
Bayardo Bar attack commemoration held on 50th anniversary
A short parade by a flute band which marched from Tennent Street along the Shankill Road preceded a laying of wreaths by victims' families and members of the Bayardo Somme Association, who organised the event. The wreaths were laid at the memorial to the Bayardo Bar attack on the corner of Argyle Street.The events of 50 years ago made the headlines this week as a tribute was paid to one of the men convicted of carrying out the attack, former senior IRA leader Brendan "Bik" McFarlane, at the Féile an Phobail event in Falls Park on Sunday evening. McFarlane died in February this year. McFarlane and two other IRA members, Peter Hamilton and Seamus Clarke, were sentenced to life imprisonment for carrying out the attack.
John MacVicar is the editor of The Shankill Mirror and was at the commemoration on Wednesday evening. He said like so many other attacks that have taken place, it leaves an impact on families and the community. He said seeing "one of the perpetrators of the attack eulogised" at the Féile an Phobail event "doesn't help". "It's hurtful," he added.The family of Linda Boyle have said they were "absolutely disgusted" by the "sick" tribute. Speaking ahead of the 50th anniversary, the family issued a statement which said: "Wednesday will be a particularly difficult day although there have been few easy days since the Provisional IRA stole away our beautiful Linda and the others that fateful day." It went on to say how Linda would now be of retirement age and should be "relaxing and exploring a further chapter of life"."Linda's storybook was ended before she got beyond her first chapter," it added.Kenny Donaldson, from the South East Fermanagh Foundation, which supports victims and survivors of terrorism, said for this tribute to come just days before the anniversary of the bombing ws "particularly cruel and crass". Féile an Phobail have been contacted for a response.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Sun
an hour ago
- The Sun
Teen arrested after ‘attacking female tourists in their hotels' on hols island as chilling pics show blood-stained rooms
A TEENAGER has been arrested after two tourists were attacked in their hotel rooms on the Canary Island Fuerteventura. A youngster has been accused of seriously wounding the women in separate assaults on the island, which left blood smeared around the rooms. 5 5 5 Detectives released graphic photos showing bed sheets drenched in blood and puddles on the floor. They said the victims were staying at separate hotels in the resort of Costa Calma, known for its beautiful child-friendly family beach. One of the victims was hospitalised with injuries to her head, hands and arms. Neither of their nationalities have been released. The two brutal attacks happened seven months apart, in December and June, but similarities between them led cops to make a link. CCTV footage of a figure sprinting away from one of the hotels was released alongside the pictures, and police say they used this to help them identify the suspect along with clothes and a mobile they seized. The suspect was arrested a month after the second assault and has been described as a minor - but his exact age not released. He has been remanded to a youth detention centre by a judge pending an ongoing criminal investigation. Police have not yet offered any information about what they think motivated the attacks. Confirming the arrest as part of Operation Praktiker, a spokesman for the Civil Guard said: 'The Civil Guard in Fuerteventura has arrested a minor as the alleged perpetrator of two crimes of serious wounding in Costa Calma in the municipality of Pajara. Devil's Den 'murderer' sparks serial killer fears as he's investigated for 2nd unsolved death with eerie 'satanic' link 'The victims are two women who were staying at hotels in the area. 'The investigation began as the result of an assault on a woman on June 23 this year. 'The victim was attacked inside her hotel room, suffering serious injuries to her head, hands and arms. 'She had to be rushed to Fuerteventura General Hospital to receive emergency medical attention. 'This incident generated great social alarm, intensified by messages the victim subsequently published on social media. 5 'Officers began by analysing images from CCTV in the area. 'They checked information with workers in nearby hotels, people who had been staying in the hotels around the dates under investigation and local residents and employees of nearby business premises, making background checks and verifying possible links with similar incidents. 'The analysis of the images enabled investigators to relate the June assault with another similar incident which occurred on December 16 last year, in which another woman was attacked in her hotel room, also in Costa Calma and very near to the scene of the second assault. 'In both cases a similar modus operandi was used. 'After comparing the security camera recordings, investigators concluded the same person had entered both rooms and caused the serious injuries the women inside suffered.' The arrest was made on July 18, although details of the case have only just been made public. The Civil Guard spokesman said: 'The arrest occurred after a court-ordered search of the suspect's home. 'Clothes he allegedly wore the night of the assaults were recovered as well as different objects possibly linked to the physical attacks. 'Mobile phones were also confiscated so they could be analysed. 'The youngster has been remanded to the Tabares Juvenile Centre in Tenerife."


