New Events

International

no events posted in last week

Blog Feeds

Anti-Empire

Anti-Empire

offsite link The Wholesome Photo of the Month Thu May 09, 2024 11:01 | Anti-Empire

offsite link In 3 War Years Russia Will Have Spent $3... Thu May 09, 2024 02:17 | Anti-Empire

offsite link UK Sending Missiles to Be Fired Into Rus... Tue May 07, 2024 14:17 | Marko Marjanović

offsite link US Gives Weapons to Taiwan for Free, The... Fri May 03, 2024 03:55 | Anti-Empire

offsite link Russia Has 17 Percent More Defense Jobs ... Tue Apr 30, 2024 11:56 | Marko Marjanović

Anti-Empire >>

Human Rights in Ireland
Indymedia Ireland is a volunteer-run non-commercial open publishing website for local and international news, opinion & analysis, press releases and events. Its main objective is to enable the public to participate in reporting and analysis of the news and other important events and aspects of our daily lives and thereby give a voice to people.

offsite link Julian Assange is finally free ! Tue Jun 25, 2024 21:11 | indy

offsite link Stand With Palestine: Workplace Day of Action on Naksa Day Thu May 30, 2024 21:55 | indy

offsite link It is Chemtrails Month and Time to Visit this Topic Thu May 30, 2024 00:01 | indy

offsite link Hamburg 14.05. "Rote" Flora Reoccupied By Internationalists Wed May 15, 2024 15:49 | Internationalist left

offsite link Eddie Hobbs Breaks the Silence Exposing the Hidden Agenda Behind the WHO Treaty Sat May 11, 2024 22:41 | indy

Human Rights in Ireland >>

Lockdown Skeptics

The Daily Sceptic

offsite link Labour Has Just Betrayed a Generation of Young People Sun Jul 28, 2024 09:00 | Richard Eldred
By dropping the Higher Education (Freedom of Speech) Act, the Education Secretary has declared war on the culture of free speech on campus. The fight-back starts here, says Claire Fox in the Telegraph.
The post Labour Has Just Betrayed a Generation of Young People appeared first on The Daily Sceptic.

offsite link The Extreme Weather We?re Experiencing Is Not Man Made, According to the IPCC Sun Jul 28, 2024 07:00 | Mark Ellse
Day-to-day weather, with all its extremes, is "just weather", according to the IPCC. With their authority onside, we can shrug off the BBC's melodramatic climate reports and misinformation, says Mark Ellse.
The post The Extreme Weather We?re Experiencing Is Not Man Made, According to the IPCC appeared first on The Daily Sceptic.

offsite link News Round-Up Sun Jul 28, 2024 01:17 | Richard Eldred
A summary of the most interesting stories in the past 24 hours that challenge the prevailing orthodoxy about the ?climate emergency?, public health ?crises? and the supposed moral defects of Western civilisation.
The post News Round-Up appeared first on The Daily Sceptic.

offsite link Green MP Proposes Sweeping Reforms to House of Commons in Maiden Speech Sat Jul 27, 2024 19:00 | Sean Walsh
The sweeping House of Commons reforms proposed by Green MP Ellie Chowns are evidence that the Mrs Dutt-Pauker types have moved from Peter Simple's columns into public life. We're in for a bumpy ride, says Sean Walsh.
The post Green MP Proposes Sweeping Reforms to House of Commons in Maiden Speech appeared first on The Daily Sceptic.

offsite link Heat Pump Refuseniks Risk £2,000 Surge in Gas Bills Sat Jul 27, 2024 17:00 | Richard Eldred
With heat pump numbers forecast to rise, the energy watchdog Ofgem has predicted that bills for those who continue using gas boilers will surge.
The post Heat Pump Refuseniks Risk £2,000 Surge in Gas Bills appeared first on The Daily Sceptic.

