Tuesday, 8 December 2009
Monday, 26 October 2009
Omagh Bomb Father receives recognition
OMAGH BOMB FATHER RECEIVES AWARD IN SPAIN
Michael Gallagher who's 21 year old son Adrian who died in the Omagh Bomb is to receive an International award in recognition for the work he has done for victims of terrorism at home and around the world. The ceremony it to take place in Madrid on Wednesday the 28th October 2009.
He received the news in a letter last June which stated: the board of Trustees of San Pablo Ceu University Madrid and the International Center for Victims of Terrorism unanimously agreed to award Mr. Gallagher the International award for Memory, Dignity and Justice for the following reasons in consideration of his personal commitment to the cause of victims of terrorism and defending freedom anywhere in the world where there's terrorist violence, specially in Northern Ireland.
Speaking yesterday Mr. Gallagher said this is a great honour not just for myself but for all those families who have had the courage to stand up and demand justice over many difficult years, we thank Spain for there support and encouragement
He received the news in a letter last June which stated: the board of Trustees of San Pablo Ceu University Madrid and the International Center for Victims of Terrorism unanimously agreed to award Mr. Gallagher the International award for Memory, Dignity and Justice for the following reasons in consideration of his personal commitment to the cause of victims of terrorism and defending freedom anywhere in the world where there's terrorist violence, specially in Northern Ireland.
Speaking yesterday Mr. Gallagher said this is a great honour not just for myself but for all those families who have had the courage to stand up and demand justice over many difficult years, we thank Spain for there support and encouragement
Sunday, 20 September 2009
Amazing stories
Saturday, 19 September 2009
UDR Story
"I felt as frightened as helpless as a child; the shadows had returned to fill my mind again. I lay in the soft warm comfort of my wife’s embrace, yet I felt alone. I felt as if I was I the only one in the world in this disparate state. I needed to get some help, but from whom, from where? When the phantoms came, me the so called “hard man”, a man that would shoot a man dead without as much as a flicker of emotion in my face, would instantly transform into a quivering fearful defenceless child."
Read the full story http://www.sharedtroubles.net/storydetail.php?story_id=1157
Friday, 11 September 2009
Monday, 7 September 2009
Belfast Telegraph
Hate mail for man behind Troubles website
Monday, 7 September 2009
http://www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/news/local-national/hate-mail-for-man-behind-troubles-website-14482301.html
Thursday, 3 September 2009
IRA blanketman Anthony McIntyre
Former IRA volunteer and ex-prisoner, spent 18 years in Long Kesh, 4 years on the blanket and no-wash/no work protests which led to the hunger strikes of the 80s. Completed PhD at Queens upon release from prison. Left the Republican Movement at the endorsement of the Good Friday Agreement, and went on to become a journalist. Co-founder of The Blanket, an online magazine that critically analyzed the Irish peace process.
Read a story supplied by Anthony McIntyre
The human cost of the Troubles
Read the harrowing story of a RUC widow's horrible shock
http://www.sharedtroubles.net/storydetail.php?story_id=1107
Tuesday, 11 August 2009
Margret Thatcher
Baroness Thatcher has supported the Sharedtroubles archive by supplying an account of her experiences during the Brighton Bomb
Read Margret Thatcher's story http://www.sharedtroubles.net/storydetail.php?story_id=1146
Thursday, 9 July 2009
American Major reflects on Sharedtroubles
Good evening, I have just finished up reading some of the most powerful expressions of what it was to live in N. Ireland through the troubles. They were probably so powerful because I lived them. I know the street names. I rode my bike and delivered my Irish News and “Teles” to some of those addresses. As I read, I recall the experiences, the soldiers’ accents, the emotions, and the smells of the many times I was stopped and “checked out”. I will share this site with my wife, as I have never been able to fully explain what it was to grow up in Belfast. Perhaps this will help her and my children understand why I prefer not to discuss this aspect of my childhood and young adult life. As I read, I re-experienced the atmosphere at hunger strikers’ funerals, being gassed during Operation Motorman, ducking from rubber bullets and plastic baton rounds and cooking in the back garden on the outside fire during the general strike The irony of this is that I am sitting in my office at work. I am and active duty US military officer, (one of many from N. Ireland including my wee brother) who teaches young officers how to approach irregular warfare and counter-insurgency. These are hot topics for the US military as you might expect. I find that as I approach the preparation of these young officers I am drawing ever more frequently on my experiences in Northern Ireland. You have started an amazing project. A truth and reconciliation process similar to the one in S. Africa was probably never going to happen in N. Ireland however, you have created a virtual place for our parents, us and our children to travel back and hear perspectives of the events of the troubles that would otherwise be lost. I applaud you for your commitment to your children and to their understanding of what we, as humans, are capable of doing to each other when we fail to understand the basic humanity we all share. We condemn ourselves and our children to repeat the mistakes of the past when we fail to educate the succeeding generations about our failures. Continue this great work. One day I will return to my home. I had to leave. My choices were narrowing by the day. I am glad that my nieces and nephews do not have to face the choices we had to. Keep up the good work. I have thought hard about signing my name to this… To this day I still worry that my family left behind will be subject to something?? I know this is not a reasonable thought but it is a legacy of the troubles I still carry. Maybe one day I will not have this baggage.
