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Outrage over £30m torture hush money

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    #71
    Originally posted by EternalOptimist View Post
    ok, so in your mind, some low level operative, who was having quick shufty, just to see how this stuff works, was in fact a diplomatic representative of HMG.
    I seriously doubt that anyone involved saw any major gravity in the situation (apart from the guy getting whazzed, obv). I suspect that a lot of this stuff is casual in the extreme, and a lot of it is incidental and ad hoc.
    Maybe we should have a new AtW law 'only those who represent HMG in a diplomatic role can witness , influence or note, horrible things, just in case we ever get found out'



    Twas on a Sunday evening the sun was in the sky
    As he walked his way to the Gaelic pitch never thinking he was going to die
    But as he crossed the checkpoint the sound of gunfire came
    The news spread through the border town Aiden McAnespie was slain

    For years he was harassed by the forces of the crown
    As he went to his work every day he left his native town
    The soldiers swore they´d get him the reason no one can say
    And sure enough they murdered him in cold blood that sunny day

    Oh why did you do it?
    Have you not the guts to say
    You say it was an accident or even a ricochet
    But like Loughgall and Gibraltar you´re lies are well renowned
    You murdered Aiden McAnespie on his way to the Gaelic ground

    Comment


      #72
      Originally posted by minestrone View Post
      Twas on a Sunday evening the sun was in the sky
      As he walked his way to the Gaelic pitch never thinking he was going to die
      But as he crossed the checkpoint the sound of gunfire came
      The news spread through the border town Aiden McAnespie was slain

      For years he was harassed by the forces of the crown
      As he went to his work every day he left his native town
      The soldiers swore they´d get him the reason no one can say
      And sure enough they murdered him in cold blood that sunny day

      Oh why did you do it?
      Have you not the guts to say
      You say it was an accident or even a ricochet
      But like Loughgall and Gibraltar you´re lies are well renowned
      You murdered Aiden McAnespie on his way to the Gaelic ground



      BoyZone ?



      (\__/)
      (>'.'<)
      ("")("") Born to Drink. Forced to Work

      Comment


        #73
        Originally posted by EternalOptimist View Post
        ok, so in your mind, some low level operative, who was having quick shufty, just to see how this stuff works, was in fact a diplomatic representative of HMG.
        No he wasn't, but the Govt must have been aware what's going on - if that low level operative did not report up the chain that British subjects are tortured then that operative should go to jail.

        Comment


          #74
          Originally posted by EternalOptimist View Post
          BoyZone ?



          No, it's a typical Rhebel song. Loughgall was where the SAS ambushed the PIRA on their way to attack the local police station and Gibraltar was where the SAS took out the scum who were planning to attack the British soldiers on the rock. I believe it was the SAS 11 - PIRA 0 after those events.

          Minestrone showing his true colours here.

          Here's a song for you Minestrone.

          YouTube - The Soldier - The Sacrifice of the British Army in Ulster

          Dedicated to Sgt Michael Willetts GC

          The Queen has been graciously pleased to approve the posthumous award of the George Cross to:
          2391067 Sergeant Michael WILLETTS, The Parachute Regiment.

          At 8.24 p.m. on the evening of 25th May 1971, a terrorist entered the reception hall of the Springfield Road Police Station in Belfast. He carried a suitcase from which a smoking fuse protruded, dumped it quickly on the floor and fled outside. Inside the room were a man and a woman, two children and several police officers. One of the latter saw at once the smoking case and raised the alarm. The Police Officers began to organise the evacuation of the hall past the reception desk, through the reception office and out by a door into the rear passage.

          Sergeant Michael Willetts was on duty in the inner hall. Hearing the alarm, he sent an N.C.O. up to the first floor to warn those above and hastened himself to the door towards which a Police Officer was thrusting those in the reception hall and office. He held the door open while all passed safely through and then stood in the doorway, shielding those taking cover. In the next moment, the bomb exploded with terrible force.

          Sergeant Willetts was mortally wounded. His duty did not require him to enter the threatened area, his post was elsewhere. He knew well, after 4 months service in Belfast, the peril of going towards a terrorist bomb but he did not hesitate to do so. All those approaching the door from the far side agree that if they had had to check to open the door they would have perished. Even when they had reached the rear passage, Sergeant Willetts waited, placing his body as a screen to shelter them. By this considered act of bravery, he risked - and lost - his life for those of the adults and children. His selflessness, his courage are beyond praise. 22nd June 1971


          Viewing Page 6641 of Issue 45404

          In a station in the city, a British soldier stood
          Talking to the people there, if the people would
          Some just stared in hatred and others turned in pain
          And the lonely British soldier, wished he was back home again

          'Come join the British Army' said the posters in his town
          'See the world and have your fun, come serve before the Crown'
          The jobs were hard to come by and he could not face the dole
          So he took his country's shilling and enlisted on the roll

          For there was no fear of fighting, the Empire long was lost
          Just ten years in the army, getting paid for being bossed
          Then leave a man experienced, a man who's made the grade
          A medal and a pension, some memories and a trade

          Then came the call to Ireland as the call has come before
          Another bloody chapter in an endless Civil War
          The priests they stood on both sides, the priests they stood behind
          Another fight in Jesus' name, the blind against the blind

          The soldier stood between them, between the whistling stones
          And then the broken bottles, that led to broken bones
          The petrol bombs that burned his hand, the nails that pierced his skin
          And wished that he had stayed at home surrounded by his kin

          The station filled with people, the soldier soon was bored
          But better in the station than where the people warred
          The room filled up with mothers, with daughters and with sons
          Who stared with itchy fingers at the soldier and his guns

          A yell of fear, a screech of brakes, a shattering of glass
          The window of the station broke to let the package pass
          The scream came from the mothers as they ran toward the door
          Dragging children crying from the bomb upon the floor

          The soldier stood and could not move, his gun he could not use
          He knew the bomb had seconds left, not minutes on the fuse
          He could not run to pick it up and throw it on the street
          There were far too many people there, too many running feet.
          'Take cover' yelled the soldier, 'take cover for your lives'
          And the Irishmen threw down their young and stood before their wives
          They turned toward the soldier, their eyes alive with fear
          'For God's sake, save our children or they'll end their short lives here'

          The soldier moved towards the bomb, his stomach like a stone
          'Why was this his battle, God, why was he alone?'
          He lay down on the package and he murmured one farewell
          To those at home in England, to those he loved so well

          He saw the sights of summer, felt the wind upon his brow
          The young girls in the city park, how precious were they now
          The soaring of the swallow, the beauty of the swan
          The music of the turning earth, so soon it would be gone
          The muffled soft explosion and the room began to quake
          The soldier blown across the floor, his blood a crimson lake
          They never heard him cry or shout, they never heard him moan
          And they turned their children's' faces from the blood and from the bone

          The crowds outside soon gathered, and the ambulances came
          To carry off the body of a pawn lost to the game
          And the crowd they clapped and jeered, and they sang their rebel songs
          One soldier less to interfere where he did not belong

          And will the children growing up, learn at their mothers knee
          The story of the soldier who bought their liberty
          Who used his youthful body as the means towards the end
          Who gave his life to those, who called him 'murderer' not 'friend'
          "I hope Celtic realise that, if their team is good enough, they will win. If they're not good enough, they'll not win - and they can't look at anybody else, whether it is referees or any other influence." - Walter Smith

          On them! On them! They fail!

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