IG-Calibre
comhalta
+226|7190|Tír Eoghan, Tuaisceart Éireann
The UVF, the organisation that killed the first victims of the Troubles, Catholic civilians John Scullion and Peter Ward, in June 1966 & also killed the first police officer to die in the Troubles, have said they have put their weapons " beyond reach" and have stood down their army. 

*Note* this is the same organisation that have killed at least 21 people since its last "ceasefire".  Is anything less that complete verifiable decommissioning acceptable?

Full Statement

The UVF has said it will become a civilian organisation
Following a direct engagement with all the units and departments of our organisation, the leadership of the Ulster Volunteer Force and Red Hand Commando today make public the outcome of our three year consultation process.
We do so against a backdrop of increasing community acceptance that the mainstream republican offensive has ended; that the six principles upon which our ceasefire was predicated are maintained; that the principle of consent has been firmly established and thus, that the union remains safe.

We welcome recent developments in securing stable, durable democratic structures in Northern Ireland and accept as significant, support by the mainstream republican movement of the constitutional status quo.

Commensurate with these developments, as of 12 midnight, Thursday 3 May 2007, the Ulster Volunteer Force and Red Hand Commando will assume a non-military, civilianised, role.

To consolidate this fundamental change in outlook we have addressed the methodology of transformation from military to civilian organisation by implementing the following measures in every operational and command area.

Recruitment

All recruitment has ceased; military training has ceased; targeting has ceased and all intelligence rendered obsolete; all active service units have been de-activated; all ordinance has been put beyond reach and the IICD instructed accordingly.

We encourage our volunteers to embrace the challenges which continue to face their communities and support their continued participation in non-military capacities.

We reaffirm our opposition to all criminality and instruct our volunteers to cooperate fully with the lawful authorities in all possible instances.

Moreover, we state unequivocally, that any volunteer engaged in criminality does so in direct contravention of brigade command and thus we welcome any recourse through due process of law.

All volunteers are further encouraged to show support for credible restorative justice projects so that they, with their respective communities, may help to eradicate criminality and anti-social behaviour in our society.

  We call on all violent dissidents to desist immediately


We ask the government to facilitate this process and remove the obstacles which currently prevent our volunteers and their families from assuming full and meaningful citizenship.

We call on all violent dissidents to desist immediately and urge all relevant governments and their security apparatus to deal swiftly and efficiently with this threat.

Failure to do so will inevitably provoke another generation of loyalists toward armed resistance.


We have taken the above measures in an earnest attempt to augment the return of accountable democracy to the people of Northern Ireland and as such, to engender confidence that the constitutional question has now been firmly settled.


In doing so we reaffirm the legitimacy of our tactical response to violent nationalism yet reiterate the sincere expression of abject and true remorse to all innocent victims of the conflict.

Brigade command salutes the dedication and fortitude of officers, NCOs and volunteers throughout the difficult, brutal years of armed resistance.

We reflect with honour on those from our organisation who made the ultimate sacrifice; those who endured long years of incarceration and the loyal families who shared their suffering and supported them throughout.

Finally, we convey our appreciation for their honest forthright exchange with officers, NCOs and volunteers throughout the organisation over the past three years which has allowed us to assume with confidence the position we adopt today.

For God and Ulster. Captain William Johnston, Adjutant

Last edited by IG-Calibre (2007-05-03 03:50:30)

IG-Calibre
comhalta
+226|7190|Tír Eoghan, Tuaisceart Éireann
wow amazing not one opinion on the subject all day? anyone who is interested in conflict resolution should take a little listen to this program from N.I today it's a radio phone in show.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio/aod/mainfram … ?ulster/tb

personally I welcome this announcement, however I think it could of done without the veiled threats and should of welcomed independent verification on the decommissioning of the guns etc etc ..
ghettoperson
Member
+1,943|7097

TBH, I'm never going to believe that they all just hand over their weapons. The idea that a group of murderers can go from killing to being nice members of society doesn't really make sense in my mind.
Lost Hope
Lurker
+20|6775|Brussels, Belgium
Aren't most of the Unionists paramilitary groups organized crime ?

If so, they are never going to hand over all of their weapons, there isn't much to debate here, we all know that.

