bmattock
Veteran
Roger Hicks said:I'm slightly surprised at Bill's comments about its being against the law to mention the IRA or Sinn Fein, because I certainly never noticed their absence in the media and indeed it would have been impossible NOT to mention them. I mean, take the Birmingham pub bombing (I used to drink there occasionally). They couldn't say, "There has been a bomb attack but we're not allowed to say who by," could they?
Or given Tony Bliar's mania for secrecy and control, maybe that's what we'll be hearing quite soon...
Cheers,
Roger
Roger,
Being of Irish extraction as well as Catholic, we were all 'well aware' that the UK didn't report what was happening in Northern Ireland. Yes, bombings got the news - hard to ignore them. But hamstringing, shooting, and beatings of Catholics in the six counties? Catholic Church burnings? Not on BBC, mate.
http://staff.stir.ac.uk/david.miller/teaching/7613-NI.html
The 1989 Official Secrets Act further narrowed the sphere of debate by making it illegal for anyone associated with intelligence or security matters to speak or be reported in the media. No public interest defence is permissible.
I won't take a stand defending the IRA or Sinn Fein, because I don't defend terrorism, ever. I find it ironic that the RUC was not considered to be a similar terrorist organization, and the fact that the US would not let RUC members into the USA was never reported in the UK.
I remember being shocked when former PM Thatcher stood on the doorstep of 10 Downing with a pair of orphans from Germany and asked the world why there could not be 'One Germany' instead of two. My jaw dropped - when there are two Irelands, she had to ask this about Germany?
Anyway, let's not get at logger-heads over this; I was just saying that the US is not the only government that censors what its citizens can see and hear, and the UK was an example. I don't think anyone can defend that the UK did NOT censor reports out of NI.
Best Regards,
Bill Mattocks