Living through the Troubles in Northern Ireland

00:11:38
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NNmcRoNMC5E

Summary

TLDRThis segment discusses the events and atmosphere during the Troubles in Northern Ireland, focusing on a bombing on 8 November 1987 in Enniskillen by the Provisional IRA. This attack and the ongoing violence highlighted the sectarian divide, marked by peace walls erected to separate communities. Despite barriers and violence, secret talks between Gerry Adams of Sinn Fein and John Hume pointed towards a potential resolution. The 1990s saw increased violence with significant events such as the funerals attack involving loyalist Michael Stone and the murder of British soldiers escalating tensions. Nevertheless, the unsustainable violence pushed towards peace talks, culminating in the 1994 dual ceasefires, despite subsequent setbacks like the 1996 Canary Wharf bomb. Peace ultimately required complex negotiations, recognizing mixed desires for armed defense, political representation, and eventual disarmament.

Takeaways

  • 💣 The Enniskillen bombing by the IRA was a pivotal and condemnable event in the Troubles.
  • 🚧 Peace walls were constructed to separate communities but became symbols of division.
  • 🤝 Secret talks between Gerry Adams and John Hume laid groundwork for eventual peace.
  • 🔄 The Remembrance Sunday attack prompted a strategic reevaluation within the IRA.
  • ⛓️ Violence increased after the Anglo-Irish Agreement, demonstrating deep-rooted tensions.
  • 📉 The unsustainable violence level in the 1990s fueled momentum for peace negotiations.
  • 🗣️ TUAS represented a tactical shift in armed struggle by the IRA.
  • 🕊️ The 1994 ceasefire was a major move towards peace but was precariously dependent on political dialogue.
  • 🚛 The 1996 London lorry bombing highlighted the fragility of the peace process.
  • 🔑 The complexity of peace talks included disarming paramilitary groups and political representation challenges.

Timeline

  • 00:00:00 - 00:05:00

    The video recounts the aftermath of a bombing in Enniskillen, Northern Ireland, carried out by the Provisional IRA targeting a Remembrance Sunday ceremony. This act received widespread condemnation and marked a significant point in the history of the Troubles in Northern Ireland. The Troubles, a prolonged period of conflict, had impacted the daily lives of citizens, who lived in divided communities separated by peace walls. The barriers, initially constructed for security, later became symbols of division. By the late 1980s, Northern Ireland was deeply polarized with regular occurrences of bomb scares, murders, and armed confrontations between communities.

  • 00:05:00 - 00:11:38

    The shift towards political dialogue is highlighted by the secret meetings between Gerry Adams of Sinn Fein and John Hume of the Social Democratic and Labour Party after the 1987 bombing. This marked an essential step towards peace despite ongoing acts of violence. As attempts for a ceasefire emerged in the early 1990s, political efforts started gaining momentum, culminating in the IRA's 1994 ceasefire announcement. However, the peace process faced hurdles such as disagreements over decommissioning weapons. Violent attacks resumed, undermining negotiations, yet the public's desire for peace and political persistence kept pushing towards a resolution for Northern Ireland's enduring conflict.

Mind Map

Video Q&A

  • What happened on 8 November 1987 in Enniskillen?

    A bomb planted by the Provisional IRA went off during a Remembrance Sunday ceremony, targeting the British Military, leading to widespread condemnation of the IRA.

  • Why were peace walls erected in Northern Ireland?

    Peace walls were erected to separate the republican and loyalist communities, intended for security and reducing fear between the communities.

  • What was the significance of Gerry Adams and John Hume’s secret meetings?

    Their secret meetings signified a possible shift towards political resolution, building trust and setting a platform for future peace talks.

  • How did the Remembrance Sunday bombing affect the IRA's strategy?

    It marked a turning point, with the IRA realizing that acts like these could damage their cause, prompting them towards political engagement.

  • What was the aftermath of the Anglo-Irish Agreement?

    It led to increased assaults from loyalists against Catholics and heightened IRA bombings, worsening tension in Northern Ireland.

  • How did the violence in the 1990s influence peace talks?

    The unsustainable level of violence pushed all sides towards initiating peace talks, recognizing that continued conflict was untenable.

  • What does TUAS stand for?

