The Plough #26
13 February 2004

E-Mail Newsletter of the Irish Republican Socialist Party

1. NIPSA ACTION
2. "Time for Change"
3. THE WATCH COMMITTEE
4. Convention of the Left
5. Loyalism and the Connolly Approach 
6. Book Review: "In The Cause Of Labour"
7. New Voting System and Nomination Restrictions Are Undemocratic
8. Trade Unionist Harassment 
9. Appeal from the Basque Country
10. Sacked Airport Shop Stewards to Start Hunger Strike 
11. What's On?

*******

NIPSA ACTION

As outlined in last week's issue of The Plough, NIPSA, the largest 
union in the North, are engaged in an increasingly active campaign of 
industrial action over civil service pay.

Civil servants represent over 15% of workers in the six counties, and 
also, uniquely, reflect almost exactly the gender and "community" 
make up of Northern society.

The basis of the dispute were set forth last week, but basically they 
amount to a management offer of a 0% pay rise to junior grades after 
management had awarded themselves between 4 and 9%.

RISING MILITANCY

Following very successful isolated days of action, NIPSA decided to 
introduce a programme of rolling weekly strikes amongst key sets of 
workers (who were supported by their comrades by way of a levy). 

The first branch to take such action was Strabane SSO, who engaged in 
the action from 23/01/04. The response to the action was remarkable 
with all but two staff in the office absenting themselves from work, 
and upwards of 60% presenting themselves on the picket line each day.

However, it was the second week of selective action which caused the 
current management reaction; during that week the telephone operators 
based in, amongst other places, Stormont, refused to take calls. As 
management had covered for this eventuality by bringing in Agency 
scabs, all workers in civil service offices refused to answer phone 
calls. This was not only a justified solidarity action by the workers 
involved, but it was also entirely legal, even under the present 
draconian employment laws.

In response to this spontaneous show of solidarity the management of 
the Department for Social Development (DSD), which includes the 
Social Security Agency and the Child Support Agency, began to 
threaten workers involved with the arbitrary removal of the Flexible 
Working Hours scheme. This scheme, which allows workers to work 
their 8 hour day within a 12 hour window, was introduced particularly 
to help women who have to juggle domestic responsibilities with home 
life.

Upon hearing of this threat, as anyone who watched the television 
last week will know, all NIPSA members in central Belfast walked out. 
Whilst this was portrayed by both management and their paid liars in 
the media as a "wild cat" action, in reality it illustrated the 
determination of NIPSA grass roots members neither to be intimidated 
themselves, nor to stand idly by whilst this was happening to their 
comrades. It was a heartening, and unfortunately too infrequent, 
show of class solidarity.

THIS WEEK

As planned the NIPSA action has now spread to meat processing 
inspectors, an unlikely area, but one which has been completely solid 
and successful. Next week the members in the DVLNI shall observe a 
weeks stoppage.

However within the last two days the dispute has re focused on the 
DSD.  Without provocation, the DSD management have threatened to 
suspend, without pay, any union member who abides by the NIPSA 
instruction to work to rule (i.e. within the confines of their 
contract).

*******

"Time for Change"

NIPSA activists have responded to the union leadership's poor 
management of the civil service dispute by mounting a campaign to get 
control of the union's ruling General Council. The coalition "Time for
Change" has put up a number of candidates, on a grass roots campaign, 
and with a surprisingly tight internal discipline structure.

"Time for Change"includes the best left-wing, anti-bureaucratic, 
element of the NIPSA active members. It is an alliance of independent 
socialists in concert with members of various progressive political 
parties, including the IRSP.

All involved are agreed that the union belongs to their members, and 
the current campaign highlights the difference between the enthusiasm 
of the membership in the current dispute, and the ultra conservative 
and self-seeking bureaucrats who currently run the organisation on 
the members' behalf..

It is vitally important that "Time for Change" win this internal 
battle, as it shall determine the outcome of this dispute, the 
largest in the North since 1932.

For the record the "Time for Change" candidates are:

Carol Barnett
Brian Booth
Brian Crawford
Paul Dale
Brian Forbes
Carmel Gates
Dooley Harte
Gerry Largey
Kevin Lawrenson
Maria Morgan
Janette Murdock
Patrick Mulholland
Ricki Reid
John Toal

The results of the election should be known by next week, and shall 
be published in The Plough.