Until then, Major, United States Air Force Proud graduate of Saint Oliver Plunkett Primary School and the streets of Lenadoon, Belfast
Friday, 26 June 2009
Bogside Sniper
Wednesday, 3 June 2009
Bullets, Bombs and Cups of Tea: Further Voices of the British Army in Northern Ireland 1969-98 (Hardcover)
This is Ken Wharton's second oral history of the Northern Ireland troubles told again from the perspective of the ordinary British soldier. This book looks deeper into the conflict, utilising stories from new contributors providing revealing and long-forgotten stories of the troubles from the back streets of the Ardoyne to the bandit country of South Armagh. Ken Wharton - himself a former soldier - is now known and trusted by those who served and they are keen for their part in Britain's forgotten war to now be made public. For the first time, he tells the stories of the 'unseen victims' - the loved ones who sat and dreaded a knock at the door from the Army telling them that their loved one had been killed on the streets of Northern Ireland. There are more first hand accounts from the Rifleman, the Private, the Guardsman, the Driver, the Sapper, the Fusilier on the street as they recall the violence, the insults and the shock of seeing a comrade dying in the street in front of them. There is an explosive interview with a soldier who killed an IRA gunman who was fresh from the murder of two Royal Artillerymen. Building on the huge success of Ken's first book, this second volume will provide plenty of new material for the reader to reconsider afresh the role of Britain's soldiers in Northern Ireland.
Highly recommended read http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/190603334X/ref=cm_cr_mts_prod_img
Tuesday, 26 May 2009
Gerry Adams lends his support
Gerry Adams ' story of life in his street when internment arrived gives a stark and human account of the rough end of 'Ulsterisation policy' Told with a sense of black humour Gerry's story may surprise a few readers.
Read Gerry Adams' Story http://www.sharedtroubles.net/storydetail.php?story_id=1094
Wednesday, 6 May 2009
Northern Ireland Story No.100
A watershed of 100 individual stories has been reached! After launching in January 2009 Sharedtroubles.net has attracted stories from all sides of the Northern Ireland Conflict.
Story number 100 comes from David a young Orangeman who witnessed the stand off between The State and Unionist Orangemen.
Read David's story from Drumcree http://www.sharedtroubles.net/storydetail.php?story_id=1092
Monday, 6 April 2009
The Irish News Feature Sharedtroubles.net
Tuesday, 31 March 2009
International Actor James Nesbitt
James Nesbitt has put his support behind Sharedtroubles.net James is the patron of the trauma support group WAVE who offer cross community support for those affected by the Northern Ireland Troubles. A renowned international actor, James is an active campaigner on behalf of reconciliation and a great advocate for Northern Ireland.
Read James Nesbitt's story http://www.sharedtroubles.net/storydetail.php?story_id=1055
Wednesday, 25 March 2009
USA Citizens express interest
With the recent attacks by dissident IRA, Sharedtroubles.net is receiving international interest.
American citizens are particularily interested in reading the real stories from the people who were actually there. 'We had no idea that Protestants were murdered and the trouble was so widespread. Our media always presented the situation as a war between Catholics and the British Army' said Brad from Boston. 'It was interesting to read stories from a range of people it really opened my eyes'
Sharedtroubles has also received a story from a Canadian who was in Omagh on the day of the bombing.
Read his story http://www.sharedtroubles.net/storydetail.php?story_id=1047
Tuesday, 17 March 2009
The Peace People
Mairead Corrigan McGuire extends her support to the Sharedtroubles website and places the amazing story of The Peace People on Sharedtroubles. The Northern Ireland Peace Process owes a great deal to the tireless work of this organization.
