英国也出美丽风景线了

t
toddler
楼主 (未名空间)

UK news
Despair fuels the flames of young loyalist anger in Northern Ireland
Let down by politicians and police, cultural symbols belittled ... unionist teenagers feel marginalised and are taking action
08:30 UTC Sunday, 11 April 2021
For the schoolboy commander who stood on the grassy hill and gave his name
only as Bob, the intricacies and compromises of politics, policing, Brexit
and the Northern Ireland protocol could all be boiled down to this: his side was losing, and that had to stop.
His side were the Protestants, unionists and loyalists, bulwarks of
Britishness on the island of Ireland, and they needed to assert themselves, starting with the traffic roundabout at the bottom of O’Neill Road in
Newtownabbey, outside Belfast.
A singed and tattered union jack fluttered from a stick planted in the
middle of the intersection, testament to three cars hijacked and set alight there in Northern Ireland’s week of riots. Bob and his band of teenagers,
some clutching rocks and bottles, would defend it from any police officer
who dared remove it.
The Democratic Unionist party (DUP) and other unionist parties were not
defending Northern Ireland’s place in the UK, said Bob. “They’re all ball bags that don’t know how to put their foot down. That’s why we’ve been
out here.”
In a nutshell, that is why petrol bombs have been flying. Working-class
loyalists feel forgotten and marginalised and are using mayhem to get
attention and leverage.
They got the attention. The region’s power-sharing executive held an
emergency session, the Northern Ireland secretary Brandon Lewis rushed to
Belfast, Boris Johnson issued a joint statement with his Irish counterpart, Micheál Martin, and the White House expressed concern.
Whether it advanced the loyalist agenda is another matter. The governments
and political parties all condemned the violence, which injured 55 police
officers, as reckless and unjustifiable. Arlene Foster, the DUP leader and
the region’s first minister, called it an embarrassment.
But Bob and his ilk, clad in dark fleeces, hoods and masks, had their own
political calculus.
A trade border down the Irish Sea; nationalists flouting pandemic rules at
the funeral of a former IRA commander; police and prosecutors not arresting or charging anyone who attended the funeral; in the zero-sum politics of
Northern Ireland that meant loyalists were losing.
“We’re part of the UK, but they’re trying to make Northern Ireland into a united Ireland,” said Bob, as his lieutenants nodded. Few had travelled
south of the border, just 60 miles away, for the Republic of Ireland was
hostile, alien territory. Bob, taller and bolder than the others, had done
so, to visit Dublin zoo, and that was enough.
In their view the other side, colloquially known as “them’uns”, was
winning. Police patrols and drug busts in Newtownabbey’s housing estates,
they said, showed a biased police service beholden to ascendant nationalism.It is part of a loyalist narrative that the rot set in after the 1998 Good
Friday agreement. Instead of a settlement, a new dawn, Sinn Féin and its
allies used the agreement to chip, chip, chip away at Northern Ireland,
removing royal symbols, removing the union jack from Belfast city hall,
erecting Irish-language signs.
Now, in the centenary year of Northern Ireland’s creation in 1921,
Catholics may soon outnumber Protestants, Sinn Féin is within a whisker of overtaking the DUP as the biggest party and there is chatter about a
referendum on Irish unity.
What this defeatist view overlooks is that in recent elections the
nationalist vote has plateaued, that nationalists have their own list of
grievances, and that the fastest growing political force in Northern Ireland is the non-aligned centre which shuns Orange and Green labels.
Bob was adamant: loyalists had become second-class citizens. “You have
police treating Protestants like shit and Catholics like upper-class
citizens. The police were born Protestant and should remain Protestant.” He displayed his scorn when up the hill tramped three officers, two of them
male. “Hello ladies.”
Older loyalists such as John Scott, 61, a retired musician, were not manning barricades but felt the protests served a purpose. Johnson had betrayed
unionists over Brexit, just like previous occupants of Downing Street had
betrayed the most British bastion of the UK. “It may help get politicians
off their arses. Every now and again the prime minister, whoever he is,
needs a slap up the bake [mouth].”
Blunt honesty, perhaps, but there is a murkiness to the riots. Middle-aged
men have hovered amid the youthful missile-throwers, raising suspicion that paramilitary elements are directing the violence. “They let us know when
something will happen, they warn us so we can close in time,” said one
store owner in Newtownabbey, which has a strong Ulster Defence Association
presence. Asked who “they” were he smiled. “I can’t say more.”
Some sense the DUP’s hand in the riots, saying the party demanded the chief constable’s resignation over Bobby Storey’s funeral to direct loyalist
anger towards the police and away from the DUP’s role in creating the Irish Sea border.
“What we’re seeing here tonight is the outworking of the crisis in
unionism,” said Matt Collins, a Belfast city councillor with the People
Before Profit party. He spoke on Wednesday night as smoke plumed over the
loyalist Shankill Road, where rioters had set a hijacked bus ablaze. “
Having delivered nothing to their working-class communities they have
resorted to sectarianism.”
A 63-year-old Catholic council worker who gave his name only as Patrick had a blunter critique. “Unionists and loyalists were used to getting their way – and now that they’re not getting their way they’re complaining like a spoilt child.”
Peter Shirlow, a director at the University of Liverpool’s Institute of
Irish Studies and an authority on unionism, said many working-class
loyalists viewed compromises inherent in the Good Friday agreement as
concessions, surrender, a drip-drip erosion of sovereignty. “They’re
constantly told the other side is winning.” In fact most of Northern
Ireland’s deprived areas were Catholic and loyalist communities boasted
success stories, said Shirlow. “When people say loyalists have been
abandoned, abandoned by whom? Like any other working-class community they
have their own issues.”
The worst flashpoint last week was in Belfast at the interface of the Lanark Way peace wall, the Orwellian name for barriers that separate
neighbourhoods.
Young people from the loyalist Shankill Road and youths from the nationalist Springfield Road waged an aerial bombardment of rocks, bottles and petrol
bombs. At one point the gate caught fire and was breached, with interlopers briefly milling in enemy territory, hurling taunts as well as missiles.
In the fresh light of morning you could still read a faded, smudged message painted on the wall, like a message passed down from another era: “There
was never a good war or a bad peace.”
Few in Northern Ireland would consider the Troubles, which cost 3,700 lives, a good war. The problem is those who chafe at an imperfect peace and who
forget, or never knew, the alternative.