COLIN CRAIG

*******

THE WATCH COMMITTEE

In response to the bullying tactics of the NICS management, 
particularly those in the Department for Social Development, a number 
of NIPSA members formed a "Watch Committee" on Thursday 12 February. 
The purpose of the committee is to "name and shame" those managers 
who take disciplinary action against NIPSA members because of their 
involvement in the current dispute, in order to alert the working 
class to the presence of scabs in their midst.

The Committee intends to issue its first such list on Wednesday 18 
February, and weekly thereafter, and have called on all socialist 
publications to assist their campaign by publishing the names 
involved.

*******

Convention of the Left

For a number of weeks The Plough has carried a statement from the 
Socialist Environment Group, based in the North West of the North of 
Ireland advertising a convention of the left. It is also carried in 
this edition of The Plough.

It is time to spell out the position of the Irish Republican 
Socialist Party. But first let us put on record a number of basic 
principles that this party adheres to.

The IRSP is anti-sectarian, anti-racist, internationalist, socialist, 
republican and anti-imperialist. We believe in the primacy of 
politics. We believe that the Good Friday Agreement was a squalid 
sectarian deal that was part of a process of pacification of the 
wider anti-imperialist tradition in Ireland. 

We have called for unity of republican and socialist forces in the 
past. We want to see a united front of all of the working classes 
standing up against oppression, injustice and poverty wherever it 
exists. The unity of progressive forces is obviously desirable. But 
we are not in favour of the widest possible unity based on the lowest 
common denominator. For as the founder of the IRSP said, 

"One of the principal reasons for lack of development of working 
class or socialist politics is the existence of partition - the fact 
that the British are still within the country. In the minds of most 
people this has been the main question in Irish politics for 50 
years. The main question which must be resolved is the struggle 
against imperialism, so that the workers can think in terms of 
confronting the native capitalist class. That is the principal reason 
why we want to end imperialist intervention in the country. We want 
to see a natural political situation develop, with the confrontation, 
which you normally expect, between left and right, and in this way to 
bring the Irish working class into control of the resources and the 
wealth of the country."

Those clear words from Seamus Costello sums up our position. Any talk 
of the unity of the left must be around some core principles. Any 
unity behind a candidate who does not bring out the essential 
contradictions of the continued existence of the Northern state and 
only emphasises bread and butter issues, perhaps spiced up with 
opposition to the neo-liberal agenda of globalisation, is a false 
unity. We have had efforts like this before. We have had the Northern 
Ireland Labour Party which because of its failure to confront 
sectarianism and its acceptance of the border imploded. Surely Eamon 
McCann, a former candidate for the Northern Ireland Labour Party, 
does not want to repeat that experience?

Sinn Fein/The Workers Party ditched their opposition to partition, 
and their republicanism, in a futile effort to reach out to the mass 
of Protestant working-class people. They failed utterly. We could go 
on. 

However we ourselves are not above criticism and have made wrong 
turns in the past. Those who fail to learn from mistakes are doomed 
to repeat them. Is a convention of the left really the best way to 
reach agreement? We have seen no agenda, no standing orders, no 
policies. We fear the convention will be a chance for infantile 
leftist slanging. Let's hope we are wrong.

