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Background
to the Hunger Strike
In
May 1972, a hunger strike commenced in Belfast Prison, which IRA prisoners
ended 35 days later when British Direct-Ruler William Whitelaw gave in
and granted 'special category status', that is political status to political
prisoners. From then, until 1976, many thousands of Irish men and women
served their prison sentences under this special category regime in the
cages of Long Kesh, and in A-Wing of Armagh women's prison.. Between the
years 1971 and 1975 thousands of additional prisoners, interned without
trial, had a similar status in Armagh, Magilligan, Belfast Prison, the
prison-ship Maidstone, and Long Kesh.
The existence of thousands of prisoners, interned and sentenced under
a regime which recognised them as political prisoners, coupled with the
popular support for the armed struggle, forced the British government,
after some earlier political and military miscalculations, to instigate
a number of classical counterinsurgency measures. Primarily, the objective
was to isolate those engaged in the resistance struggle from their support
and to 'normalise' life in the Six-County state.
CRIMINALISATION
This attempted 'isolation and normalisation' policy took on a number of
forms, all interlocked. There were various strategies adopted to create
an illusion of political normalisation, the so-called 'primacy of the
police', the gradual withdrawal of British army units and the Ulsterisation
of British military forces were all tactically designed to isolate those
engaged in struggle. This criminalisation attempt was part of the overall
effort to project the resistance struggle as a criminal conspiracy and
ran parallel with a propaganda thrust which saw the use of such terminology
as 'paramilitaries, Godfather, mafia' etc, etc, by British government
spokespersons.
A
major obstacle to this criminalisation policy was the fact that almost
2,000 prisoners, recognised by the British government as political prisoners,
were still held in British prisons, which directly contradicted the British
government's propaganda claims. Long Kesh, by name and appearance was
known worldwide as a concentration camp and the large number of political
prisoners drawn from all over the Six Counties enjoyed, through family,
community and local connections, maximum support.
In
January 1975, a British commission (The Gardiner Commission) made a number
of important recommendations. These included the phasing-out of political
status and the ending of internment. Long Kesh had already been renamed
HMP The Maze. A 50% remission scheme was introduced to accommodate the
release of sentenced prisoners and the internees were released.
An arbitrary date, March 1st, was set and the British declared that anyone
arrested after that date would not be treated as political prisoners and
would serve their sentences in new cellular accommodation. The H-Blocks,
designed to maximise the control of prisoners in four small wings of 25
single cells (instead of the traditional large huts), were born. In British
terms, the strategy was simple. Outside the prison, however, the situation
started to change, resistance recommenced and without the benefit of internment
orders, the British Government employed new 'legal' methods to intern
their opponents and to demoralise an uncompromising population. Castlereagh
torture centre came into its own, rules of evidence were changed, extra
Diplock (non-jury) courts were brought in, judges were appointed and the
H-Block conveyor-belt went into full gear. Now instead of internment the
British had a legal-looking process of arrest, charge, remand, trial and
sentence. That the arrests were arbitrary, the charges based on forced
confessions, the remands lengthy, the trials farcical and the sentences
totally unjust was incidental,. The propaganda machine adequately covered
all that. At least in the beginning.
The
architects of the new policy to criminalise those who resisted and portray
prisoners as ordinary criminals, failed to take into account the resistance
of a new generation of political prisoners, those sentenced after March
1st. They refused to accept the new regime, refused to cooperate with
the prison guards or to accept prison discipline. They refused to wear
the prison uniform, were denied thier own clothes, and wore only a blanket.
As their numbers increased and the blanket protest strengthened, news
of beatings, deprivations and maltreatment began to leak out of the H-Blocks
of Long Kesh and the women's prison in Armagh.
BLANKET
PROTEST BEGINS
In March 1978, 18 months after the start of the blanker protest, with
over 300 prisoners on protest, the prison administration stepped up the
beatings and harassment and forced the blanket men on to the no-wash,
no-slop out protest. This was to last for a full three years and arose
essentially because the men were refused washing or toilet facilities
or were beaten when they left their cells. The same thing was to happen
later in Armagh in February 1980 when the prison administration attacked
the women political prisoners, assaulting them and withdrawing toilet
facilities.
