Portadown
& the Marching Season
A Fact Sheet
- The Marching Season in the Six Northeastern Counties of Ireland
spans from April through to December. The majority of these marches
are organised by what are termed the Loyal Orders, namely the Orange
Order, the Apprentice Boys and the Royal Black Preceptory.
- In Portadown approximately 40 parades are organised each year by the
above groups as well as by other Loyalists groupings, With one
exception, that of the return leg of the Drumcree parade along the
Drumcree and Garvaghy Roads, all these marches take place in the town
centre or other areas of the town which are predominantly
Protestant/Unionist. Although all of these marches cause major
inconvenience and annoyance, it is only the return leg of the Orange
Order's Drumcree parade along the Drumcree and Garvaghy Roads which
Catholic/Nationalists actively oppose.
- The Loyal Orders named above are secret societies from which
Catholics are excluded. When a person becomes a member of any of the
Loyal Orders, he must swear he has no blood or marital connection with
any member of the Catholic faith. The Loyal Orders are exclusively
Protestant, Unionist and pro- British organisations.
- A number of marches by these organisations go through areas which
are predominantly Catholic/Nationalist, such as the Garvaghy Road in
Portadown and the Ormeau Road in Belfast. Such marches are considered
to be akin to Ku Klux Klan marches through coloured communities in the
U.S. or marches by neo-Nazi organisations through Jewish or other
ethnic communities in Europe.
- In these disputed areas, the Loyal Orders refuse to meet with
residents' groups to discuss rerouting parades and marches away from
contentious and controversial routes.
- The local Member Of Parliament is David Trimble, the leader of
the Ulster Unionist Party, who is a member of the Orange Order.
From the time he was elected in 1990 until May 1999, Mr
Trimble refused to meet with the Garvaghy Road Residents'
Coalition (his own constituents). After a visit to the U.S.,
where over 100 members of Congress presented him with a letter that
strongly urged him to talk with his constituents, he finally attended
two short meetings with the Garvaghy Road residents. During
those years he did not speak with nationalist residents, he had no such problems
meeting with known Loyalist paramilitary members, such as Billy Wright, also
known as King Rat, at Drumcree in July 1997. Wright was the leader of
a Loyalist death squad based in the Portadown area which has been
responsible for the murders of over 150 Catholics since 1970. Harold
Gracey, leader of the Orange Order in Portadown, frequently publicly
appeared in Wright's company. For further details of David Trimble's
links with Wright and others, read "The Committee" by Sean
McPhilemy, published by Roberts Rheinhart.
- As is the case in all disputed areas, an alternative route which
totally avoids the Garvaghy Road area is available to the Orange
Order. This alternative route in Portadown (along the Corcrain and
Dungannon Roads) is actually the route taken by the Orange Order on
their way TO Drumcree.
- The Loyal Orders allege that residents groups are not representative
of local communities. In Portadown, the Catholic/Nationalist
population is represented by the Garvaghy Road Residents' Coalition -
an umbrella group whose membership is drawn from local community-based
organisations.
- Portadown is a predominantly Unionist/Protestant town in County
Armagh with a total population of approximately 28,00O. The minority
Catholic/Nationalist population of the town is approximately 6,000.
Almost all the CathoIic/Nationalist population live in housing estates
along the Garvaghy Road or the smaller Obins Street area in the
north-western corner of the town. (See Map)
Many of those living there were forcibly evicted from their homes in
other parts of the town by pro-British Loyalist paramilitaries.
- A survey carried out in the Garvaghy Road area by the
Independent Review of Parades and Marches in 1996 (a British
Government agency) found that 93% of the local Catholic community in
Portadown were sympathetic to the concerns expressed by the Residents
Coalition.
- 97% of all those questioned in that Survey, and 99%
of Catholics, said that parade organisers should take into account
demographic and other changes which have occurred in the religious mix
of an area.
- When asked if a parade should go through an area
where the religious balance is 10% (or less) Protestant and 90% (or
more) Catholic - similar to the make-up of the Garvaghy Road area - NO
Catholics in favour of a march going ahead, with 90% of Catholics
calling for rerouting or outright ban on such marches.
