaching consequences
for and proved to be one of the key turning points of "the Troubles". The
heroism of the hunger strikers had had a big effect, and the Thatcher
government was forced to make concessions. On 6 October 1981 James Prior,
then Secretary of State for Northern Ireland, announced a series of measures
which went a long way to meeting many aspects of the prisoners' five
demands.

Prior announced a number of changes in prison policy, one of which would
allow prisoners to wear their civilian clothes at all times. This was one of
the five key demands that had been made at the start of the hunger strike.
Prior also announced other changes: free association would be allowed in
neighbouring wings of each H-Block, in the exercise areas and in recreation
rooms; an increase in the number of visits each prisoner would be entitled
to; and up to 50 per cent of lost remission would be restored. The issue of
prison work was not resolved at this stage but there were indications that
this issue too would be addressed.

The obstinate stupidity of Thatcher had the most negative results for
British imperialism. They had helped the Provisional IRA. Support for Sinn
Féin (SF) was demonstrated in the two by-elections and eventually led to the
emergence of SF as a significant political force. The British government now
feared that SF would overtake the Social Democratic and Labour Party (SDLP)
as the main representative of the Catholic population of the North. This was
a key reason for the Anglo-Irish Agreement (AIA) of November 1985.
Armalite or ballot box?

Having failed to crush the movement by brutal repression, London tried a
different tactic: to entangle the PIRA in parliamentary politics. In this
they were enthusiastically encouraged by the bourgeoisie of the South.
Garret FitzGerald, then Taoiseach (Irish Prime Minister), held talks with
Margaret Thatcher, then British Prime Minister, in London. As a result of
the meeting it was decided to establish the Anglo-Irish Inter-Governmental
Council, which would act as forum for meetings between the two governments.

There were now serious differences over tactics in the ranks of the
Provisionals. One wing of the Sinn Fein leadership was more inclined towards
parliamentarianism while others favoured the continuation of the armed
struggle. The result was an uncomfortable compromise, which went under the
name of the ‘Armalite and ballot box’ tactic. After the hunger strike, Sinn
Féin began fielding candidates for local councils and the European
parliament. In the autumn of 1981 Sinn Féin (SF) held its Ard Fheis (annual
conference) in Dublin. Danny Morrison, then editor of *An Phoblacht*, gave a
speech in which he addressed the issue of the party taking part in future
elections:

"Who here really believes we can win the war through the ballot box? But
will anyone here object if, with a ballot paper in one hand and the Armalite
in the other, we take power in Ireland"

This tactic was intended to paper over the cracks in the Provos. But British
imperialism was not willing to play games. It decided to crush the PIRA,
fighting with no holds barred.* *Immediately following the hunger strike,
the British tried several tactics to break political activists and those
under arms against the occupation. The attempt of the Provisionals to renew
their bombing campaign in the 1980s was met with a ferocious response on the
part of the security services, involving the notorious shoot-to-kill
tactics. These were used mostly against members of the PIRA and INLA, but on
occasion, civilians were also killed. In an official investigation, the
killings of six men were examined, three were in the PIRA, two in the INLA,
and one was a young civilian. A chief constable from England, John Stalker,
was appointed to head the investigation. He was stonewalled by the RUC, and
allegations of impropriety were made against him. The "shoot-to-kill"
investigation became "Stalker-gate" after he was removed from the
investigation.

It came as no great surprise to anyone that the RUC and British Army were
found innocent of any deliberate attempt to kill PIRA and INLA members. In a
separate case, the European Convention on Human Rights ruled that Britain
should be taken before the European Court on Human Rights, and tried for the
deaths of Provo volunteers and staff officers Mairead Farrell, Seán Savage
and Danny McCann, known as the Gibraltar 3. The trio were assassinated by
the British Army on Gibraltar, after which the British government attempted
a cover-up, stating that a bomb was found in their car. When this failed,
Thatcher's people tried to blame the Spanish security forces, who refused to
be the fall guys for the cold-blooded murder of the three. Again, the
British courts found those involved in the killings innocent of wrongdoing.

The full extent of the involvement of the British security services in these
events is only now coming to light. The collusion of the British state with
loyalist murder gangs, the killing of lawyer Pat Finucane and many others,
has been exposed in recent months. Even more recently the allegations of the
existence of an agent reporting to British intelligence at the highest
levels of the PIRA, the Stakeknife affair, has dealt the Provos a further
blow.

By 1993, elected representatives of both Sinn Féin and the SDLP increasingly
became targets for attack. The British organized the wholesale arrest of
members of the Republican and Republican Socialist movements, on the word of
a "reformed terrorist," that is, a paid perjurer. Most times, these
"supergrasses" ("grass" being slang for informer) would be given a list of
names and "crimes" to sign. Although eventually many of these cases were
thrown out on appeal, they had a demoralizing effect on activists. As a
smaller organization, the Irish Republican Socialist Movement was
particularly hard hit. Unlike during the hunger strike, a mass, organized
opposition to the informers tactic failed to materialize, in part due to
Sinn Féin's insistence on political domination of any mass group.
To boycott or not to boycott?

Sinn Féin began its foray into electoral politics as a direct result of the
hunger strike campaign. In 1983, Gerry Adams, Sinn Féin president, was
elected as MP for West Belfast, and held the seat until April 1992. Sinn
Féin members were elected to county and city councils in the North and
South. The party even went so far as to restructure its Cummain (branches)
on the basis of electoral districts. In 1986, after much debate over several
years, Sinn Féin dropped its policy of abstentionism in Dáil Eireann.
Ironically this had been the ostensible reason for the split from the
Officials in late 1969/early 1970, though the real reasons were more
profound.

The decision to abandon the abstentionist line was a correct one. As a
general rule of thumb, a revolutionary party only has the right to boycott
elections when it is in a position to offer something superior - i.e. soviet
power, a genuine workers’ democracy. Otherwise it is duty bound to
participate in elections, the extent depending on the means at their
disposal - this does not necessarily involve standing candidates, but not
standing is not the same as a boycott - as a means of reaching the masses.
To refuse to participate would mean the party boycotting itself. However, in
this case, this reflected a change in principle as well as tactics. The
dropping of abstentionism led to a split in Sinn Féin, when hard-line
abstentionists walked out of the Ard Fheis and formed Republican Sinn Féin,
a political party with little politics, which supported armed struggle, but
had no army. The PIRA had declared its support for the new order in a
convention held several weeks before the Ard Fheis.

In 1982, elections were held for a new assembly in the North. The British
tried to bring in "rolling devolution," but the attempt failed utterly. The
Unionist parties supported the Northern Ireland Assembly, but the
nationalist community was divided over the issue. The body would have very
limited power, as a sop to the Loyalists. The bourgeois nationalists of the
SDLP supported the assembly, and sought election with the intention of
taking seats. The IRSP advocated a boycott, and initially, Sinn Féin
supported the idea.

After the SDLP announced it would run, Sinn Féin changed its mind, deciding
to also field candidates, but on an abstentionist platform. The IRSP, with
the Irish Independence Party, continued to advocate boycotting, but if
voting, to vote Sinn Féin. During the election campaign, the INLA engaged in
a bombing campaign to disrupt the election. The bombing campaign was
criticized by Sinn Féin. The whole mess came to an ignoble end after several
years, when the Unionists pulled out over the Anglo-Irish Agreement, and the
only party left participating was the SDLP.

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