    Republicans claimed it stands for 'Totally Unarmed Struggle', but it actually meant 'tactical use of armed struggle', indicating an ongoing but reduced armed campaign.

  • What was the impact of the 1994 ceasefire announcements?

    They marked a significant step towards peace, but were contingent on continued political progress and cessation of violence from all sides.

  • How did the 1996 lorry bomb in London affect the peace process?

    It disrupted the ceasefire, showing public and paramilitary frustration with stalled peace talks and highlighting the difficulty of maintaining peace.

  • What were the challenges faced during peace negotiations?

    Key challenges included disarming paramilitary groups, maintaining ceasefire conditions, and achieving political representation for Sinn Fein.

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  • 00:00:00
    This amateur footage was captured in the aftermath of one of the most shocking events of the
  • 00:00:05
    troubles.
  • 00:00:06
    On 8 November 1987 a bomb at a Remembrance Sunday ceremony in the town of Enniskillen.
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    The bomb had been planted by the Provisional IRA, who later stated their target was the
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    British Military.
  • 00:00:15
    The devastating scenes from the attack led to widespread condemnation and a backlash
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    towards the IRA and Sinn Fein.
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    For nearly twenty years, the citizens of Northern Ireland had lived through the Troubles.
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    Many had been born into the conflict, and had never known anything else.
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    Yet by the early 1990s, it appeared that peace was finally within reach.
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    So what was it like to live through this conflict, and how did the two sides finally come together
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    to negotiate a solution?
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    Since the early violence of the Troubles, barriers had been erected to divide the republican
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    and loyalist communities.
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    The first barriers went up in Belfast on September 10th, 1969, and were put up by the British
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    Army's Royal Engineers.
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    At this stage they were wooden pickets with rows of barbed wire, and they were there to
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    separate the communities of the Falls Road and the Shankill.
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    However, as the Troubles progressed, rather than reducing the number of barriers, they
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    increased, particularly in Belfast, where the area between the Shankill and Falls Road
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    increased to huge steel walls that are here to this day.
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    The peace walls were probably largely welcomed by people at the time owing to the fact of
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    security and fear of the other community.
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    And even today, even though the walls have start to come down in stages in many communities,
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    people don't yet feel confident enough for these barriers to be removed.
  • 00:01:38
    In 1963-65, I was going out with my future wife.
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    I lived in the West of Belfast and she lived in the extreme east of Belfast.
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    Now, I used to virtually every night walk that 7 miles.
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    So I would walk through the Newton’s Park Road, which is a highly protestant area; through
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    the Markets area, and the Short Strand area and the Markets area are both Catholic, seven
  • 00:02:06
    miles right through the centre of the city.
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    And I walked that every night, with no fear whatsoever and no consequences.
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    Now, in the 1980s had I done that, I wouldn’t have lived for more than a week, you know.
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    Because there were so many murders in that Short Strand, Markets, Newton’s Park area,
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    that one of the groups would have picked me up.
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    But it wasn’t just walls that segregated communities.
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    Growing up in Northern Ireland often meant interacting almost exclusively with people
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    from the same background and faith.
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    By the late 1990s, around 92% of Northern Ireland’s public homes were segregated by
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    religion.
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    Marriages between Protestants and Catholics were highly unusual.
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    In 1970, over 95% of children in Northern Ireland attended single-faith schools.
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    But from early on in the Troubles, there were movements campaigning for integration and
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    peace.
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    The Community of Peace People led marches throughout the 1970s.
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    But the issue of segregation proved difficult to change – even today, the majority of
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    schools are still segregated by faith.
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    In the late 1980s, Northern Ireland was still being governed by Direct Rule from Westminster.
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    The NI Assembly had been closed in 1986 and no satisfactory solution could be agreed to
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    reinstate a devolved government.
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    Northern Ireland was as polarised as it had ever been.
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    The Anglo-Irish Agreement had sparked a series of assaults from loyalists against Catholic
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    houses and RUC officers.
