Ian Acheson Ian Acheson

Why are armed men still able to parade around Northern Ireland?

(Photo: Getty)

Is the Police Service of Northern Ireland equal to the task of dealing with the sour, indigestible remnants of Troubles paramilitarism? Events this weekend in an estate on the outskirts of Derry, showing yet more glorification of a terrorist by armed men firing weapons, suggests otherwise.

Michael Devine, the man who was venerated by half a dozen goons dressed in black this weekend, starved himself to death in Northern Ireland’s notorious Maze prison in 1981 along with nine other republican prisoners in pursuit of political status. He was also a founder of the Irish National Liberation Army (INLA), one of the most viciously and overtly sectarian paramilitary death squads produced by the Troubles. The Bobby Sands Trust describes this organisation as formed for ‘offensive operational purposes.’ Those offended against were mainly off-duty police and army personnel, judges, ambassadors, MPs and, notoriously, the congregation of an isolated Protestant church in South Armagh.

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