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j
jojoyz

风景线好几天了,没什么存在感,真是连港灿的一个边角的待遇都没有,唏嘘一下
b
beijingren5

BBC笑而不语
d
dnls

北爱尔兰 excited!
j
jojoyz


【 在 beijingren5 (吃喝) 的大作中提到: 】
: BBC笑而不语

bbc当时在香港那个上蹿下跳,各种谣言阴间滤镜用的可是非常兴奋,这下轮到英国风
景线了,是造谣呢还是用阴间滤镜,估计不敢,只能装看不见
y
yanzhengman

不知中国出于围棋式的精算,还是自我道德约束或胆小,不支持鼓励北爱独立,拆解英国
S
StMicheal

牛掰,这个够大阴帝国喝一壶的。

北爱独立运动后的脆弱和平局面,天主教对新教,忠英对忠爱,脱欧乱局北爱政经混乱,新冠困局, 底层实业贫困工人,
无望废青got nothing to lose...

多条fault line纵横交错,旧恨新仇,太精彩了。乌东加香港的感脚。

苏格兰也争取独立吧。

Great Britain就变Little Britain了。

活该政客操弄民意,把脱欧这种大决策公投。现在傻眼了。

看戏看戏

w
wep

关于这个的新闻BBC连一条都不敢发,这次BBC真臭大街了

【 在 jojoyz (jojoyz) 的大作中提到: 】
: 风景线好几天了,没什么存在感,真是连港灿的一个边角的待遇都没有,唏嘘一下

b
btsor

BBC这次当婊子当的好彻底,连遮羞布都不要了,来不及立牌坊了。