News:

This week IPhone 15 Pro winner is karn
You can be too a winner! Become the top poster of the week and win valuable prizes.  More details are You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login 

Main Menu
Menu

Show posts

This section allows you to view all posts made by this member. Note that you can only see posts made in areas you currently have access to.

Show posts Menu

Messages - 11pm

#1
A former paratrooper denied today that he lied about firing 19 shots at a sniper to cover up shooting some of the dead and wounded on Bloody Sunday.
Claims by Soldier H that he fired so many times at a gunman in a bathroom window were dismissed as “incredible” by a lawyer for the Saville Inquiry.
Christopher Clarke QC said the soldier – a first class shot – must have been “rather unlucky” to have missed him on 19 separate occasions.
“If that account is right, the upshot must be that the gunman,You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login, having been shot at once, must have intentionally moved into the same position of mortal danger in line with a soldier with an SLR who tried to kill him on 18 further occasions.”
Mr Clarke put it to him that he was lying in order to account for all the rounds he fired that day and that those extra shots may have been used to wound or kill some of the victims of Bloody Sunday.
Previous evidence given by soldiers has pointed to seven shots being fired in Glenfada Park North, while it has been established that six people died and seven were wounded by soldiers operating in that area.
Mr Clarke speculated that some of Soldier H’s tally could account for this shortfall.
“If your 19 shots in Glenfada Park, or even 18 of them, were not fired into a window at the south of Glenfada Park, there are up to 18 or possibly 19 additional targets available to meet the shortfall,” he said.
“If the tribunal was satisfied that the people I am talking about, the known dead and wounded,You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login, were shot by soldiers, it might be driven to conclude that those who were shot and who cannot be linked to the evidence of other soldiers who fired, were shot by you.”
Soldier H insisted he was speaking the truth.
Mr Clarke said to him: “I want to suggest to you what may be a reason why you should invent such an account. That is because you fired a large number of shots that you realised at the time you would not be able to justify.
But Soldier H replied: “No, I think if I was making up a story, sir, I think I would have made up a better one than that. I have only tried to be honest all the way through and say,You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login, even though it sounds silly, it is what actually happened.”
The inquiry is investigating the events of January 30 1972, when 13 unarmed civilians were shot dead during a civil rights march in the Bogside area of Derry.
Soldier H who fired the most shots on Bloody Sunday – a total of 22 –  told the inquiry that despite firing 19 times at the window of a house in Glenfada Park North, he did not break the glass.
“I cannot remember seeing it break and wonder whether it had reinforcement wire in it,” he added.
The former soldier, who was giving evidence at Central Hall in Westminster, was one of a group of four soldiers who moved into Glenfada Park North from where six victims were killed and seven wounded.
Last week, another one of this group, Soldier F, admitted shooting dead four of the 13 victims.
Soldier H claimed in his statement to have shot two youths as they handled a nail bomb just after he entered Glenfada Park North.
He recalled seeing one youth holding a smoking object in his hands and fired two quick shots at him.
“I hit him with one of my shots  possibly both, although I am not sure where on his body he was hit,” he added.
Shortly after the young man he shot fell to the ground, he said a second youth picked up the nail bomb and began running with it.
“I fired one shot at him and hit him in the shoulder. He did not fall to the ground and continued running,You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login,” he added.
When Soldier H gave his evidence to the first inquiry held in 1972, the chairman Lord Widgery disputed his account that he fired 19 times at the window.
The former Lord Chief Justice concluded in his report: “Soldier H did not fire 19 shots at a gunman... those bullets were wholly unaccounted for.”
Soldier H denied claims from Soldier O27, who has already given evidence, that he fired from the hip on Bloody Sunday.
“I did not shoot from the hip at all that day. In my opinion, it would be virtually impossible to shoot with any degree of accuracy from the hip.”
Related Stories:
Saville Inquiry
Ex-para denies lying to cover himself You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login
#2
,You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login
Burma’s secretive military junta has forced out its prime minister, the long-powerful General Khin Nyunt, and placed him under house arrest on corruption charges.
“We can confirm that Khin Nyunt has been removed from the position of prime minister and is being detained under house arrest,” said Thai government spokesman Jakrapob Penkai.
The removal of Khin Nyunt, who was apparently forced to resign, could tilt the balance of power within the junta toward harder-line generals and further delay the stalled reconciliation process with the opposition led by Nobel Peace Prize laureate Aung San Suu Kyi.
The Thai spokesman’s declaration followed a day of rumours in Burma, also known as Myanmar, that Khin Nyunt had been ousted and that soldiers had raided the headquarters of military intelligence, which he had long headed and was the source of his power.
Diplomats in the capital Rangoon said that there was a rumour that Khin Nyunt had been “taken out of circulation,” but had no details. There was no sign of tanks or increased military presence,You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login, and any overthrow would appear to have been an internal affair.