We can debate about the government that has to be (or is ?) formed, we don't hear a lot about that here.
https://bf3s.com/sigs/9c9f8f6ff3579a4c711aa54bbb9e928ec0786003.png
M.O.A.B
'Light 'em up!'
+1,220|6671|Escea

ghettoperson wrote:

TBH, I'm never going to believe that they all just hand over their weapons. The idea that a group of murderers can go from killing to being nice members of society doesn't really make sense in my mind.
Sounds like the IRA to me, they're probably still holding a few guns.

Last edited by M.O.A.B (2007-05-03 11:46:21)

ghettoperson
Member
+1,943|7097

M.O.A.B wrote:

ghettoperson wrote:

TBH, I'm never going to believe that they all just hand over their weapons. The idea that a group of murderers can go from killing to being nice members of society doesn't really make sense in my mind.
Sounds like the IRA to me, they're probably still holding a few guns.
They pretty much are IRA.

*Expects to be corrected by the Irish for being completely wrong*

I think that's the case anyway.
IG-Calibre
comhalta
+226|7190|Tír Eoghan, Tuaisceart Éireann
What is the UVF?
The paramilitary Ulster Volunteer Force has declared that it is renouncing violence and will cease to exist as a terrorist organisation from midnight on 3 May.






During the Troubles in Northern Ireland, the UVF murdered more than 500 people.


Its campaign also claimed the lives of 33 people in bomb attacks in Dublin and Monaghan in 1974.

The UVF was formed in 1966 to combat what it saw as a rise in Irish nationalism centred on the 50th anniversary of the 1916 Easter Rising.

It adopted the name and symbols of the original UVF, the movement founded in 1912 by Sir Edward Carson to fight against Home Rule. Many UVF men joined the 36th Ulster Division of the British Army and died in large numbers during the Battle of the Somme in July 1916.

Fifty years later, the Prime Minister of Northern Ireland, Captain Terence O'Neill, would rush back from a commemorative service at the Somme to ban the UVF.

It had been formed a few months earlier with the express intention of executing "mercilessly and without hesitation" known IRA men.

Their first three victims, a Protestant woman and two Catholic men, had no connections with the IRA.

It was the murder of barman Peter Ward, the third victim, which brought the UVF and its leader Gusty Spence to public attention. Spence was convicted of Ward's murder and sentenced to 20 years in prison.

The new UVF opposed the liberal reforms being introduced by PM O'Neill. In March and April 1969 they bombed water and electricity installations as part of a broader political campaign to force O'Neill to resign.

The bombings were blamed on the IRA. O'Neill resigned at the end of April.

According to the book Lost Lives, between 1966 and 1999 the UVF and an affiliate group, the Red Hand Commando, killed 547 people.


Many were killed in high profile attacks. In December 1971 they planted a bomb at McGurk's bar in Belfast killing 15. By the mid-70s a vicious UVF unit known as the Shankill Butchers was engaged in horrific sectarian killings.

In May 1974, the UVF was suspected of planting bombs in Dublin and Monaghan killing 33 people and in 1975 they shot dead three members of the Miami Show Band.

In October 1975, the UVF was undermined when soldiers and police swooped on houses in Belfast and East Antrim and arrested 26 men. The following March they were sentenced to a total of 700 years in prison. The police got more evidence in 1983 when a UVF commander turned informer.

In October 1994, the Combined Loyalist Military Command, which included the UVF, called a ceasefire. Gusty Spence made the announcement, expressing "abject and true remorse" to all innocent victims of loyalist violence.


The UVF's political wing, the Progressive Unionist Party, played a prominent role in the peace process and supported the 1998 Belfast Agreement.

Since 1996, the UVF has been embroiled in a feud with the Loyalist Volunteer Force. In August 2000 a murderous feud broke out between the UVF and the UDA's C Company, led by Johnny Adair, on Belfast's lower Shankill Road.

By the time a truce was negotiated in December 2000, seven men had died as a result of the feud and hundreds of families were displaced

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/northern_ireland/6619417.stm
ghettoperson
Member
+1,943|7097

So they are essentially armed supporters of remaining separate to Ireland?
IG-Calibre
comhalta
+226|7190|Tír Eoghan, Tuaisceart Éireann
bingo!

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