Marxist murderers announce 'United Ireland' campaign in mainland
Britain...
Sinn Féin is stepping up its
campaign in Britain for a united Ireland
There was a full house at the London Irish Centre
last week, to hear a Sinn Féin delegation led by Gerry Adams set
out its plans for 'a more active engagement with those in Britain who
support Irish unity.'
"We are asking all of those who support Irish unity
and the right of the Irish people to determine our own future, to join
with us in this extraordinary endeavour, and to make it a genuine
movement for change over the next number of years," Adams told the
meeting.
"We have to develop a viable strategy, and positive
arguments around that strategy, that can win the assent of unionists,
or a significant section of unionists to a United Ireland. "
"It is clear that some unionist leaders are fearful
that a substantial section of the unionist electorate is increasingly
becoming indifferent to politics. "
"They are afraid that that may evolve into an
indifference to the union, and they know that the potential exists to
persuade a section of the unionist electorate that partition does not
serve their best interests and that a united Ireland does."
"And to achieve our goals we need to mobilise
opinion here in Britain, not just among the Irish in Britain but also
among progressive organisations and individuals."
"We need to get people here to become persuaders for
Irish unity," he added. "We need to figure out campaigns,
consciousness-raising, find whatever means to get this into the
mainstream of the opinion-making and decision-making processes on this
island."
"The upcoming Olympics are a big opportunity. Look
what the people in Tibet were able to do in publicising their cause
around that, so there's a big opportunity here to start thinking around
these big events."
"We need to develop a very concentrated programmatic
and sustained lobby of all the political parties. I'm not just
restricting that to Westminster. There are potential friends and allies
in the Parliament up in Scotland, in Wales, and if they ever put
together some devolved administration, here in England."
Adams gave further details of his thinking in a
lively question and answer session following his speech.
Among those in the audience was Martin Collins, the
director of the Agreed Ireland Forum and a long-time ally of Labour'
former Northern Ireland spokesman Kevin McNamara.
"Is it possible to have a united Ireland without the
break-up of the United Kingdom," Collins asked, "and if the break-up of
the United Kingdom is going to be on the agenda, then how does the
alliance work out with Scottish people who want independence?"
"We want to engage with people in Scotland and
Wales," Adams responded. "These are live issues certainly in Scotland
at this time.
The Sinn Féin President left open the
question of how the party's engagement in Britain would proceed. "I've
always said when I come here that I don't know how to do that here. I
know how to do it at home. I could come and say the totally wrong thing
on the television and annoy everybody."
"People here know how to do that. People here know
how to engage. There are brilliant examples of work done in very hard
times by people like Martin and others. So if you like I throw that
question back to you."
Adams scotched talk of setting up a new organisation
in Britain, a possibility that had caused concern among some members of
Sinn Féin's existing British support group, the Wolfe Tone
Society.
BPP COMMENT:
The British People's Party is pledged to supporting the Loyalist
majority in Ulster, both Protestant and Catholic, and we will continue
to expose the false 'patriots' of Marxist Sinn Fein who hide behind the
mask of 'Irish Nationalism' to promote their ultimate aim of destroying
national boundaries, individual races and cultures and all
religions. They are the enemies of both Ulster and Ireland.
ULSTER IS FOREVER BRITISH!
Readers are reminded
of the BPP Policy Points Number 11 and 12:-
11. The guarantee that Ulster shall remain forever a part of Great Britain
12. The
outlawing of the IRA and other anti-British terror organisations