The majority of protesting prisoners, both men and women, were in their
late teens or 20s and over 80% were imprisoned solely on the strength
of forced confessions. They were refused from the beginning of their sentences
all exercise facilities, reading or writing material, and access to radio
or newspapers. Kept in cells on a punishment diet, with loss of all remission
and without furniture, they were constantly beaten and harassed. Sinn
Féin and Relatives' Action Groups began a protest campaign, mostly
confined to the Six-Counties, on the prisoner's behalf.
CARDINAL
O FIAICH VISITS H-BLOCKS
It was not until Cardinal, then Archbishop, O Fiaich, visited the prisoners
on July 31st, 1978, and condemned the conditions under which the prisoners
were being held, that greater public interest increased. He said: "Having
spent the whole of Sunday in the prison, I was shocked at the inhuman
conditions prevailing in H-Blocks 3,4 and 5 where over 300 prisoners were
incarcerated. One would hardly allow an animal to remain in such conditions,
let alone a human being. The nearest approach to it that I have seen was
the spectacle of hundreds of homeless people living in sewer pipes in
the slums of Calcutta. The stench and filth in some cells, with the remains
of rotten food and human excreta scattered around the walls, was almost
unbelievable. In two of them I was unable to speak for the fear of vomiting.
The prisoners' cells are without beds, chairs or tables. They sleep on
mattresses on the floor, and in some cases I noticed they were quite wet.
They have no covering except towel or blanket, no books, newspapers or
reading material except the Bible (even religious magazines have been
banned since my last visit), no pens or writing material, or TV, or radio,
no hobbies or handcrafts, no exercise or recreation. They are locked in
their cells for almost the whole of every day and some of them have been
in this condition for more than a year and a half."
Public
interest had also been aroused by the Amnesty International report of
June 1978, which stated categorically that: "Maltreatment of suspected
terrorists by the RUC, has taken place with sufficient frequency to warrant
establishment of a public inquiry to investigate it".
However, the plight of the H-Block and Armagh prisoners again faded to
some degree from the public view, until the establishment of the National
H-Block/Armagh Committee in October 1979. This committee, elected from
a broad-based campaign, advocated, with endorsement of the prisoners,
five basic demands whose implementation would resolve the prison deadlock:
The
five demands were:
(1) No prison uniform;
(2) No prison work;
(3) Free association;
(4) Full remission;
(5) Visits, parcels, and recreational/educational facilities.
In
March 1980 Cardinal O Fiaich again visited the prison and the following
day he and Bishop Edward Daly met Direct-Ruler Humphrey Atkins for talks
to attempt to settle the crisis, especially since the blanket men were
now advocating hunger strike as a way out of the deadlock.
In an attempt to create an atmosphere conductive to a settlement and to
take pressure off the British administration, the IRA ceased its attacks
on prison officials. These talks dragged on for over six months before
Cardinal O Fiaich and Bishop Daly had to admit they were getting nowhere.
FIRST HUNGER STRIKE BEGINS
The blanket men and protesting women prisoners, totally exasperated, finally
commenced hunger strike on October 27th, 1980. The fist H-Block hunger
strike that was to last 56 days saw the greatest nationalist mobilisation
in Ireland since the early days of the civil rights/anti-internment campaign.
That peaceful and disciplined campaign, organised by the National H-Block/Armagh
Committee, attracted on a single issue scores of thousands of people and
united people of different political persuasions. The campaign itself
came under attack from British and pro-British elements and campaign leaders
John Turnley, Miriam Daly, Noel Little and Ronnie Bunting were murdered
and Bernadette and Michael McAliskey were wounded.
The
hunger strike ended on December 18th when the British government presented
to the seven men who had fasted 53 days two documents. The three women
hunger strikers ended their hunger strike the following day. On Thursday
afternoon of December 18th, as the condition of hunger-striker Sean McKenna
rapidly deteriorated, the British minister in charge of the Six Counties,
Direct Ruler Humphrey Atkins, suddenly and without public explanation
postponed a statement he had been due to make to the British parliament
and ensured that it was delivered to the seven hunger strikers in the
prison hospital along with a 34-page document entitled Regimes in Northern
Ireland Prisons, Prisoners day to day life with special emphasis on Maze.
This document was new to the men and to the general public and was a major
elaboration of how far the British government had gone in meeting the
political prisoners' five demands. "If they choose to live, the conditions
available to them meet in a practical and humane way the kind of things
they have been asking for", said Atkins.
