1 / 9

‘Omagh’ An Introduction

‘Omagh’ An Introduction. Ireland. Conflict began in 12 th century British rulers took land for their own men Reformation further divides Ireland “plantations” of English and Scottish Religious Conflict- Ulster large protestant influence- all of Northern Ireland- local Irish Catholic

burian
Download Presentation

‘Omagh’ An Introduction

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. ‘Omagh’ An Introduction

  2. Ireland • Conflict began in 12th century • British rulers took land for their own men • Reformation further divides Ireland • “plantations” of English and Scottish • Religious Conflict- Ulster large protestant influence- all of Northern Ireland- local Irish Catholic • 1800 Act of Union- joined Ireland to Great Britain to create the United Kingdom

  3. 20th Century- Ireland starts to agitate for Independence • Nth- 2/3s Protestants, fear losing their religious freedom and economic advantage to Catholic Majority in Sth. • Country divided in 2: Unionists (pro-England, generally protestant) and Nationalists (pro-independence and generally Catholic) • 1921: Ireland formally partitioned: • 26 Southern counties independent Republic of Ireland • 6 North Eastern counties part of UK • Very violent for next three years in Ulster By 1960s relative stability achieved- Catholics discriminated against

  4. ‘the Troubles’ • Civil rights protests led by Catholics demanding equal power and cultural recognition • Formation of Ulster Volunteer Force- parliamentary group, lasted until the early 21st Century • Very violent both nationalists and unionists perpetrators and victims • British Army involved • Creation of the Provisional Irish Republican Army-radical

  5. The peace process • Delicate ceasefire negotiated in 1994 • Collapsed in 1996- armed force main form of negotiation • Sinn Fein (political wing of IRA) led by Gerry Adams- VIP • Good Friday Agreement- 10 April 1998: • Proposed a constitutional future for Northern Ireland decided upon by citizens • Approved by Britain and Ireland and endorsed by major political partied

  6. Radicals in PIRA disgruntled with Gerry Adams for signing- form the Real IRA • The Real IRA are the group who took responsibility for the bombing in Omagh August 15 1998 • Omagh is a Northern Irish town

  7. The Omagh Bombing • 29 killed • Hundreds wounded • Victims not involved in peace negotiations • Destroyed families • Town feels it is very difficult to get justice as authorities believe it will jeopardise peace negotiations • Omagh self help support Group

More Related