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Defend the RUC


THE RUC AS VICTIMS OF VIOLENCE

302 officers killed, 9000 injured.  This represents 18% of the casualties of the conflict, compared to 12% sustained by the British Army.  Since 32,000 people have served in the RUC since 1969, you could say that there was an almost one in three chance of being killed or injured.

In Year 1998/1999, there were 1852 attacks on the Police (involving shootings, bombings, bomb hoaxes, petrol bombs, missiles and other physical assaults).  RUC officers suffered 514 petrol bomb attacks in the same year.

THE POLICE AS PERPETRATORS OF VIOLENCE

The RUC has killed 53 people during the conflict.  This represents 1.5% of the total (compared to 83.1% by paramilitaries and 9.2% by other security forces ).  Of those 53, 31 were civilians, 19 were paramilitaries and 3 were other members of the security forces.

A REPRESENTATIVE MEMBERSHIP

Over the 30 years, the proportion of Catholics in the RUC has hovered at 8% on average.  In 1994-95 (the year following the first IRA cease-fire), 21.5% of new applicants were Catholic.  This has now risen to 22%.  The basic major reason for the traditional under-representation of Catholics is that Catholics who joined were frequently ostracised by their communities and became prime targets for the IRA.

Reinforcing this point, the 1998 RUC Community Attitudes Survey found that ‘fear of intimidation upon themselves or their families’ was the principal reason that Catholics were deterred from joining the RUC (cited by 70 per cent).

IMPARTIALITY

The first police fatality of the troubles was killed by loyalists (October 1969).  The first WPC was also killed by loyalists (March 1975).  Clear up rates for loyalist terrorism has always been much higher than for republican terrorism.  In 1999 (up to 3 October) 164 members of Loyalist paramilitary organisations have been charged with terrorist offences, as opposed to 91 Republicans.

COLLUSION WITH LOYALIST PARAMILITARIES

This is the most serious charge levelled at the police by Sinn Fein-IRA. One simple statistic can place it in context.  In the troubles, 190 members of the IRA were assassinated (i.e., killed individually by design, not killed in action as in Loughgall).  Of those, 164 were killed by fellow republican terrorists.  Loyalists killed only 26.  So only 26 IRA members, in the whole 30 years of conflict, could even theoretically have been killed by police collusion with loyalists.

RESPECTED BY THE COMMUNITY IT SERVES

The International Victimisation Survey (Mayhew & Van Dijk 1997 and quoted in Patten) looked at public satisfaction levels with Police performance across 11 countries.  The RUC was ranked higher than any of the continental European countries.  With 63 per cent it was lower than Canada (at 80 per cent), the US, Scotland and England & Wales (with 68 per cent).

In the most recent RUC Omnibus Survey, 88 per cent of those questioned expressed confidence (from ‘total’ to ‘some’ confidence) in the RUC’s ability to provide and ordinary day to day policing service for all the people of Northern Ireland.  The same poll found 79 per cent having confidence in the RUC’s ability to provide public order policing for all.

On performance of the Police in Northern Ireland as a whole, 75 per cent of respondents to the September 1998 RUC Omnibus Survey deemed this to be ‘very or fairly good’.

TERRORIST VIOLENCE: A GROWING THREAT TO THE COMMUNITY

Up to 3 October 1999 has seen 175 paramilitary style attacks combining beatings and shootings.  The same period in 1998 saw 169 attacks.

In 1999 alone 255 people, Loyalist and Republican, have been charged with terrorist offences in Northern Ireland (up to 3 October 1999).  These crimes ranged from murder to possession of firearms, possession of explosives, attempted murder and armed robbery.

RUC BACKED BY 61% OF CATHOLICS

By David Sharrock and Robert Shrimsley
Daily Telegraph, 6 April 2000

THE name of the Royal Ulster Constabulary ranks alongside St Patrick's Day and the Union flag in importance to people in Northern Ireland, a major survey of the province's attitudes towards identity has shown.

The survey, in the Belfast Telegraph, will boost the campaign to save the RUC's name and cap badge, with its distinctive crown and harp emblems, which the Government has said it will remove in line with recommendations of the Patten report on policing and as part of the suspended Belfast Agreement.

While the survey found that 31 per cent of Catholics found the RUC name and identity to be offensive, 61 per cent of Catholics were not offended.

Asked which aspects of identity were important, a large sample of adults from both traditions placed the RUC seventh behind Northern Ireland identity, commemoration of innocent victims of the Troubles, Remembrance Day, Protestant identity, British identity and St Patrick's Day.

David Lyle, chief executive of the McCann-Erikson advertising agency, which commissioned the survey from Ulster Marketing Surveys, said the findings "mean that Patten's notion of stripping away the names and symbols of the RUC is as clever as trying to eradicate St Patrick's Day and the Union flag".

The legislation to implement the Patten reforms will be introduced within two weeks, Peter Mandelson, Northern Ireland Secretary said yesterday.  He said he believed that police officers were now "facing up to the reality" that the controversial changes would take place.

(The disbandment of the RUC have never been for the benefit of the Catholic community, but simply to appease Sinn Fein/IRA - Ed).


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