*******

Loyalism and the Connolly Approach

Costello drew on both the experience and teachings of James Connolly 
in his approach to the problem of "loyalism" among the Belfast 
Protestant working class. When questioned in March 1975, about co-
operation with representatives of the Protestant workers on immediate 
issues "which would appear to unite the people," he defined his 
position clearly and succinctly. "Connolly had to face exactly the 
same predicament. In Belfast prior to 1916, you had people who 
classified themselves as socialists and who were also interested in 
ending British rule in Ireland. Their approach to the Protestant 
working class was on the basis of limited and immediate issues. One 
of the principal issues which affected both sections of the working 
class was the question of whether or not they could get gas and water 
into their houses. Some very militant campaigns were engaged in on 
these two demands - gas and water for the houses in the working class 
districts. Republicans and socialists were involved in this campaign 
on the basis that this was the way to unite the working class. At the 
same time, these republicans and socialists refused point blank to 
mention or even discuss the national question with the Protestant 
working class, on the grounds that if they did, the Protestant 
working class wouldn't listen to them and that they would lose their 
co operation on the issue of gas and water for the houses. Connolly 
was totally in opposition to this approach. He categorized them as 
gas and water socialists. Today in Belfast we have what we call ring-
road socialists. They are exactly the same type of people. They are, 
in fact, the leadership of the Official republican movement in 
Belfast. We maintain that any co-operation with the Protestant 
working class must be on the basis of a principled political 
position. It must be on the basis of explaining fully to the 
Protestant working class what all our policies are, not just our 
policy on the ring-road. We must try and politicize them, 
simultaneously with conducting a political campaign to get rid of 
Britain. It will be primarily an educational function, or an 
educational campaign directed towards Protestants in the hope at 
least that some significant section of the Protestant working 
class will understand."

*******

IN THE CAUSE OF LABOUR: A HISTORY OF THE BRITISH TRADE UNIONS

By Rob Sewell
Published by Wellred Books

REVIEWED BY PETER BLACK

"Were history what it ought to be, an accurate literary reflex of
the times with which it professes to deal", wrote James Connolly, the 
great Irish trade union leader and Marxist, "the pages of history 
would be almost entirely engrossed with a recital of the wrongs and 
struggles of the labouring people, constituting, as they have ever 
done, the vast mass of mankind." 

But official history treats the working class with contempt, 
derision, hatred and misrepresentation whenever it "dares to throw 
off the yoke of political or social servitude".

There are many narrative histories of the struggles of Irish and 
British workers. However Rob Sewell's book is different. The
purpose of his history is not only to recite the wrongs inflicted on 
working people, or simply to describe their heroic struggles. It is 
an attempt to draw out the lessons of the events that helped shape 
the Labour movement, and made it what it is. 

This history of trade unions is particularly relevant at the present 
time. After a long period of stagnation, the fresh winds of the class 
struggle are beginning to blow. We see growing industrial militancy 
in many countries, which heralds a fundamental change in the 
situation. Here and in Britain there is ferment in the trade unions, 
characterised by a sharp turn to the left in one union conference 
after another. New forces are emerging in the trade union and Labour 
movement, and are beginning to challenge the dead hand of the old 
leadership. 

Rob Sewell's book was written clearly with these new forces in
mind. The British labour movement is the oldest in the world. More 
than two hundred years ago, the pioneers of the movement created 
illegal revolutionary trade unions in the face of the most terrible 
violence and repression. A little later they established the first
workers' party in history, the Chartist Association. Later they 
participated in the founding of the First International, in which 
Karl Marx played a leading role. The Irish provided many leaders in 
these early struggles, such as John Doherty and Feargus O’Connor. 

In the course of the nineteenth century they built trade unions of 
the downtrodden unskilled workers "those with "blistered hands
and the unshorn chins," as Feargus O'Connor called them. Finally,
the working class established a mass party of Labour based on the 
trade unions, breaking the monopoly of the Tories and Liberals. The 
book deals with the heroic Belfast strike and Dublin lockout led by 
Larkin and Connolly, as well as the stormy years following the 
Russian Revolution when they engaged in ferocious class battles, 
culminating in the General Strike of 1926. 

Nor did the achievements of the British trade union movement cease 
with the Depression and the Second World War. The post-war upswing 
served to strengthen the working class and heal the scars of the 
inter-war period. By the time of the industrial tidal wave of the 
early 1970s, they drove a Tory government from power, after turning 
Edward Heath's anti-trade union laws into a dead letter. Those
years saw the demonstrations against the Industrial Relations Act
- the biggest workers' protests since the days of the Chartists. 

Later, the miners, the traditional vanguard of the British working 
class, waged an epic year-long struggle in 1984-85 against the 
juggernaut of Thatcherism. (This brings a clear memory of the 
solidarity for the miners, when I was for a time seconded to their 
support group) They could have succeeded, had the right-wing Labour 
and trade union leaders not abandoned them and left them isolated. 
But though it was defeated the miners' strike, which at times had the 
hallmarks of a semi-insurrection, showed the world the colossal 
potential that exists in the British working class. It would require 
a book to deal with the lessons of this strike alone, but Rob Sewell 
has done it justice.

