UNITED LOYALIST CAMPAIGN AGAINST SELL OUT
STARTS
Loyalists delivered more than 200,000
newspapers today as part of a new campaign urging resistance against an
alleged slide towards a united Ireland.
Victims of IRA violence fronted the attempt
to rally mass Protestant support, with headlines and posters declaring:
"Ulster At Crisis Point".
But senior loyalist paramilitaries were also
at Larne Harbour in County Antrim where the cargo of free newspapers
was brought in by boat in a symbolic recreation of a weapons delivery
to the old Ulster Volunteer Force on the Clyde Valley ship in 1914.
Campaign organisers, who have also gained
the support of Orange Order leaders, insisted this was an alternative
to violent protest.
William Wilkinson, of the South Armagh-based
group for Families Acting for Innocent Relatives (FAIR), said they
would struggle against a security seal down and disbandment of Royal
Irish Regiment units through entirely peaceful methods.
He said: "The pen is mightier than the sword
and we hope this will provide an alternative to a lot of frustration
and deep hurt being felt."
Organisers pledged to deliver papers right
across Northern Ireland free of charge as part of what they have
labelled the Love Ulster Campaign. 
A website has also been set up carrying
regular news and campaign updates.
The newspaper was put together by the
Shankill Mirror, a community organisation based in a West Belfast
Protestant stronghold.
John MacVicar, a board member of the media
organisation, claimed they had simply answered the call of anxious
loyalists across the province and were waiting for future instructions
about where the project should go next.
Mr MacVicar also insisted that the
paramilitaries could not be ignored.
"The reality is that loyalist paramilitaries
are part of the Protestant community," he stressed.
"They along with a lot of other people were
part of the conflict we have been involved in and they need to be part
of the resolution.
"We have come out of 35 years of violence,
things aren`t going to change overnight and we need to influence
everyone in our community positively and that include loyalist
paramilitaries."
But the campaign also pushed the views of
those still coming to terms with the loss of loved ones during the
conflict. Sisters Ashley Graham, 26, and Manya Dickinson, 29, spoke of
their hurt at seeing republicans allegedly being rewarded for the IRA`s
decision to end its armed struggle.
The Provisionals` declaration that their war
was over provided little comfort to the pair whose father Kenny Graham,
a building contractor who supplied security bases, was blown up outside
his home in Kilkeel in 1990.
Mrs Dickinson said: "It`s been forgotten
about completely, even though we have to live with it every day."
Her sister insisted there would never be
closure for families like them.
She added: "We feel the IRA have gotten away
with it. They can get on with their lives but not a day goes by without
us having to remember.
"People in our situation are angry and feel
something should be done."
The campaign has pledged to produce future
issues of the Shankill Mirror to be distributed across Northern
Ireland, and will consider staging rallies if support levels are strong
enough.
Even though the loyal marching orders and
church representatives were said to be involved, the initiative has
steered clear of all unionist politicians as they insisted the emphasis
should be on victims.
But Robert Saulters, grand master of the
Orange Order, declared his total backing for the project.
"I would hope that Orange members will
support it wholeheartedly," he said.
"When you look back at the victims within
our institution we have grieved 304 members, and half of those weren`t
involved in security force work. They were just murdered for being a
Protestant or an Orangeman.
"I would welcome and hope that if we can get
the whole Protestant, loyalist people together, that this will be given
a great go because we need to stick together."
With loyalist paramilitaries locked in a
vicious feud and being blamed for sect