Lockdown Skeptics >>

Voltaire Network
Voltaire, international edition

offsite link Netanyahu soon to appear before the US Congress? It will be decisive for the suc... Thu Jul 04, 2024 04:44 | en

offsite link Voltaire, International Newsletter N°93 Fri Jun 28, 2024 14:49 | en

offsite link Will Israel succeed in attacking Lebanon and pushing the United States to nuke I... Fri Jun 28, 2024 14:40 | en

offsite link Will Netanyahu launch tactical nuclear bombs (sic) against Hezbollah, with US su... Thu Jun 27, 2024 12:09 | en

offsite link Will Israel provoke a cataclysm?, by Thierry Meyssan Tue Jun 25, 2024 06:59 | en

Voltaire Network >>

Justice and Policing, Orange Parades and Human Rights

category international | rights, freedoms and repression | opinion/analysis author Friday January 29, 2010 14:34author by Peter Mulholland - noneauthor email orangecitadel at gmail dot com Report this post to the editors

A Struggle for Recognition

This article argues that the DUP's attempt to link policing and justice to Orange parades is a threat to human rights in Northern Ireland.

The Orange Order and its associated institutions seem to believe that they have a right to parade through Nationalist areas of Northern Ireland and the DUP appear to be trying to support that right by refusing to honour their commitments to policing and justice, and, thereby threatening the Peace Process.

In essence, there is nothing new in this. As I have documented elsewhere, Orange parades have disturbed the peace and corrupted policing and justice in Ireland for a couple of hundred years (see: http://orangecitadel.blogspot.com/). Since the inception of the Orange Order in 1795 its paramilitary rituals have been imposed with violence and the threat of violence or further socioeconomic exclusion. Since the inception of the Northern State until July 1998 those sectarian rituals were endorsed by the state, backed up by the judiciary, facilitated by the security forces, and approved or condoned by many within the Church of Ireland and other Protestant churches.

Nevertheless, the Orangemen complain that they are now being denied their right as citizens (or ‘subjects’) to parade ‘the Queen’s highway’. The fact of the matter is that Orange parades are a symbolic expression of sectarian domination and they have corrupted policing and justice in Ireland for many generations. And, as I argued in 1999, they are a denial of the basic human rights of the minority community in Northern Ireland – the right to live in peace and security, with dignity, respect, and justice (see Mulholland, P. 1999. Drumcree; a Struggle for Recognition 1999, Irish Journal of Sociology Vol. 9)

The Orange Order’s official response to the so-called ‘Drumcree Siege’ of 1995 is a good example of how it persists in misrepresenting and covering up its tradition of violence and sectarian abuse. In 1995 the Grand Orange Lodge of Ireland published a booklet called The Order on Parade. In the introduction Brian Kennaway held that the ongoing debate about Orange Parades was ill informed and opined that ‘If people were better informed as to the nature of the Orange Institution they would be in a much better position to understand the purpose of parades’. Mr. Kennaway then proceeded to quote from the Bible in support of a fatuous suggestion that the victims of Orange aggression should not ‘go out of their way to be offended’ by Orangemen who, he noted: ‘should not give offence to anyone’. Then, without offering any insight into the 'nature of the Orange Institution', the authors of this ‘educational’ book proceeded to defend their demonstrations of sectarian supremacy in a manner that suggested parading was the Order’s raison d’être. Without the slightest indication of any sense of irony, they defended all and every Orange Parade as being part of a colourful tradition that fulfils a common need to celebrate political and religious commitments and beliefs. They described Orange parading as being ‘a celebration’, ‘a display of pageantry’, ‘a demonstration of strength’ that provides ‘a sense of tradition’, ‘a testimony and a statement of beliefs’, and ‘the culmination of each lodge's activities’ (and see The Orange Citadel, 1996)

This kind of Orange propaganda led many to view the Drumcree ‘Church parade’ as being the epitome of a conflict over two equal but opposing sets of rights or, worse still, as a modern manifestation of a sectarian ‘tribal’ conflict. In fact, the Drumcree parade is where Orangeism has historically woven religion into politics in the creation and maintenance of a sectarian state in which ‘Protestant’ domination over the Catholic/Nationalist community was assured. Historical events and circumstances have established Drumcree (Obins Street and now the Garvaghy Road) as the premier site of ritualized threats of violence and sectarian domination.