The fact that a British cabinet minister postponed a parliamentary statement
to send it to protesting republican prisoners in order to seek a settlement
to the 53-day-old hunger-strike, was a unique act of political recognition
in itself and the delivery of the 34-page document reinforced this political
recognition for up until then there had been no bending from the British
government apart from one incident. On Wednesday, December 10th, when
a senior member of the colonial Northern Ireland Office, a Mr Blellock,
met the seven H-Block hunger strikers in the prison hospital and read
out to them the prison reforms that were then available but refused to
answer questions or negotiate with Brendan Hughes, former O/C of the blanket
men.
The delivery of the document and the ending of the hunger-strike ushered
in a new atmosphere and Bobby Sands, the blanket men's O/C, was given
freedom to liase and meet with the hunger strikers in the prison hospital,
and each of the blanket Block O/Cs, and it was with him that the jail
governor met directly, thus conferring recognition of the republican command
structure. This recognition was reinforced when on Friday, December 19th,
all of the H-Block O/Cs were brought out of their blocks for a further
meeting with Bobby Sands in H-Block 3. Bobby Sands himself publicly expressed
satisfaction at the new era of cooperation inside the jail, unprecedented
since the British government embarked upon its policy of criminalisation
in March 1976.
However, to the dismay of the prisoners, within days the atmosphere in
the prison changed as soon as the spotlight shifted away from the jail.
All the document's phrases about the situation not begin static; work
not being interpreted narrowly and the prison regime being progressive,
humane and flexible were soon shown not to be worth the paper they were
written on.
The blanket men had hoped to move about 30 men off the blanket and no-wash
protest before Christmas Day but were stopped by Governor Hilditch who
told Bobby Sands that nobody would be moving anywhere until they put on
prison-issue clothing and conformed. In Armagh Jail, where women are allowed
to wear their own clothes, George Scott the governor refused even to discuss
with prisoners the question of self-education classes as outlined in the
document.
HUMPHREY
ATKINS RENEGES
On January 9th, in the British Parliament, Humphrey Atkins publicly reneged
on his December 18th statement by reversing the order in which the men
received their own clothes.
The prison administration tried to force the men to unconditionally end
their protest but at a further meeting between all the H-Block O/Cs on
January 11th it was decided to attempt in a step-by-step process the de-escalation
of the protests in a principled fashion. Thus, following a period in which
the prisoners cooperated to their utmost with a stubborn regime, on January
27th 96 prisoners smashed up cell furniture in a fit of frustration. The
reaction from the prison administration was swift and brutal. Over 80
prisoners were assaulted, beaten in wing shifts, left overnight without
bedding or blankets or drinking water, refused toilet facilities and had
meals interfered with or withdrawn altogether.
It was back to square one. Despite calls from the blanket men to those
who had appealed to them to abandon their hunger strike, no one, from
Bishop to politician, spoke out. Then on March 1st, Bobby Sands commenced
hunger strike. In a statement announcing the commencement of the hunger
strike the political prisoners said:
"We the republican POWs in the H-Blocks of Long Kesh, and our comrades
in Armagh Prison, are entitled to and hereby demand political status,
and we reject today as we have consistently rejected every day since September
14th, 1976, when the blanket protest began, the British government's attempted
criminalisation of ourselves and our struggle.
"Five
years ago this day, the British government declared that anyone arrested
and convicted after March 1st, 1976, was to be treated as a criminal and
no longer as a political prisoner. Five years later we are still able
to declare that that criminalisation policy, which we have resisted and
suffered, has failed.
"If a British government experienced such a long and persistent resistance
to a domestic policy in England then that policy would almost certainly
be changed. But no so in Ireland where its traditional racist attitude
blinds its judgement to reason and persuasion.
"Only the loud voice of the Irish people and world opinion can bring
them to their senses and only a hunger strike, where lives are laid down
as proof of the strength of our political convictions, can rally such
opinion and present the British with the problem that, far from criminalizing
the cause of Ireland, their intransigence is actually bringing popular
attention to that cause.
"We have asserted that we are political prisoners and everything
about our country, our arrest, interrogations, trials and prison conditions,
show that we are politically motivated and not motivated by selfish reasons
or for selfish ends. As further demonstration of our selflessness and
the justness of our cause a number of comrades, beginning today with Bobby
Sands will hunger strike to the death unless the British government abandons
its criminalisation policy and meets our demand for political status."
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