[net.nlang.celts] A Medal For Colonel Wilford

jmm@bonnie.UUCP (Joe Mcghee) (01/31/85)

	On Sunday, January 30, 1972 Lt. Colonel Derek Wilford led his troops
of the 1st Battalion of the British Parachute Regiment in an operation which
caused him to be awarded the Order of the British Empire (O.B.E.) by Queen
Elizabeth. This operation was not a desparate struggle against hopeless odds,
nor was it an operation which saved any lives, nor was it an operation which
required any great effort or courage on the part of his troops.
	Colonel Wilford was given one of England's highest honors for the
killing of 13 unarmed and innocent civilians at a civil rights rally in one of
the main squares of the city of Derry in northern Ireland. The civilians who
died that day were:
			Kevin McElhinney	age 16
			John Duddy		age 17
			Hugh Gilmore		age 17
			Michael McDaid		age 17
			John Young		age 17
			Michael Kelly		age 17
			Gerard Donahy		age 17
			William Nash		age 19
			Patsy Doherty		age 21
			Jim Wray		age 23
			William McKinney	age 27
			Gerald McKinney		age 35
			Bernard McGuigan	age 41

	A fourteenth victim later died of wounds in the hospital.

	The Derry city coroner, Major Hubert O'Neill, said at the inquest on
the fourteen deaths on the 21st of August, 1973:

		"It strikes me that the army ran amok that day and they shot
	without thinking of what they were doing. They were shooting innocent
	people. These people may have been taking part in a parade that was
	banned, but I don't think that justifies the firing of live rounds
	indiscriminately. I say it without reservation. It was sheer
	unadulterated murder."

	On Monday, January 31, 1972, the day after the massacre, Fulvio
Grimaldi, an Italian journalist in Derry to report the march and rally
described for Irish radio what he saw:

		"It was the most unbelievable.... I have traveled many
	countries. I have seen many civil wars and revolutions and wars. I
	have never seen such a cold-blooded murder, organized, disciplined
	murder, planned murder.
		I was in the front line of the march as the march approached
	the barricade erected by the military in William Street. The Army
	moved up with this water cannon and sprayed the whole crowd with
	colored water after which gas was used massively by the army, and the
	crowd dispersed towards the meeting place, which was at Free Derry
	Corner.
		As the crowd was moving away, I would say about a couple of
	thousand people - completely peaceful because they had been drenched
	with gas and they could hardly breathe, and many were sick - suddenly
	in the area behind Free Derry Corner - Rossville flats, I think it is
	called, the big square in front of those flats - the army, the
	paratroopers, moved in on Saracens (armored cars).
		And other paratroopers followed on foot, and they jumped out.
	The people were thinking they would be given another dose of gas and
	scattered very hurriedly and they really fled towards Free Derry
	Corner. The army jumped out and they started shooting in all
	directions. I took pictures of this, I took recordings of this, and
	there is no doubt whatsoever that there wasn't the slightest
	provocation.
		There hadn't been one shot fired at them. There hadn't been
	one nail bomb thrown at them. They just jumped out and with
	unbelieveable murderous fury, shot into the fleeing crowd."

	When asked if the paratroopers had been fired on at any time prior
to their shooting of the crowd, Mr. Grimaldi said:

		"I am absolutely certain, and it is proved by the tape which
	records the whole following of events. Absolutely no shot, no nail
	bomb even, nothing at all. The crowd was dispersing.
		Let me tell you what I saw. Now, they were only in the street
	and in the squares. I saw a man and his son crossing the street,
	trying to get to safety, with their hands on their heads. They were
	shot dead. The man got shot dead. The son, I think, was dying.
		I saw a young fellow who had been wounded, crouching against
	the wall. He was shouting `Don't shoot, don't shoot!' A paratrooper
	approached and shot him from about one yard. I saw a young boy of 15
	protecting his girl friend against the wall and then proceeding to
	try and rescue her by going out with a handkerchief and with the other
	hand on his hat. A paratrooper approached, shot him from about one
	yard into the stomach, and shot the girl into the arm.
		I saw a priest approaching a fallen boy in the middle of the
	square, trying to help him, give him the last rites perhaps, and the
	army - I saw a paratrooper kneel down and take aim at him and shoot
	at him, and the priest just got away by laying flat on his belly. I
	saw a French colleague of mine who, shouting `Press, Press!' and
	raising high his arms went into the middle to give help to a fallen
	person and I saw again paratroopers kneeling down and aiming at him,
	and it's only by a fantastic acrobatic jump that he did that he got
	away.
		I myself got shot at five times. I was at a certain stage
	shielding behind a window. I approached the window to take some
	pictures. Five bullets went immediately through the window and I
	don't know how they missed.
		It was panic. It was sheer despair. It was frustration. I
	saw people crying, old men crying, young boys of 13, 14 and 15 years
	who had lost their friends, crying and not understanding. There was
	astonishment. There was bewilderment. There was rage and frustration."

	Undoubtedly this was an experience which caused many people in Ireland
to turn to the gun. If we look at a graph of the number of attacks against the
British, there is an immediate dramatic upturn after this date which has lasted
through the intervening 13 years.
	And Colonel Wilford has his medal for killing the largest number of
unarmed, innocent non-combatants in the present conflict in northern Ireland -
a record which still stands after 13 years.


		"Murder is murder is murder."
						- Margaret Thatcher

		"These people know nothing of democracy."
						- Margaret Thatcher


						bonnie!jmm
						J. M. McGhee

jcgowl@ihlpg.UUCP (r. gowland) (02/01/85)

> 
> 	On Sunday, January 30, 1972 Lt. Colonel Derek Wilford led his troops
> of the 1st Battalion of the British Parachute Regiment in an operation which

This is not an attempt at humour, but a statement of feeling by
an expatriate Brit concerned about people. Why did Col Wilford do
this twelve years early and in the wrong place. He should have
been set onto Arthur Scargill and his rent-a-mob pickets.
This is probably not a view which my employers would have, so I
had better disassociate this personal view from any connection
with anyone who might be regarded as my employer.