The foreword is written by Jeremy Dear, general secretary of the 
National Union of Journalists and member of the General Council of 
the TUC (personal capacity). 

Price: £14.99 (special price for readers of Starry Plough of
£10 plus £2.50 p&p) 
480 pages, illustrated 
ISBN: 1 9000 07 14 2 

Order your copy from Wellred Books, PO Box 2626, London N1 7SQ. 
Or buy on-line at http://www.marxist.com/wellred/

(Peter Black is a leading member of the ATGWU, Iónadái, and 
IRSP Ard-Chomhairle)

*******

New Voting System and Nomination Restrictions Are Undemocratic

Des Dalton, Vice President Republican Sinn Féin
February 5, 2004

"The introduction of electronic voting coupled with new
restrictions for independent candidates have placed serious question 
marks over the electoral process in the 26 Counties. The new 
electronic voting system, which is to be extended to all 
constituencies in the 26 Counties for the forthcoming Local and 
European elections has two fundamental flaws. In forcing a person who 
wishes to 'spoil' their vote, to inform the returning officer, 
violates the right to a secret ballot as well as denying people a 
legitimate means of registering protest. Secondly, the system lacks 
any transparency. It gives people no paper record that their vote was 
cast as they intended, such a record could be kept and checked in the 
case of a challenge. This is to ignore the serious concerns of the 
international computer science community who are calling for the 
introduction of a voter verified audit trail." 

"On top of the introduction of electronic voting, new restrictions 
have been imposed for Independent or Community candidates who wish to 
contest the local elections under new nomination procedures which 
require independent or on - registered candidates to be nominated by 
15 people on the live register. This discriminates against people who 
are not members of one of the major parties. These parties thereby 
are being handed an advantage in that their candidates do not have to 
take what amounts to a test, in order to contest the local elections. 
Such restrictions are undemocratic, denying people who simply wish to 
serve their communities, their right to participate in the electoral 
process regardless of party affiliation." 

*******

Trade Unionist Harassment

Paddy Kenneally, Munster Republican Sinn Féin
February 10, 2004

A trade union official in County Clare has publicly criticised the 
activities of the Special Branch police for harassing people engaged 
in legitimate union activity. 

Paddy Kenneally from Crusheen, the secretary of the Clare Plasterers 
Union, said today that he has personal experience of the increasing 
level of police interference with trade union organising. 

"On Monday afternoon in Shannon Airport I was pulled over by a car 
with a blue flashing light and questioned by the Special Branch. That 
morning along with the vice-chairman of the branch I had been 
visiting local building sites in the interests of union members. 
Obviously some builders have links with the police who threatened me 
with arrest before going through my union briefcase and my trade 
union papers. 

"This type of harassment and intimidation by the police has no
place in a democratic society. In fact it is an attack on a trade 
union and on the rights of workers to organise in their own 
interests - a right recognised internationally and enshrined in 
legislation. 

"I feel that the fact I am also chairman of the Munster Executive
of Republican Sinn Féin is another reason why I am subject to this
type of harassment by the police. "

*******

Appeal from the Basque Country

Demonstration against torture in the Basque Country. 

In the following text you can find the manifesto of the demonstration 
against torture which is taking place in Donostia-San Sebastian on 
the14th of February, "25 years on torture, enough is enough". 

Please support this demonstration, which you can show by emailing us 
at askida@stoptortura.com. As well we would welcome your friends and 
contacts support if it is possible. 

25 years of torture, enough is enough! 

25 years since the Spanish Constitution was passed. 25 years during 
which continuity has been shored up, a continuity that seeks to make 
itself permanent over time. 25 years in order to certify that the 
torture that existed in the Francoist dungeons has now been made 
over, refined, perfected by a system that in essence is just more of 
the same. 25 years of dirty war, brutality and denial against the 
Basque Country. 

