On
another occasion I came upon a group of British soldiers busy digging in my
back garden.I identified myself and
enquired of a sergeant whether they had received intelligence that something
was buried there – arms and explosives or whatever.
He
reported that aerial photographs had identified a suspicious mound of stones in
the garden.
I
hastily explained that they were paving stones that my wife intended to use to
make a path to the clothes line!
Internment
Day was most traumatic.There was a loud
knocking at my front door at an unearthly hour.It wasn’t the police or Army but neighbours:I spoke to them from the bedroom window: I
was told to bring my camera to the police station as a large number of men from
the estate had been “lifted”.
By
the time I made a move, a Protest March had been assembled and proceeded
through the Meadow at 5.30 am, rattling bin lids and calling out for volunteers
to swell their ranks.
After
a short protest at the Corry Square Police Station, addressed by the then
Chairman of Newry Urban Council, Dromalane man Pat McMahon, the March moved on
heading for the UDR Centre on Downshire
Road.
At
the barrier a line of mothers – wives and sisters of internees - harangued
those few on duty.Eventually the
protest moved on but their was no dispersal plan and some elements within the
protest joined others intent on destruction, now conscious of the mere skeleton
garrison left in the town after the earlier swoop, and determined to take
advantage, they began to systematically smash and burn commercial premises on
Hill Street and The Mall.
By
eight o’clock, when some few workers were plodding wearily into town to begin
their day, there hung a huge pall of smoke over the town centre.
Parking
at Kildare Street
I entered Hill Street
and was amazed at the sight that met
me.From the Town Hall to Margaret Square
shops were ablaze.Even as fire-fighters
tackled the blazes, more were begun around them.
There
was a young British soldier armed with a rifle standing alone and seemingly
lost beneath the Golden Kettle.The
rioters glanced in his direction before resuming their terrible work!He was alone.He did not intervene!