MEETING TRA SINN FEIN E PSNI PER DISCUTERE DELLA PARATA DI RASHARKIN
Lo Sinn Fein ha fatto valere valere una serie di motivazioni alla base dell’accuse di illegalità mosse in riferimento alla parata della Ballymaconnelly Sons of Conquerors Flute Band il cui tragitto è stato ripianificato arbitrariamente dalla PSNI, scavalcando la Parades Commission
In un comunicato Daithi McKay (Sinn Fein), ha affermato che quello di oggi 23 agosto è stato un utile incontro e si spera il primo di una serie volto ad evitare quanto accaduto nella notte del 20 agosto in occasione della parata a Rasharkin.
Per permettere il ‘regolare’ svolgimento della parata, la PSNI aveva deciso di bypassare un allarme bomba scattato poco prima della partenza della sfilata, riprogrammandone il percorso senza il consenso della Parades Commission e ad aggravare il ruolo decisionale della PSNI è stato il “fatto che la parata stessa ha avuto luogo dopo la mezzanotte e, quindi, in una nuova data, senza alcuna autorizzazione. Ciò è particolarmente significativo in considerazione del fatto che questa è tra le parate più controverse del nord. ”
Daithi McKay ha rivelato che la polizia aveva ricevuto “numerose telefonate da persone residenti in Rasharkin per quanto riguarda le intimidazioni che si sono verificate nel sud del paese e con la conseguente possibilità di una violazione significativa della pace”.
McKay ha sollevato anche una differenza di trattamento riservato alle fazioni opposte. “Un certo numero di giovani nazionalisti sono stati respinti inutilmente dopo che il corteo era passato.”
“Eppure, una tale azione non è stata presa contro i lealisti che sono stati autorizzati a raccogliersi sul fondo del centro abitato”.
Mervyn Storey (DUP) ha intravisto nella decisione della PSNI una sorta di lezione per quei repubblicani che non tollerano ogni presenza orangista e/o lealista.” La decisione di re-indirizzare la parata di venerdì sera è stata presa per ragioni di merito e la reazione dei Daithi McKay purtroppo è stata triste quanto <prevedibile>”.
Related Articles
- Rasharkin return parade permitted (bbc.co.uk)
- Restrictions on Rasharkin march (bbc.co.uk)
- DUP meet with police over parade (bbc.co.uk)
- Can’t march? Er…can (sluggerotoole.com)
- PSNI criticised over parade route (bbc.co.uk)
SF meet PSNI after Rasharkin re-route (U TV)
A Sinn Féin delegation has met with senior officers to discuss the party’s concerns over how police handled a band parade in Rasharkin on Friday night.
Officers changed the agreed route of the march without consulting the Parades Commission following a bomb scare.
Police said they were acting in the best interests of safety.
“The decision was taken that it was in the best interests of everyone to allow the parade to proceed along the route in reverse”, PSNI Chief Inspector Ryan Henderson explained at the weekend.
Sinn Féin north Antrim MLA Daithí McKay said the meeting was “useful”.
“We view this as the beginning in a series of meetings in order to ensure that there is no repeat of this kind of episode in the future”, Mr McKay said on Monday.
“Amongst the issues raised was the fact that the PSNI should not be determining parade routes; this was compounded by the fact that the parade itself took place after midnight and therefore on a new date without any determination. This is particularly significant given the fact that this is the most contentious band parade in the north.”
Mr McKay said the PSNI “received numerous phone calls from residents in Rasharkin regarding the intimidation which took place in the south of the village and that there was a possibility of a significant breach of the peace.”
According to the Sinn Féin MLA, the policing operation saw “a number of young nationalists pushed back unnecessarily after the parade had passed.”
“Yet no such action was taken against the loyalists who were allowed to gather at the bottom of the village”, he said.
The Rasharkin Residents Association said there was “lot of anger amongst local residents here in the wake of the parade”.
However the Ballymaconnelly Sons of Conquerors defended the re-routing, saying:
“We and the greater public are aware the people opposed to us are only using the parade to further their political agenda.
“This was the case on Friday with a hoax bomb scare disrupting the parade with the object of creating tension and the hope this would plunge our community into violence.
“The band therefore took the decision, with the support of the police on the ground to reversing the parade route, thus taking bands away from the flashpoint of the hoax, and doing our best to ensure the parade got started, and finished without any more disruption.”
DUP North Antrim MLA Mervyn Storey has praised the band for their “approach to the parade in the village”.
“It is quite apparent that there are republican elements within the area who will simply not tolerate any Orange or Protestant presence within the village. The decision to re-route the parade on Friday night was made for responsible reasons and the reaction from Daithi McKay unfortunately was as sad as it was predictable”, Mr Storey said.
Friday’s parade was delayed by nearly three hours as the army bomb squad examined a suspicious object found at the Orange Hall in Main Street in the town.
The street, along which the bands were due to march, was cordoned off until 10pm.
The security alert was later declared a hoax.