Pacts were ratified, agreements were signed, shock and disbelief were 
protested... The transition was complete, the mistakes amended, the 
security establishment had been, finally, purged. The referendum. A 
categorical "yes" in Spain. A definite "no" in the Basque Country. 

Because we knew that the problem had not been solved. Because we were 
aware that the jails would soon fill again and that the torture 
complaints made by men and women from those provinces formerly deemed 
to be traitors would amount to hundreds. 

The pain and broken souls of Basques are still in piles of court 
complaints, declarations, reams of paper lying under the dust on the 
tables of the new Spanish courts. In November 1979, the Home Office 
secretary of the time, Ibañez Freire, who was already operating
under the brand-new constitutional text, solemnly declared that the 
torture claims were false. 

From then on, the Spanish government and its regional branches 
continue stubbornly in the same position. They have attempted to 
cover up the stench, the festering in their system, with courts like 
the Audiencia Nacional, with constitutional anti-terrorist laws, with 
opaque spaces to allow beastly interrogation, or with shiny police 
procedure protocols. Human Rights campaigns have been prepared while 
the screams continued to issue from their dungeons.  And Basque 
society stands before this scenery. A lonely hand attempting to lift 
the lid of the rubbish bin. A lonely pair of eyes trying to peek at 
what is in there. A sorry heart that recognises its loved ones under 
torment and brutality. A single mind that has learned to understand 
the true message behind the official campaigns, behind the official 
versions. A single voice, in the end, amplifying a unanimous cry. A 
single body that will march through the streets of Donostia on 
February 14. The Basque Country must raise that single voice so that, 
once and for all, no more Basques cry in the solitude of torment. We 
need all of you in Donostia on February 14, 2004.

(From: ASKIDA )

*******

Press Release 

13.02.04 

Sacked airport shop stewards to start hunger strike 

"We want the T&GWU to agree an immediate inquiry into the role played 
by our union officials at the time we were sacked. We will not come 
off our hunger strike until we get it" Gordon McNeill 

Two of the three airport shop stewards, who were sacked from Belfast 
International Airport for taking strike action over pay, have decided 
to start a hunger strike. 

They are demanding that the T&GWU Executive agree to set up an 
Inquiry, made up of rank and file members of the union, to uncover 
the truth about the role played by their union official, Joe 
McCusker, and other officials, at the time of their dismissal. 

Gordon McNeill today commented: 

"Madan Gupta and I have very reluctantly, and with heavy hearts, 
taken this decision because we can see no other way of bringing this 
long dispute to a resolution. All the sacked workers are totally 
frustrated at the way in which an officer in the union and other 
officers have treated us. 

"The issue has dragged on for nearly two years and has taken a big 
toll on us, badly affecting our health. Madan and I are determined to 
bring it to a head now. We want an Inquiry but we want it to be made 
up of rank and file members who will be prepared to look at what 
happened in a truthful and independent way. 

"It clearly states in the union code of practice that, where a shop 
steward is dismissed, an immediate inquiry will be set up to 
investigate. That's all we are asking for but we have been forced
to take this drastic action because, up to now, this right has been 
denied us. 

"In May 2002 our union official, Joe McCusker, called us out on 
official strike. Then, when we were on strike, he told our employer 
that he had repudiated our action and the company then used this as 
their excuse to sack us. We have now found out that a week earlier he 
had given the company an assurance that there would be no strike. 

"We want to know why this happened. Were we set up? What links, if 
any, existed between our official and our employer, ICTS? We have 
been asking these question for nearly two years and have not been 
given answers. That is why we need an inquiry. 

We want Joe McCusker to sign an affidavit clarifying that he told us 
that our strike was both legal and official. To date all the promises 
that he would do so have been broken. We want to know why. 

"Going on hunger strike might seem to many a desperate step to take 
in order to get the union to take the very simple step of setting up 
an inquiry. But we have been driven to this, we have been slandered, 
vilified and threatened to the point that we feel our lives have been 
ruined, and we want to get to the truth in order to clear our names. 

The real question is why it takes such drastic action to get the 
T&GWU leadership to concede an inquiry. We are asking union members 
to support our action by putting this question directly to our 
General Secretary, Tony Woodley" 

Madan Gupta and Gordon McNeill will begin their hunger strike on 
Monday 16th February inside Transport House Belfast. 

