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New 1981 hunger strike documents disclosed


Bobby Sands: died during the hunger strikes
Bobby Sands: died during the hunger strikes

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"If they did not, this statement would not be put out but instead an alternative statement reiterating the Government's position as he had set it out in his statement of 30 June and responding to the discussions with the Irish Commission for Justice and Peace would be issued. If there was any leak about the process of communication with PIRA, his office would deny it."

A later telegram from the NIO said a statement had been read adding: "we await provo reactions (we would be willing to allow them a sight of the document just before it is given to the prisoners and released to the press). It has been made clear (as the draft itself states) that it is not a basis for negotiation."

Another document records a statement read to prisoners from the Secretary of State, who said no moves could be made under the duress of a hunger strike but "making sure that the protesters were aware of what was available".

It said: "Little expansion of association was contemplated but the suggestion of association of adjacent wings (made by the ICJP) was taken on board. On clothing the 'possibility of further development' had not been ruled out. On work, no-one would be excluded but the commitment was given to add to the range of activities, including examination of the ICJP's suggestions. No more than the existing 1/5 restoration of lost remission to ex-protestors was promised."

It added: "The prisoners were given an opportunity to discuss the document among themselves and also saw McFarlane for a time. Lynch and Doherty - the 2 most determined strikers - said afterwards that there was nothing in it for them."

A document previously released showed that Thatcher planned to make another approach to the IRA through a secret channel but changed her mind amid fear that the offer would be made public.

A later letter- dated July 18- from Downing Street said the following:

"The official would set out to the hunger strikers what would be on offer if they abandoned their protest. He would do so along the lines discussed with the Prime Minister last week. He would say that the prisoners would be allowed their own clothes, as was already the case in Armagh prison, provided these clothes were approved by the prison authorities. (This would apply in all prisons in Northern Ireland).
"He would set out the position on association; on parcels and letters; on remission; and on work. On this last point he would make it clear that the prisoners would, as before, have to do the basic work necessary to keep the prison going: there were tasks which the prison staff could in no circumstances be expected to do. But insofar as work in the prison shops was concerned, it would be implicit that the prisoners would be expected to do this but that if they refused to do it they would be punished by loss of remission, or some similar penalty, rather than more severely...


Nster.com


8 Comments

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The offer before Lynch's death is not new if you have read any of the books on this topic including Ten Men Dead and Tom Collins Hunger strike!
Just another timely attempt to smear the hunger strikers of 1981. This being the 30th anniversary, of course the English will get their toadies to "release documents." The truth of the matter is quite different. If someone is truly interested they can research Tomas Cardinal O'Fiach's commentary. Bobby Sands Prison Diary is another source. Other sources remain the families of those who died. Thatcher is a MURDERER or as Danny Morrison describes her "the biggest bastard we have ever known"! Morrison edited a book called the Hunger Strike (Reflections on the 1981 Hunder Strike) that was published by the Bobby Sands Trust in 2006. Thatcher referred to the Hunger Strikers as "common criminals without public support."
It's a shame they died. I wish they were still with us. I wonder if those who died were even in any shape to have the offer read to them?
What do you care about IRA hunger strikers? They would presumably be scaumbags too.
Anyone who has researched or read about this era would be aware that the push for the second hunger strike came from within the prison! Bobby Sands acted against instructions from outside the prison! The offers put by the brits in these letters appear to be similar to the offer that finished the first hungers strike in Dec 1980 but the prisoners were against being tricked like this again. (the source of this research is Bobby Sands Prison Diary)
What does the Irish-American halfwit, scumbags who sent money to the IRA/Sinn Fein, terrorist scum, have to say about how the hungar strikers were allowed to die
"It had been alluded to in the past that the IRA sacrificed the hunger strikers to boost their electoral strategy and that they never told the strikers about offers provided by England to end the strikes". This info proves what low-lifes the IRA and Sinn Fein are. A question for Adams and McGuinnes : "why did you allow the hunger strikers to die"... ?
Interesting stuff, wonder what else we will learn in the coming years. This doesn't really change anything about our current understanding of the Hunger Strikes, everyone knew the British were negotiation but from a position far removed from POW demands.
 




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