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    IRA bombings had also increased in reaction to this.
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    Bomb scares had become a regular occurrence for Northern Irish citizens, especially in
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    Belfast and Derry/Londonderry.
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    Behind me is a Wheelbarrow.
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    Its bomb disposal robot used by the British Army from the early 1970s to diffuse certain
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    types of devices.
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    Sadly for the people of Northern Ireland, bomb scares were a common occurrence.
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    Often any object that looked remotely suspicious had to be reported.
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    Many of the devices planted were aimed at the business districts of cities and towns,
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    shops and also military targets as well.
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    So the threat was very real for the civilian population as invariably they were the ones
  • 00:04:09
    who would be caught in any blasts.
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    If you identify a bomb or find a suspicious package, what do you do?
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    Even at a moment like this, try to be observant.
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    If you do find a bomb of any kind, follow this procedure.
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    Although little things weren't.
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    It was commonplace just to walk out of your house in the morning and have an armed British
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    soldier.
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    Your people.
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    I remember that question a lot.
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    And that was every day.
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    Going shopping or putting your handbag up?
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    Going through checkpoints which just popped up anywhere.
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    Other little things were, it was commonplace just to walk out of your house in the morning
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    and have an armed British soldier at your gatepost.
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    I remember not questioning that, and that was every day.
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    Going shopping, opening your handbag up.
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    Going through checkpoints, which just popped up anywhere.
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    Bombs scares were commonplace.
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    And again, none of that…
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    it was just normal.
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    It was my normal.
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    That's only after I left and all this has stopped that, I think, how do people live
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    like that?
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    The 1980s had seen an increase in violence and a series of tit-for-tat bombings.
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    Both sides were smuggling weapons into Northern Ireland to support their armed campaigns.
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    The IRA had been importing arms from the US, Libya and elsewhere since the early 1970s,
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    and in the mid-1980s, the loyalist paramilitary groups collaborated to obtain arms from abroad.
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    In late 1987, a large shipment of arms was smuggled into Belfast from Lebanon, intended
  • 00:05:21
    for the UDA, UVF and the Ulster Resistance.
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    But the movement towards politics was also developing…
  • 00:05:28
    The Remembrance Sunday bombing in November 1987 marked a turning point in the Troubles.
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    The IRA and Sinn Fein were straddled between a political agenda and acts of terrorism,
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    and their senior members were aware of how much attacks like this could damage their
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    cause.
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    Gerry Adams - the leader of Sinn Fein - said that the Ennisikillen bombing was a mistake
  • 00:05:48
    that they couldn't afford to repeat.
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    Just two months later, Gerry Adams met in secret with John Hume, leader of the Social
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    Democratic and Labour Party.
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    The talks between Gerry Adams and John Hume are highly significant.
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    They began speaking in secret in early 1988.
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    Initially the talks come to nothing, but Adams and Hume build up a trust and over the next
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    few years continue to meet in secret.
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    But it's not only them.
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    The British government and the Irish government are also involved in this.
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    This may be secret from the population, but it's well known within the Irish and British
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    governments.
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    And it's not until April 1993 when purely by accident, Gerry Adams is seen going into
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    John Hume’s house in Derry, that the public realizes that something is going on.
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    Both sides were keen for peace, and open to the idea of the wider pan-Irish alliance.
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    Yet the armed struggle continued.
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    Gerry Adams says that the British government really understands the force of argument,
  • 00:06:48
    but it understands the argument of force.
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    And also the armed struggle isn't purely about defence.
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    It sets a political agenda.
