The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

British Army operations began five decades ago

Violent unrest cost 722 soldiers their lives between August 1969 and July 2007

- GEORGINA STUBBS

Yesterday marked 50 years since the start of the British Army operation in Northern Ireland.

It was the beginning of the lengthiest continuous campaign in British military history.

Operation Banner lasted from August 1969 to July 2007 and cost 722 soldiers’ lives following paramilita­ry attacks.

Northern Ireland’s government at Stormont had urged the UK to deploy troops after sustained violence wore out police officers.

Soldiers on the streets, at checkpoint­s or in vehicles on patrol in support of the police provided a ready target for a nascent Provisiona­l IRA pre-eminent amongst the republican factions.

In some parts like South Armagh it became so dangerous that soldiers had to confine much of their travel to helicopter.

Two have died since violence largely ended and the Army was withdrawn from operations in Northern Ireland.

Sappers Patrick Azimkar and Mark Quinsey were shot dead by dissident republican­s outside their Massereene base in Co Antrim as they prepared to deploy to Afghanista­n.

Members of the Army have been under investigat­ion for high-profile cases of alleged wrongful killing – Bloody Sunday in Derry is the best-known – leading to calls from some MPs for them to be granted immunity.

On the other side stand the victims of state killings seeking justice for the deaths of loved ones.

A mother- of- eight who had served tea and sandwiches for British soldiers at her family home was shot dead by the Army some 12 months later.

Joan Connolly welcomed soldiers into her home where she lived with her husband and children in a predominat­ely Catholic area in Belfast.

She made them tea and food and soldiers gifted her with a present when the first regiment stationed in Ballymurph­y left that part of west

Belfast.

Her daughter, Briege Voyle, has fond memories of the Army being in her home when they first arrived in Northern Ireland.

In August 1971, Joan was one of 10 people shot dead by soldiers in what later became known as the Ballymurph­y massacre.

Ms Voyle said: “The Army just seemed to turn. One minute they were our friends, the next minute they weren’t.

“They just saw everyone as the enemy. They thought every Catholic was an IRA person.”

Martyn McCready said the arrival of British soldiers on the streets of Northern Ireland changed the atmosphere “for the better”.

His father John was shot dead by the IRA as he walked home in north Belfast in 1976.

He said: “They were sent here as a peace force to look after both sides.”

 ?? Picture: PA. ?? Police battling with rioters in the Bogside area of Londonderr­y in 1969.
Picture: PA. Police battling with rioters in the Bogside area of Londonderr­y in 1969.
 ??  ?? Martyn McCready, whose father John was shot dead by the IRA in north Belfast in January 1976.
Martyn McCready, whose father John was shot dead by the IRA in north Belfast in January 1976.

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