Khin Nyunt had been in an awkward position since last month,You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login, when regular army soldiers raided a checkpoint dominated by military intelligence officers on the Chinese border. Large quantities of gold, jade and currency were seized.
More than 100 intelligence, immigration, customs and police personnel were arrested, including at least three military intelligence colonels who remain in custody and are expected to be charged.
Khin Nyunt assumed the prime minister’s post last year in what was seen as a demotion from the positions he had previously held in the ruling clique of generals, increasingly dominated in recent years by hard-liners.
In some aspects, Khin Nyunt is considered a moderate, though he never prevailed on other generals to strike a deal with the high-profile leader of the opposition, Suu Kyi, to restore democracy to the impoverished Southeast Asian country.
In the past year, Khin Nyunt promoted what he called a road map toward democracy in UN-brokered contacts between the government and Suu Kyi’s party, the National League for Democracy. The talks went nowhere,You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login, and critics accused the government of using stalling tactics to retain its monopoly on power.
Burma has been ruled by the military since 1962, when army commander Ne Win seized power. Pro-democracy protests led by Suu Kyi were bloodily suppressed in 1988, and Khin Nyunt was one of the younger generation of generals who assumed power.
Burma's hard-line military junta arrests its Premier You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login
#3
The British government refused today to consider any further delays in the Northern Ireland Assembly elections.
Even though Britain's Prime Minister, Tony Blair, announced the poll has been put back four weeks to May 29 in an attempt to break the political deadlock and restore devolution, British officials indicated this was the bottom line.
One source said: “We will work on the legislation necessary for the new election date, but we would not want to go beyond that.”
Pressure was today intensifying for the IRA to make the huge move on disarmament now needed to rescue the peace process.
After a marathon two-day talks session at Hillsborough Castle,You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login, Co Down,You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login, Taoiseach Bertie Ahern and Prime Minister Blair have yet to close a deal with all sides in Belfast.
The two premiers now plan to return with their blueprint next month and tell the parties: take it or leave it.
It is understood broad agreement has been reached on plans for a major scaling down of troop levels in Northern Ireland, as well as reforms to policing and the criminal justice system.
But David Trimble’s Ulster Unionists are demanding the IRA destroy their huge arsenal of guns and bomb-making equipment before they will agree to return to the Stormont power-sharing Executive which was suspended last October amid allegations of a republican espionage plot.
Sinn Fein has also resisted pressure for tough sanctions to be installed which could see the party expelled from the Assembly if the Provisionals continue military operations.
Republicans claim the plan is an attempt to humiliate them.
Dublin and London remain hopeful that the political impasse can be overcome, with British government sources today insisting most of the difficulties were hammered out during 30 hours of talks.
“The (British) Prime Minister sees this as a breakthrough and it will turn out to be one if all the signs are fulfilled,” one said.
“It’s just up to the parties to consult.”
Ulster Unionists were today waiting for the IRA decommissioning move they stress must now take place.
“Sinn Fein have a very clear understanding of what’s needed and we just have to sit tight,You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login,” a party source said.
“There’s very little we can do until we see the colour of their money.
“It’s not exactly a luxurious position we are in, but any response from us and a deal being settled in April now hinges on two issues: weapons and sanctions.
“The pendulum has started to swing back in our direction.”
Related Stories:
Northern talks
No more delays to Assembly elections,You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login, officials insist You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login
#4
A schoolboy was filled with deep remorse after being accused of murdering a 30-year-old man in Belfast,You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login, a court heard today.
The 14-year-old from the south of the city,You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login, who cannot be named for legal reasons,You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login, has been charged with killing Ian Flanagan at a sports ground at the weekend.
The accused was remanded in youth custody after appearing at Laganside Magistrates’ Court in Belfast.
Wearing a white shirt and black trousers, the teenager stood head bowed as Detective Inspector Jeff Smyth told the court that when charged, he replied: “I regret it.”
Mr Flanagan,You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login, a civil servant from South Armagh, who was living in Belfast, was found dead beside hockey pitches at Malone Playing Fields on Sunday.
He had suffered severe head injuries.
The accused’s lawyer, Sean Patterson insisted he had co-operated fully with police by answering every question put to him during seven interviews conducted after his arrest.
Mr Patterson said: “This was a tragic series of events which led to the loss of one life and another being irrevocably altered.”
The barrister added that his client was full of regret for what he “neither intended, desired or anticipated”.
The youth was remanded in custody pending a bail application to appear at the same court via video link on October 8.
A co-accused is due to appear before the same court tomorrow.
Murder-charge youth expressed regret, court told You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login