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PRC-UTE
3rd July 2007, 23:12
These sort of attacks on catholics are still a major problem, despite having achieved "peace". It seems that maintaining a state based on sectarian headcounts keeps violent sectarian murder gangs going.



Gang broke boy's skull with club
A mother has described how a sectarian gang beat her son with a golf club, broke his skull, then tied wire around his neck and dragged him along a road.

Niall Ferrin, 15, suffered hearing and sight loss and underwent surgery following the attack at a north Belfast interface on Friday night.

His mother, Patricia, said she believes the gang were out to kill. But she appealed for no retaliation.

A gang of five men set upon Niall, who is from the nationalist Oldpark Road.

Mrs Ferrin said Niall, who is 5ft 1in tall, was chatting to another boy and two young girls near a park at 2300 BST, when they saw the gang coming from an alleyway.

One of the attackers - all believed to be in their 20s or 30s and wearing hoods - hit the boy over the head with a golf driver.

"Before he went unconscious, he remembers looking up and they were still hitting him," she said.

Woman's courage

"He remembers that a Protestant woman came out of her house and shouted at them to stop. The wee girls were screaming for them to stop and his friend ran to get help."

Niall suffered a fractured skull and had a hole in the side of his head.

"He has come round, but there is a loss of memory and his speech is incoherent. He suffered blindness and deafness," Mrs Ferrin said on Tuesday.

"Niall was in the wrong place at the wrong time. He is an innocent Catholic.

"The gang who did this were not going out to play golf. They were going out to kill. He is a small boy, lightly made-up - they knew they were attacking a child."

Residents gathered at Cliftonpark Avenue on Monday to show their support for Niall and his family.

A man was arrested in connection with the attack. He has been released on police bail.

Story from BBC NEWS:

Iron
4th July 2007, 02:00
*sigh* sad story only more proof to me that religion is bad.

Hiero
4th July 2007, 05:51
Originally posted by [email protected] 04, 2007 12:00 pm
*sigh* sad story only more proof to me that religion is bad.
It's not a religious issue, it is a national/ethnic issue.

seraphim
4th July 2007, 08:48
It happens on Both sides of the devide.

Iron
5th July 2007, 18:28
Originally posted by [email protected] 04, 2007 04:51 am
It's not a religious issue, it is a national/ethnic issue.
Catholic and Protestant are Religons and scine it was a "sectarian" attack this rules out national issues.

PRC-UTE
5th July 2007, 20:16
The IRSP in North Belfast are concerned with the rise of sectarian attacks along the Cliftonpark Avenue interface that has culminated in the near fatal attack on 15 year old Niall Ferrin last Friday night. North Belfast IRSP representative Paul Little said:

'The severity of Friday nights attack is causing great concern and left the young lad with injuries that are reminiscent of the notorious Shankill Butchers! We believe that these attacks will not cease until there is a genuine attempt to tackle sectarianism. It is sectarianism that lies at the heart of problem.
Other initiatives such as the various 'intervention schemes' do little if anything to address the longterm problems in interface areas, though they do appear to salve the consciences of those who fund these projects.

In conclusion The IRSP representative said, Until there is a programe to tackle sectarianism married to social and physical regeneration of interface areas, attacks like last Fridays are inevitable. In 2007 that this is the case in North Belfast is nothing short of criminal.'

http://rsmforum.proboards107.com/index.cgi...read=1183575423 (http://rsmforum.proboards107.com/index.cgi?board=general&action=display&thread=1183575423)

PRC-UTE
5th July 2007, 20:23
Originally posted by Hiero+July 04, 2007 04:51 am--> (Hiero @ July 04, 2007 04:51 am)
[email protected] 04, 2007 12:00 pm
*sigh* sad story only more proof to me that religion is bad.
It's not a religious issue, it is a national/ethnic issue. [/b]
The attackers were motivated by sectarian and ethnic hatred, but this is a result of British rule that upholds sectarian divisions and privelages. Britain's strategy has been to divide and rule. That's why we argue they have to go.

The US is trying to apply the same approach in Iraq now.

Hiero
6th July 2007, 07:41
Originally posted by PRC-UTE+July 06, 2007 06:23 am--> (PRC-UTE @ July 06, 2007 06:23 am)
Originally posted by [email protected] 04, 2007 04:51 am

[email protected] 04, 2007 12:00 pm
*sigh* sad story only more proof to me that religion is bad.
It's not a religious issue, it is a national/ethnic issue.
The attackers were motivated by sectarian and ethnic hatred, but this is a result of British rule that upholds sectarian divisions and privelages. Britain's strategy has been to divide and rule. That's why we argue they have to go.

The US is trying to apply the same approach in Iraq now. [/b]
I don't know if you quoted me because you agree, but it sounds like you do. At least that was what I was arguing.

If it was a religious problem then this would be mor common through out the world. Here in Australia Catholics and Protestants do not fight. Sure through history there was a divide, such as Anzac day parades were seperate for Catholics and Protestants. However the common ethnicity of white people, the anglo Australian identity faded out Catholic and Protestant divides. So the main agent is ethnicity.

In Ireland it is the same. My understand is the Catholics identify as mainland Irish. Protestants identify as British settlers. Then when it comes to politics, Catholics identify with a united republican Ireland and Protestants with a seperate N.Ireland within the United Kingdom. Then as you state British imperialism has alot to do with the sectarian violence, as colonialist they are the main perpetuators of the divide.

Iron's analysis is wrong, that simple because they were identified in the ariticle by their religion (who even knows if they are religious) that it is a religious issue. It just ignores the long history of colonialis and national conflict.