Gordon McNeill can be contacted on 07719574338 

Tony Woodley's mobile no is 07976828950 

He may also be contacted at Transport House in London -
Tel: 02076112500 

*******

What's On?

*

Convention of the Left - Derry February 14th 2004 

Invitation 
Socialist Environmental Alliance 
Convention of the Left 
Saturday February 14th 
11-4pm 
Verbal Arts Centre, Derry 

We are writing to invite you to a Convention of the Left to be held 
in Derry on February 14th 2004. The purpose is to discuss a united 
Left slate in the June 2004 European election. The SEA sees it as an 
imperative that there should be a left alternative in the field in 
June. If no one else is willing to come along with us we are minded 
to go forward on our own. In that circumstance, Eamonn McCann is 
willing to stand. However, we realise that a broad alliance covering 
the North would be hugely preferable. We are very open to argument 
from others as to how best we can jointly achieve this.

We envisage an electoral alliance of different parties, campaigning 
groups and individuals offering voters a radical, anti-sectarian 
alternative to parties based on one or other of "the two 
communities." The results of the SEA interventions in Foyle and East 
Londonderry by Eamonn McCann and Marion Baur make plain that a 
credible, united left campaign can attract a level of support, which 
cannot be derided or ignored. Without such an intervention, the 
European election, for practical purposes, will amount to yet another 
referendum" to determine who will champion each community vis-a-vis 
the other. It will take a united, broadly based campaign to make a 
Left intervention credible.

The issues bringing together socialists, environmentalists, defenders 
of the public sector, anti-racists, women's rights campaigners and 
anti-war groups in other countries affect us here too. Millions of 
Europeans rallied to these issues in 2003, particularly in anti-war 
demonstrations on February 15th. Our Convention marks the first 
anniversary of those huge protests - which saw one of the biggest 
ever marches in Belfast that did not reflect sectarian divisions.
We must break out of the circular argument, which holds that Northern 
Ireland is so polarised along communal lines that there's no point 
trying seriously to challenge its communal politics. A June campaign 
would offer a chance to link day-to-day local concerns to major 
issues being fought out at European level. Issues of water charges 
and environmental protection cannot be understood other than in a 
European perspective. The rise in racism on our streets is connected 
to the "Fortress Europe" project. Local civil rights issues now arise 
in parallel with the crackdown across Europe associated with the "war 
on terror." Privatisation schemes in our schools and hospitals are 
entangled with European directives on freeing market forces. 

It is only in the context of the fight for a social Europe and 
against a neo-liberal Europe that we can pursue these issues in 
Northern Ireland. The notion that a better Northern Ireland and a 
better Ireland is possible is an element in the broader notion that 
another Europe is possible. As to when and by whom a serious 
political effort is to be made to bring this about---if not now, 
when? If not us, who?

The Convention will be held at the Verbal Arts Centre, located on the 
City Walls at Bishop Street, Derry. A crèche will be provided. A
more detailed Agenda will be issued shortly.

Marion Baur and Eamonn McCann
(SEA candidates in the Assembly Elections) 
http://www.seaderry.co.uk/

*

TALKING AND TAKING PART

This course, hosted by Women into Politics (WiP), is responding to an 
identified need and an interest expressed for women to meet, learn 
and work with and from each other - beyond Northern Irish/Irish 
borders. The programme is aiming for a 50/50 participation of women 
from minority ethnic communities and the majority communities. It 
will provide the opportunity for every participant to learn about 
different cultures and to engage in discussion with women from a wide 
range of cultural and ethnic backgrounds.  No earlier training 
required. However, openness and an interest in each other's
culture and experience are necessary. The facilitators for the 
programme are Felice Kiel from the Northern Ireland Council for 
Ethnic Minorities and Catherine McCartney from Women into Politics. 
The course will start on Monday, 23 February 2004, from 10.00am to 
12.30pm and will run for ten consecutive mornings at WiP's premises, 
109-113 Royal Avenue, Belfast. 

WiP will subsidise travel expenses and will provide childcare if 
needed. The deadline for registration is 13 February 2004 and places 
will be confirmed on 16 February 2004.