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    In 1988, three events took place that would see the violence descending out of control
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    and change the course of the conflict.
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    In March, three members an IRA act of service unit were shot by the SAS in Gibraltar, where
  • 00:07:11
    they were seen or thought to be seen to be planting a bomb.
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    However, as it turned out, they were unarmed and there was no bomb, although the bomb making
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    materials were found in a car in Spain a few days later.
  • 00:07:21
    At the funerals of these three IRA volunteers at Milton Cemetery in West Belfast, another
  • 00:07:27
    event happened.
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    Michael Stone, a loyalist gunmen attacked the funeral with grenades and a handgun.
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    Three people were killed in this incident.
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    It was also caught on TV.
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    So these images went around the world.
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    A week later at the funeral of one of the people shot another, an IRA who was actually
  • 00:07:45
    killed by Michael Stone, for reasons that are still uncertain, two British army corporals
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    drove into the funeral cortege near Andersonstown Road in West Belfast.
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    The mourners at the funeral, believing another Michael Stone attack, attacked the car.
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    One of them came out of the car and fired a pistol in the air.
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    The two men were dragged out, beaten and taken to a piece of waste ground and shot dead.
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    Again, this was captured with the world's press.
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    At this point, the violence seems to be spiralling out of control.
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    And with this, the talks between the British government, the Irish government, Sinn Fein
  • 00:08:19
    and the SDLP seem to be more important than ever.
  • 00:08:23
    In the early 1990s, a series of bombs were detonated targeting British Army bases, there
  • 00:08:28
    were more bombings in London, in Belfast and across Northern Ireland.
  • 00:08:32
    In 1993, the Warrington bomb attacks in Cheshire kill two children and wound 56.
  • 00:08:38
    All sides recognised that this level of violence was not sustainable and public weariness of
  • 00:08:44
    the conflict helps push forward the peace talks.
  • 00:08:48
    As we move into 1994, there are signs of a ceasefire emerging.
  • 00:08:52
    Although the violence continues, the IRA have intimated that they are keen to look at terms
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    of talks.
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    A document is introduced that goes by the initialization of TUAS which Republicans claim
  • 00:09:05
    stands for Totally Unarmed Struggle, but in reality really stands for tactical use of
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    armed struggle because armed struggle has not going away.
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    But the need for political talks continues on.
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    In August 1994, a deal was finally struck.
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    The PIRA announced a cessation of all military operations.
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    Unionists and the British Government remained sceptical at the announcement, but Gerry Adams
  • 00:09:30
    pronounced it a victory, saying the struggle was into a new phase.
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    But the ceasefire was conditional on political progress.
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    In October 1994, the Combined Loyalist Military Command announced its own ceasefire.
  • 00:09:43
    Likewise, their statement asserted that the permanence of the ceasefire was dependant
  • 00:09:48
    on the continued cessation of republican violence.
  • 00:09:51
    The Irish Prime Minister, Albert Reynolds stated, "This decision effectively signifies
  • 00:09:56
    the end of twenty-five years of violence, and the closure of a tragic chapter in our
  • 00:10:01
    history".
  • 00:10:02
    In 1995, the death toll dropped to a record low since the Troubles began in 1969, with
  • 00:10:08
    nine people killed that year.
  • 00:10:10
    The all-party peace talks resumed and though a resolution felt to be close, a stumbling
  • 00:10:15
    block was hit.
  • 00:10:17
    John Major who became British Prime Minister in 1990 took steps that previous Prime Ministers
  • 00:10:23
    had not, which is to prioritize peace in Northern Ireland.
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    This is actually a bit of a risk for him because he has a very slim majority in parliament
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    and relies on Ulster Unionist Party votes.
  • 00:10:33
    However, the major sticking point for the British Government something called the pre-decommissioning
  • 00:10:37
    of IRA arms.
  • 00:10:39
    They insisted Sinn Fein could only take part in the talks if the IRA agreed to decommission
  • 00:10:44
    their weaponry.
  • 00:10:45
    This, of course, was something the IRA would never do.
  • 00:10:47
    Armed struggle was, in a sense, the main trump card.
  • 00:10:50
    Then, on 9 February 1996 – 17 months after the start of the ceasefire – a lorry bomb
  • 00:10:57
    was detonated in the Isle of Dogs in London.
  • 00:11:00
    Two people were killed, dozens were injured and millions of pounds worth of damage was
  • 00:11:04
    done.
  • 00:11:06
    The IRA claimed responsibility, stating their anger at the direction of the peace talks
  • 00:11:09
    with Sinn Fein being side-lined from negotiations.
  • 00:11:13
    Civilians were once again paying the price for the political stalemate.
  • 00:11:17
    Paramilitary groups and the IRA refused to give up their arms, and over the next few
  • 00:11:21
    years, hundreds more would suffer.
  • 00:11:23
    The public were desperate for an end to the violence, but the segregation that marked
  • 00:11:27
    the cities of Northern Ireland had deep roots.
  • 00:11:30
    How would peace in Northern Ireland finally be reached?
Tags
  • Northern Ireland
  • Troubles
  • Peace Process
  • IRA
  • Gerry Adams
  • Enniskillen Bombing
  • Peace Walls
  • Sinn Fein
  • Sectarian Violence
  • Ceasefire