Drumcree is the dark heart of Orangeism. But it is also the site of a struggle to change people’s perceptions of the Northern conflict. In that highly symbolic space ‘the two communities’ in Northern Ireland are struggling to retain or to change the structure of Northern Irish society through winning recognition for their competing worldviews. Drumcree is where the two ethno-political groups in Northern Ireland have engaged in a struggle to win the symbolic capital necessary to obtain effective symbolic power. But more than that, it is where successive generations of the long-suppressed and much abused Catholic community have fought a battle for human rights.

The Garvaghy road campaign and all the other contemporaneous and historic campaigns against Orange parades were essentially about changing the nature of relations between the two communities in order that the civil and human rights of the minority community might be fully recognized and juridically guaranteed. In the 1980s and through the 1990s it became a struggle to expose, so as to break out of a sectarian environment that perpetuated the socioeconomic and cultural subordination of Catholics while also undermining their sense of self, their self-respect, their dignity, and their sense of belonging and identity. That sectarian environment was experienced as being annually reinvigorated through Orange parading rituals that reasserted the moral and social supremacy of a dominant group that represented itself as being ‘the Protestant community’.

The German philosopher Axel Honneth has suggested that social conflicts be interpreted as struggles to create the conditions necessary for self-realization through establishing relations of mutual recognition. He observed that when people are denied recognition they feel compelled to achieve what is sensed as being a ‘vital’ human need. As Honneth explained in The Moral Grammar of Social Conflicts, it is through experiencing the negative emotional reactions of shame, indignation, and rage that we come to realize that we are being denied social recognition, a vital human need. That vital need is a deeply felt, very personal need for recognition of the dignity and worth of the individual and the struggle to achieve it kicks in when the ethnicity, status, dignity, physical integrity or sense of security of any group is systematically disrespected and denied. Readers can get some sense of how the Orange Order has systematic abused Northern Nationalists and denied recognition of their vital human need for recognition and respect from the aforementioned bolg. As that blog shows, opposition to Orange parades in Portadown and elsewhere in the North was not part of a sinister republican or Sinn Féin strategy, as the Orange Order, the RUC, and some elements of news media often used to claim (and as one respondent to my previous posting on Indymedia seems also to think ). Opposition to Orange parades in the North is a couple of hundred years old and it was driven by first-hand experience of socioeconomic, political, physical, and emotional abuse. And it was because others shared in those experiences that the anti-parades protest in my home town of Portadown won such widespread support amongst the minority community all across the North, including the support of some non-Catholics and even amongst some with Unionist or Royalist sentiments.

Even if they can, the DUP must not be allowed to link policing and justice to a threat, or to the possible denial of the basic human rights of the minority community in Northern Ireland.

Bibliography
Honneth, A. (1995) The Struggle For Recognition. Polity Press.
Mulholland, P. (2010) Orange Parades Undermine Justice and Policing: Two Centuries of Corruption. http://www.indymedia.ie/article/95599?include_comments=...=true
Mulholland, P. 1999. Drumcree; a Struggle for Recognition 1999, Irish Journal of Sociology Vol. 9.
http://web.ebscohost.com/ehost/detail?vid=3&hid=2&sid=b...79545
Portadown Cultural Heritage Committee, LOL District No.1 (1996) The Orange Citadel.
The Grand Orange Lodge of Ireland Education Committee (1995) The Order On Parade.

Related Link: http://orangecitadel.blogspot.com/
© 2001-2024 Independent Media Centre Ireland. Unless otherwise stated by the author, all content is free for non-commercial reuse, reprint, and rebroadcast, on the net and elsewhere. Opinions are those of the contributors and are not necessarily endorsed by Independent Media Centre Ireland. Disclaimer | Privacy