BBC News
11 hours ago
- BBC News
Ballymena riots: What's changed in the County Antrim town two months on?
It's been two months since scenes of hate and violence erupted on the streets of Ballymena, County Antrim – and the after effects are still evident weeks homes remain boarded up on Clonavon Terrace, which bore the brunt of rioting described by the police as "racist thuggery".The target of much of the aggression was the town's Roma (Gypsy) community and other foreign nationals. Some who fled say they are not coming back."Locals live here" posters, which first appeared by residents trying to protect their homes from being attacked, are still affixed to front windows on Queen Street. For some, the eight weeks since the rioting has seen a change in Ballymena – North Antrim MP Jim Allister said there had been "an exodus of largely Roma and some other eastern Europeans"."It has transformed the feel in the area. There's no longer people standing around our street corners here," he told The State of Us for others, they're still protesting, albeit organisers write online that their aim is to protect women and girls in the community from "Roma gangs". We tried to speak to people at a gathering last week to hear more about their concerns but were asked to is also still fear among the communities targeted by the violence, with BBC News NI finding that people from or close to ethnic communities affected largely do not want to speak is understood that up to 60% of Roma people in Ballymena left during the riots, some to other parts of Northern Ireland and others returning to home countries such as Bulgaria and not yet clear how many will return. How the riots reverberated in Ballymena Gary Lamont, who is from the area where the riots erupted, understands why people took to the streets and also why people would describe them as racist - but, in his view, this "doesn't reflect the problem"."There was so much immigration into this area literally overnight in a way that the area just could not cope."He said people felt their voices were not being heard by local agencies and politicians, with meetings and engagement "fizzling out".As far back as 2018, there has been reports of tension in Ballymena over the influx of Roma people. The spark that lit the fuse in June came after a protest over an alleged sexual assault of a teenage girl. Two 14-year-old boys, who spoke in court through a Romanian interpreter, deny charges of attempted peaceful protest was held in support of the girl and her family, but crowds poured onto the streets and disorder broke out over several nights, spreading to other towns such as Larne and almost a week of rioting, more than 60 PSNI officers were injured and 53 people, aged between 12 and 56 were arrested – 46 have been charged. Jim Allister, the town's MP, told hosts of The State of Us podcast Tara Mills and Declan Harvey that while the violence was wrong, it had transformed the area."Historically this was a very settled part of town. It changed in recent years." Available data shows a mixed picture. Northern Ireland was described as the "least diverse" part of the UK, according to research published by the Northern Ireland Assembly earlier this year. Based on international migration, only 3.4% - or 65,600 – of Northern Ireland's population are from a minority ethnic figures from 2021 show that population density in the area around Clonavon Terrace was approximately 51 times the Northern Ireland average, and four times the average for Ballymena as a whole. It also recorded that 14% of people living in the wider area around Clonavon Terrace were changing demographics led to issues with integration and language barriers, as well as suspected criminality by some, said Mr Lazar, chief executive of UK-wide Roma-led charity Union Romani Voice, has said while some within the Roma community commit crimes - much like in all communities - it is for the police to deal with those has called for more to be done to protect members of the Roma community in Northern Roma community member in County Armagh, who reported being threatened by a man wielding a knuckle-duster, told BBC News NI he and others were living in fear. Housing and deprivation driving 'frustrations' According to Allister, HMOs (houses of multiple occupation), in which large numbers of people share a home, are a major factor behind the increase in the Roma MP said they had become a "big problem in the area" and were "largely unregulated"."There are ways of ducking and diving through the rules," he said."The further you get from Belfast, HMOs seem to be largely uncontrolled."The Register of Houses in Multiple Occupation across Northern Ireland is managed centrally by Belfast City Council - it told BBC News NI it was "not aware of