14/15
August 1969: The British Army was deployed on the streets of Derry and Belfast
to stave off the collapse of the Northern State. This was to try and stem the
serious rioting in both cities and in other urban centres across the North and
to stop the collapse of the State that could come about if the situation
continued to spiral out of control.
In response to the growing Crises the Irish Prime Minister An Taoiseach Jack Lynch had gone on the airwaves the previous day to announce the setting up of Field Hospitals near the Border and Refugee Camps further south to deal with the expected influx of people fleeing their homes. This gesture however only seriously angered and worried moderate Unionists and inflamed the more hard line and paranoid Loyalists - while doing nothing of real material benefit to help the beleaguered Nationalists at that time.
In response to the growing Crises the Irish Prime Minister An Taoiseach Jack Lynch had gone on the airwaves the previous day to announce the setting up of Field Hospitals near the Border and Refugee Camps further south to deal with the expected influx of people fleeing their homes. This gesture however only seriously angered and worried moderate Unionists and inflamed the more hard line and paranoid Loyalists - while doing nothing of real material benefit to help the beleaguered Nationalists at that time.
While the
situation calmed down in Derry as the RUC were withdrawn from the Bogside&
the British Army took up positions there the situation slid out of control in
Belfast. There was also serious rioting
in Armagh, Newry & Omagh and other areas throughout the North. In Armagh a
man was shot dead by the RUC. Five people were killed in overnight rioting in
Belfast, one of them a nine year old boy. As the sectarian clashes worsened
houses and business premises were set alight and hundreds were damaged or
destroyed. Bombay street was totally destroyed and the Catholic residents had to flee for their lives.
It soon became clear that the discipline of a considerable number of the regular RUC and more particularly the B-Specials had collapsed. Numerous individuals from these organisations went on the rampage and became indistinguishable from the Loyalist mobs on the loose that night.
It soon became clear that the discipline of a considerable number of the regular RUC and more particularly the B-Specials had collapsed. Numerous individuals from these organisations went on the rampage and became indistinguishable from the Loyalist mobs on the loose that night.
While the
situation in the Six Counties had became much more dangerous over the Summer
the multiple deaths in open sectarian clashes was a huge shock to the people of
Ireland. For the first time in decades people had been killed in almost open
warfare between the Orange and the Green. It was a watershed in Modern Irish
Politics.
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