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  CAIN Web Service The Deployment of British Troops - Background Information
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 Page Compiled: Martin Melaugh
 Material is added to this site on a regular basis - information on this page may change
 
 
IntroductionThere were a number of events,
and political developments, from the beginning of 'the Troubles' in October 1968 through to the summer of 1969
which explain the reasons for the deployment of troops on the streets of Northern Ireland and the reactions to that deployment.
 The following paragraphs are intended
  to briefly highlight some of the events and developments surrounding the actual deployment of British troops.  The reader
  should consult other sections of the CAIN web service for further
  information and also the CAIN Bibliography for references to detailed
  information on particular sections.   The emergence of the Civil Rights CampaignThe Civil Rights Campaign
  that started in the mid-1960s began in the 'pressure group' activities
  of mainly middle-class Catholics who published leaflets, issued
  statements and sent letters in the hope of addressing perceived
  discrimination, in many walks of life, against the Catholic community.
  The membership and tactics of the Civil Rights Movement was to
  change over the course of several years.  It was to become a more
  broadly based organisation and was to adopt public protest on
  the street as the main means of achieving the movement's aims.
 Unionists, however, viewed the developments
  with deep suspicion and in many instances their reaction was openly
  hostile.  Many Unionists believed that the Irish Republican Army
  (IRA) was behind the agitation and accused those involved of being
  more interested in undermining the Northern Ireland state than
  in reform.   The civil unrest - 1968 and 1969The civil unrest, the rioting
  that often accompanied street protests, the confrontation between
  the Royal Ulster Constabulary (RUC) and sections of the Catholic
  community, and the destruction of property, were all viewed by
  the Protestant community as direct attacks on the fabric of the
  Northern Ireland state.
 The reforms introduced to answer
  Catholic grievances - 1968 and afterwardsThe first reforms and policy
  initiatives were announced towards the end of 1968 and the following
  years saw a number of provisions introduced to address allegations
  of discrimination and malpractice on the part of public agencies
  and government departments in Northern Ireland.  Some of the reforms
  involved merely a change in legislation and quickly achieved the
  desired effect, such as those reforms related to universal adult
  suffrage in local government elections.  Other reforms have proved
  more problematic and appear to have had less of an impact, for
  example, despite several pieces of legislation aimed at achieving
  fair employment, the level of Catholic male unemployment has remained
  much higher than the Protestant level.
 The series of reforms were opposed by
  a large section of unionist opinion, indeed the issue of reform
  was to see the fragmentation of the Unionist Party which had ruled
  Northern Ireland for 50 years.  There was also violent opposition
  in working-class Protestant areas to some of the measures.  On
  11 October serious riots followed protests by Loyalists against
  the disbandment of the 'B Specials'.  Later Loyalists open fire
  on officers of the Royal Ulster Constabulary (RUC) (who were blocking
  their route to a Catholic area of Belfast) killing the first RUC
  officer to die in the present 'Troubles'.   
 
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