- In the 1997 local government elections, two
candidates put forward by the Garvaghy Road Residents Coalition were
both elected, and both Breandan Mac Cionnaith and Joe Duffy now
represent their community as members of Craigavon Borough Council.
- The above official statistics totally contradict the
untruths continually put out by the Orange Order and by the Unionist
politicians that the Garvaghy Road Residents Coalition is
unrepresentative of the local community.
- British Crown forces in the North of Ireland,
including the British Army and RUC, have mounted major operations to
ensure the passage of Loyal Order marches along disputed routes like
Garvaghy Road and Ormeau Road.
- These operations have been widely condemned by
national and international human rights Organisations and by Irish,
European, Canadian, American and South African parliamentarians who
have been present on the ground to bear witness to the reality of the
situation.
- These military operations virtually amount to the
imposition of martial law and curfew upon the Catholic/Nationalist
communities. In the Garvaghy Road in 1997, at least 2,500 members of
the RUC and British Army were used to subjugate the local community
whose population totals 6000 men, women and children. Such was the
extent of the military occupation of the area, and the restrictions
placed upon the movements of the local community, that local Catholics
were physically prevented by armed soldiers and police from attending
their normal Sunday 8.00am, 10.00 am, and midday Masses in St. John
the Baptist Church on the Garvaghy Road in order to facilitate an
Orange Order march.
- Nationalist residents who have attempted to mount
peaceful protests against Orange Order marches have been beaten and
forcibly removed. Over two hundred people were injured in unprovoked
assaults in 1996 and a similar number again on July 6 1997 on the
Garvaghy Road alone.
- In Portadown, Catholics/Nationalists only feel secure
within their own area. Over the years, many have been murdered by
pro-British Loyalist death-squads. Jack McCabe, Felix Hughes, Eamon
McMahon, Joey Weir, Martin McConville, Robert Hamill, Thomas Trainer,
Dennis Kelly and Adrian Lamph are all
Catholics who have died horrific deaths at the hands of Loyalists in
the area of the main commercial town centre alone. Many other
Catholics have been severely assaulted and wounded in the same area
while going about their normal everyday activities.
- Robert Hamill was murdered by a lynch mob of up to
thirty Loyalists while returning from a night out with two female
relatives in April 1997. A major controversy still surrounds his
brutal death as it was revealed that members of the RUC (police force)
were present when the attack took place but refused to intervene to
save his life, or later go to render medical attention, despite the
cries and pleas of Robert's two cousins. In March 1999, the one member
of the murder gang that stood trial for Robert's killing was acquitted
of any charges. The RUC witnesses were allowed to remain silent and
not testify during the trial.
- Since the July 1998 Drumcree march, four people have
been murdered as a result of the Orange Order assaults on the Garvaghy
Road community. On July 12, three small boys were murdered while they
slept in their home in Ballymoney. The Quinns home was petrol bombed
by Orange Order supporters because the mother was Catholic. Rescuers
could not reach the three brothers before they died in the fire set by
the bomb. In October, an RUC officer, Frank Reilly, died of injuries
sustained in September when a loyalist mob threw blast bombs and
fireworks at RUC lines protecting the Nationalist area. And in 1999, Elizabeth
O'Neill, a 65-year old grandmother was killed when loyalists threw
a bomb into her home.
- On March 15, 1999 Garvaghy Road Residents Coalition
Solicitor Rosemary Nelson, the well known Human Rights Activist and
Civil Liberties Advocate in Ireland, was brutally murdered when a bomb
was planted under her car. The first woman to set up a law practice in
Lurgan, Rosemary Nelson stood for many clients who were victims of the
emergency legislated system in the six counties. She accompanied the
GRRC to meetings with both the British and Irish prime ministers and
in proximity talks with the Orange Order. She had been under death
threat from supporters of the Portadown Orange Lodge, and had received
death threats and intimidation from the RUC. These threats were being
investigated by the Metropolitan Police force at the time of her
death. All the residents groups have joined in the call for a fully
independent investigation into Rosemary's assassination, because there
is no confidence that the RUC could conduct an impartial
investigation.
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