If you require any further information, please ring Catherine on tel: 
028 9024 3363, mobile: 0774 311 8502 or email: 
admin@womenintopolitics.org.

*

Thursday February 19th Public Meetings

Dr Stephen Cleghorn: US Military Families Against the War Speak
Out

1.30pm: Peter Froggatt Centre, Queens University
7.30pm: Unemployed Resource Centre (next to John Hewitt bar –
Donegal Street, Belfast)

*

THE IRISH ASSOCIATION 

FOR CULTURAL, ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL RELATIONS 

President: Mr. Paul McErlean; Vice-President: Dr. Jean Whyte 

SPRING SEMINAR 

Policing the island: challenges, issues and co-operation. 

Speakers 
Hugh Orde, Chief Constable, P.S.N.I., 
Noel Conroy, Commissioner, of An Garda Siochana 
Chairman - Paul McErlean, President Irish Association 

Saturday 21 February, 2004, 10.30 -12.30 
Holiday Express Inn, University Street, Belfast 

All Welcome 
Members - £2.00, Non-Members - £4.00 
http://www.irish-association.org/

*

Friday March 12th 

Protest Against Anti-War Activists Arrests
4pm City Courthouse

Public Meeting: The War, Occupation and Resistance
7.30pm Grosvenor House (Glengall St. next to Europa Hotel) Special 
Guest speaker Ex-Labour MP (now RESPECT coalition) George Galloway 

Panel includes Eamonn McCann  - Journalist - Carmel Gates -
President NIPSA - Jamal Iweida  - Belfast Islamic Centre - Anti-Racism
Network speaker to be requested

*
 
Charlie Donnelly Winter School 

The Second Annual Charlie Donnelly Winter School will explore the 
legacy of Charlie Donnelly, Dungannon's soldier poet, whose 
phrase 'even the olives are bleeding' remains one of the most 
powerful evocations of the Spanish Civil War.

The school encompasses conflict and conflict resolution within the 
fields of art and literature and will include discussions, political 
panel debate and poetry workshop. The school features readings from 
the works of Charlie Donnelly.  

The Return of the Earls is the vision for the next four-year term of 
the Dungannon and South Tyrone Borough Council. Within this theme the 
Council will incorporate the overarching principle of reconciliation 
across a wide diversity of interests. 

For more information or to book a place, contact Emma Cox, Marketing 
and Events Officer, on tel: 028 8772 0342, email: 
emma.cox@dungannon.gov.uk, web: http://www.returnoftheearls.com/

Please reserve your place(s) before 20 February 2004. 

*

Saturday March 20th

International Day of Action Against the Occupation of Iraq and 
Palestine Rally

2pm Arts College, Belfast 

For more information   07742 531 617 - 07748571269

*******

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"The Starry Plough/An Camchéachta"
P.O. Box 1981, Derry, BT48 8GX, Ireland.
THE VOICE OF REPUBLICAN SOCIALISM!
Email: starry_plough@hotmail.com
Website: http://www.irsm.org/irsp/starryplough/

Fighting Fund/Donations
To: The Starry Plough
First Trust Bank, Derry, BT48 6BU
Account No. 14986015 Sort Code No. 93-86-10

http://www.irsm.org/irsm.html (Pairtí Poblachtach Sóisialach na
h-Éireann)
http://www.wageslave.org/jcs/ (James Connolly Society)
http://www.marxists.org/archive/connolly/ (James Connolly Archive)

The new Republican Socialist Forum from Derry IRSP:
http://rsmforum.proboards23.com/

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A new 2004 full colour glossy calendar is available now on the RSM 
online shop.

It celebrates the brilliant work undertaken by the Teach Na Failte 
Memorial Committees this past year throughout the six counties with 
full colour photographs on each page.

Just in time for Christmas and the New Year this calendar can be 
viewed online by clicking the link below

http://www.cafeshops.com/rsmshop.8844526

Republican Socialist Online Merchandise - New Website

A new website that offers a central place to go on the Internet to 
find good quality items with a distinct Republican Socialist theme. 
Proceeds from sales from this effort go towards the IRSM and it's 
various projects.

http://www.angelfire.com/folk/irishshop/