any unlicensed HMOs in Ballymena"."Any concerns regarding unlicensed HMO usage in any location in NI are investigated by the NIHMO (Northern Ireland Houses of Multiple Occupation Unit)," it added. Others have pointed to a lack of political leadership, deprivation and housing issues for the underlying Laverty, a community worker in the town, said "political negligence" and a lack of public services has led to "socioeconomic deprivation"."People have been left with no other option but to blame something that they've been made to feel fearful of," she Laverty said the violence and anger was an outlet for some people's frustrations but "wasn't an adequate representation of the majority" of people in the have criticised the ongoing protests' purported aim to protect women and Crory, from the Women's Resource and Development Agency, said women and children were among those harmed during the riots. She said people should look at individual perpetrators of violence rather than "whole groups of people". "If there's a problem with intimidation in the area, it's not connected to the racial background of the person who's allegedly doing it."Ms Crory said of the 28 women murdered in Northern Ireland in the last five years "if there were no immigrants in this country, that number would be 27".She said there were greater resources than ever before to address violence against women and girls now."When somebody says they're protecting women and girls... make sure their motivations are as pure as they say they are, and if they really are that pure, there are things that you can do." It's clear that Ballymena will be feeling the aftermath of June's violence for some time to come."There are many, many victims in all of this," said Gary Lamont."Most of all those who have been put out of their homes, the police, those injured officers, the landlords, all of that. "But there's also those young people's lives. They are going to be particularly heavily punished going by what we hear."For Demi Laverty, the violence should be a wake-up call."If young men and people from our country have been made to feel so disillusioned in regards to political representation and feeling like their voices haven't been adequately represented... that fear and that anger's gonna spill into other things."


BBC News
12 hours ago
- BBC News
Bayardo Bar attack commemoration held on 50th anniversary
A commemoration event has taken place in west Belfast to mark the 50th anniversary of the Bayardo Bar attack on the Shankill 13 August 1975, five people were killed and more than 60 were injured when the IRA launched a bombing and shooting attack on the bar. Those killed were William John Gracey, 63, Samuel Gunning, 55, Joanne McDowell, 29, Hugh Alexander Harris, 21, and 17-year-old Linda Boyle, who died a week after the attack from her Wednesday evening, members of the local community gathered to remember them. A short parade by a flute band which marched from Tennent Street along the Shankill Road preceded a laying of wreaths by victims' families and members of the Bayardo Somme Association, who organised the event. The wreaths were laid at the memorial to the Bayardo Bar attack on the corner of Argyle events of 50 years ago made the headlines this week as a tribute was paid to one of the men convicted of carrying out the attack, former senior IRA leader Brendan "Bik" McFarlane, at the Féile an Phobail event in Falls Park on Sunday evening. McFarlane died in February this year. McFarlane and two other IRA members, Peter Hamilton and Seamus Clarke, were sentenced to life imprisonment for carrying out the attack. John MacVicar is the editor of The Shankill Mirror and was at the commemoration on Wednesday evening. He said like so many other attacks that have taken place, it leaves an impact on families and the community. He said seeing "one of the perpetrators of the attack eulogised" at the Féile an Phobail event "doesn't help". "It's hurtful," he family of Linda Boyle have said they were "absolutely disgusted" by the "sick" tribute. Speaking ahead of the 50th anniversary, the family issued a statement which said: "Wednesday will be a particularly difficult day although there have been few easy days since the Provisional IRA stole away our beautiful Linda and the others that fateful day." It went on to say how Linda would now be of retirement age and should be "relaxing and exploring a further chapter of life"."Linda's storybook was ended before she got beyond her first chapter," it Donaldson, from the South East Fermanagh Foundation, which supports victims and survivors of terrorism, said for this tribute to come just days before the anniversary of the bombing ws "particularly cruel and crass". Féile an Phobail have been contacted for a response.