The Peace people inspired a generation in 1976 and continue to promote peace and tolerance today. Read their story on Sharedtroubles and be inspired.
Tuesday, 10 March 2009
British Agent Speaks Out on Dissident IRA Activity
It is sad that over the past few days that we have had terrorist attacks in N. Ireland that has claimed the lives of two young unarmed soldiers injuring another two and injuring two pizza delivery men , then today we hear the news that a police officer has lost his life in another terrorist attack in Co. Armagh, I have watched as some "security experts, in London" on TV, have commented on these matters, and given their opinion on the incidents, some of which I can only describe as utter "Bullshit". As a person who has had inside knowledge of a terrorist organisation and the thinking of some of the people involved in some of N. Ireland's most horrific acts, I think there is much more to come, indeed for the past few years I have been telling journalists of what I believed what was happening behind the scenes, the answer from the honest journalists was " editors won't print stories about N. Ireland, as it might damage the peace process". Well while they were sleeping, and the government were dismantling the security apparatus that was in place in N. Ireland, ( to please Sinn Fein ) and to give them a foothold, others in the Republican family were gathering intelligence, buying guns, recruiting new volunteer's, and doing dry runs, we have heard Sinn Fein and others condemning these "micro groups" saying that they have no support in the community, "these are the same sound bites" that the provisional IRA, had been hearing for over twenty years, they did not listen, what makes you think that republican groups will listen now ? and another thing, the Provo's didn't have that much support in the community either.
People like Willie Frazer, and some politician's have voiced concern over the years that Government were acting two fast and prematurely in dismantling the security apparatus that was in place, "Yes there were problems with the UDR and others, well there is nothing in place now, The Chief Constable is the chief of a police force, he now finds himself in a war against a small army of fanatics, ordinary policing will not work on it's own. "wake up and smell the coffee".
Signed.
Kevin Fulton
Former undercover British Soldier
People like Willie Frazer, and some politician's have voiced concern over the years that Government were acting two fast and prematurely in dismantling the security apparatus that was in place, "Yes there were problems with the UDR and others, well there is nothing in place now, The Chief Constable is the chief of a police force, he now finds himself in a war against a small army of fanatics, ordinary policing will not work on it's own. "wake up and smell the coffee".
Signed.
Kevin Fulton
Former undercover British Soldier
Friday, 6 March 2009
Critics attack Northern Ireland Truth Website
Victim's Commissioner Patricia MacBride receives fierce criticism from Unionist MLA
Patricia MacBride published her story 'Oglagh' about her brother who was killed during the Troubles. Patricia wrote the personal story when she was 14 years old and in it she reflects on the death of her brother at the time. Patricia's brother was a member of the IRA.
Sharedtroubles.net welcomes everyone with a story regardless of their background.
UUP Jim Nicholson called Patricia MacBride for to be sacked as a Victim's Commissioner.
Read the BBC's report http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/northern_ireland/7928945.stm
Read Patricia's story http://www.sharedtroubles.net/storydetail.php?story_id=1023
Tuesday, 3 March 2009
Facebook Page Created
Sharedtroubles.net has created a Facebook page after http://www.facebook.com/pages/Sharedtroubles-Website/59479262233?ref=nf
Saturday, 28 February 2009
Eamonn Holmes shares his Troubles story
Wednesday, 25 February 2009
The Sash My Father Wore
Tuesday, 24 February 2009
'Blanketmen' author Richard O'Rawe posts story on Sharedtroubles
Richard O'Rawe who served time alongside Bobby Sands has posted a moving story about Bobby's death whilst on Hunger Strike
http://www.sharedtroubles.net/storydetail.php?story_id=1043
Monday, 23 February 2009
British Soldier captured by IRA
Colin Demet was a 17 year old British Soldier when he was captured in the Ardoyne by the IRA
Read some of his story http://www.sharedtroubles.net/storydetail.php?story_id=1041
Read some of his story http://www.sharedtroubles.net/storydetail.php?story_id=1041
Sunday, 22 February 2009
New revelations from Northern Ireland
Friday, 20 February 2009
Undercover agents
Several undercover agents have posted their stories on Sharedtroubles.net which caused concern with my legal team.
Fortunately they kept their stories legal!
http://www.sharedtroubles.net/storydetail.php?story_id=112
http://www.sharedtroubles.net/storydetail.php?story_id=112
Sharedtroubles website launched Jan 09
I eventually got http://www.sharedtroubles.net/ launched with around 50 stories from all sides of the conflict. The response so far has been very good.
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