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Contentious Parades Deal Rejected
national |
miscellaneous |
opinion/analysis
Friday June 06, 2008 02:44 by Northern Nationalist
On April 29th, when the Strategic Review Body on Parading formally launched its consultative report, two residents’ groups - the Lower Ormeau Concerned Community in Belfast and the Garvaghy Road Residents Coalition in Portadown – whose communities were at the very heart of the turmoil and conflict over contentious marches in the 1990’s jointly set out their views and concerns in a full page article in “The Irish News”, the main nationalist daily paper in the North.
Since then, the two residents' groups have been spuriously accused by some within Sinn Fein of working to "an agenda" - although no-one who makes that accusation is prepared to state what that agenda is.
Given that parades are officially listed as one of the items to be “resolved” at the Downing Street talks between Peter Robinson, Martin McGuinness and Gordon Brown, its worth recalling the position of the two residents’ groups and establishing if others, and not the residents, are working to "an agenda".. Since the 1990s, both the Garvaghy Road Residents Coalition and the Lower Ormeau Concerned Community have campaigned for change in the way contentious marches are governed.
It is our view that the creation of the Strategic Review Body on Parading was not motivated by any genuine desire to improve the effectiveness of the Parades Commission or current processes for dealing with contentious parades. Instead, its genesis in 2006 was as a political concession to unionist parties opposed to any restrictions on the relatively small number of contentious loyal order marches.
We are very mindful of the injustices inflicted upon our communities as a result of parades, particularly during the 1990s.
All that our communities had sought was the re-routing of a small number of contentious marches. We had argued for the right to live in peace without the deep sense of fear, outrage and humiliation that consistently marked these sectarian parades through our neighbourhoods.
Instead, due to political expediency, unwanted sectarian marches were imposed upon our communities through the use of threats and violence by unionism and force from both the police and the British Army. The indiscriminate use of plastic bullets, brutal assaults upon residents, illegal curfews and massive restrictions on the movement of people within our communities were a harsh reality.
We welcomed the Independent Review on Parades and Marches (the North Review) established in 1996 in response to events in Portadown and the Ormeau Road. We expressed some scepticism about the need for a Parades Commission. It was our belief that Government was abdicating its responsibility to protect minority communities from fear and the threat of violence.
Nevertheless, in our view, the Parades Commission concept did succeed in introducing a degree of autonomy into decisions about contentious parades that was noticeably absent when such decisions were previously taken by the police, politicians or the courts. While we have not agreed with all determinations on contentious marches, there is no doubt that the first and second Parades Commissions did eventually succeed in changing the climate around such contentious marches.
Since the start of this millennium, the re-routing of sectarian marches away from the Garvaghy and Ormeau Roads by the Commission has meant that our communities – and the wider community – have enjoyed successive peaceful summers.
The clouds of fear, tension and violence, and the physical sieges of our two communities that accompanied those sectarian marches, have also disappeared. Residents in our neighbourhoods now enjoy family and community life in relative peace and tranquillity.
It is against this background that we believe this present Report to be unnecessary and largely unhelpful.
We are concerned that the Strategic Review Body’s recommendations will politicise, rather than de-politicise, the marching issue.
The Review Body itself has linked the marching issue to outstanding and unresolved political matters.
It links the marching issue to locally elected political institutions, including local councils – a number of which have proven track records of discrimination.
By making these linkages, the Review Body has opened a doorway for those who wish to turn the marching issue into a major political football - where political expediency will take precedence over valid human rights concerns.
There is also concern at the Review Body’s attempt to downgrade “the right to freedom from sectarian harassment”.
We do not believe that this Report has brought forward any suitable or viable alternative to the concept of an independent Parades Commission.
Instead, we see only potential for political interference and manipulation within each of the various strands of bureaucracy it proposes.
We fear that the majority of proposals will lead to a pre-1998 situation, re-ignite past tensions and create future inter-communal unrest during the “marching season”.
As for the current Parades Commission (which is the third such body), it is obvious that political manipulation lies at the core of its present difficulties. The corruption by Peter Hain and the NIO of the appointments process led to a two-year legal battle which culminated in the House of Lords earlier this year upholding the residents’ case that those appointments were indeed biased and unlawful.
Questions still remain over the integrity of this Commission’s own internal processes which for two years failed to recognise or properly handle the resultant major conflicts of interests.
Leaving those facts aside, we wish to make it clear that we fully support the concept of a Parades Commission – but it must be a Commission which is completely independent and free from political interference at all levels, commencing with the appointments process itself; one that is open and transparent in its dealings with everyone; and one which does not second its staff from government departments, including the NIO.
Obviously, this Review did not start from the same premise of seeking to enhance the Commission’s independence, to free it from political manipulation or improve its effectiveness.
Seven years ago, the Quigley Review of parades was created following a side-deal at Weston Park between the British government and unionists opposed to restrictions on loyal order marches. The report and recommendations from that Review now gather dust on some shelf within the NIO.
The report from this Strategic Review Body should be consigned to a similar fate without delay.
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