ON THIS DAY: 2 FEBRUARY 1972: Protests in Dublin and other cities after Bloody Sunday killings

On 30th January 1972, British Parachute Regiment shot dead civilians in a civil rights march in Derry city. It sent shockwaves through Britain and Ireland and people south of the border were angry and distraught.

The first night 50 people picketed the British embassy, but on Monday morning walkouts took place at factories in Shannon and Cork, followed by thousands more in Limerick, Galway, Dundalk and Waterford. Impromtu marches were taking place in many cities with protesters passing each other. In Dublin, the protesters converged on the British embassy and an attempt was made to storm the building; Gardai dispersed the crowd after baton charges.

The next day, Tuesday, the Irish government withdrew their ambassador from London and announced a National Day of Mourning the following day to reflect the anger and disbelief reflected in public opinion to the news of the shootings.

Schools were closed, RTÉ provided live coverage from the funerals of those shot dead, trade unions asked their members to take time off work to attend memorial events and employers facilitated this. National Organisations and associations either closed down for the full day, part of the day and donated funds to the victims families. Dockers blacked British ships; airport workers refused to services British aircraft; massive protest marches were held from Sligo, Tralee, Wexford, Dungarvan and other towns; memorial marches and events were held in towns and villages. Bus strikes were called in Cork and in Dublin the protests continued at the embassy.  An explosion destroyed the building’s armoured door, while over 70 petrol bombs were thrown at its reinforced windows. After several hours of clashes, with injuries on both sides, the Gardaí prevented further damage taking place.

On the day of the funerals, Wednesday, many politicians travelled to Derry to pay their respects, a memorial service was held in Dublin’s Pro Cathedral which was attended by Taoiseach Jack Lynch and most of the Fianna Fáil cabinet. Other religious services where held throughout the country and many people in Dublin went to specially held early morning mass before making their way into protests in the city centre – some to the embassy and some to the protest March which set off from Parnell Square.

By the afternoon, approx 100,000 had gathered and made their way to the embassy, petrol bombs were thrown at the door, a number of men scaled the embassy wall, one raised a tricolour at halfmast. Windows were broken, cars over turned and by  7pm the embassy was on fire and thousands watched it ablaze. The gardai restored order, baton charging the crowd. There were smaller protests over the next few days but nothing on the scale of the first few nights.

 

Look at this BBC report from the time

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Ar19
3 months ago

Y’see thats the problem with a large section of the ‘free state’ populace they only have the stomach to keep the fight going for short periods – in this case their fighting protest against the brits murdering 14 civilians lasts a grand total of 3 days

Andrew Devine
3 months ago
Reply to  Ar19

Most ‘Free Staters’ as appalled & sickened as they were by the Paras murder spree on that day, were as equally horrified by the rise of the Provisional IRA who went on to murder the vast majority of civilians, including far more than the UK state, many of whose security agents also saved lives during that squalid conflict in which all participants, but particularly the IRA & loyalist terror groups defied the will of most people on the island of Ireland in their bloody campaigns of terror.

ar87
3 months ago
Reply to  Andrew Devine

you should be ashamed of yourself for your ignorance. The main ( and some say only) supplier of weapons for loyalist paramiltaries was the British State. Loyalist paramilitaries murdered roughly 1000 people during the troubles and about 95% of those murders were of civilians. The IRA killed between 500-600 civilians during the troubles. So you do the arithmetic.

Absolutely shameful ignorance typical of your little weakling ‘free state’ surrender mindset

you think the british security forces were ‘saving lives’ they spent thirty years faciliating and aiding and abetting murder and you, believed their propaganda, swallowed whole like the ‘free state’ coward wjho cant think for himself. Too naieve to work out MI5 recruited many Irish journalists to churn out their propaganda.

MI5 even murdered 34 civilians in dublin monaghan in 1974 and you probably so clueless you think the ‘UVF’ did it.

Shameful

James Gough
3 months ago

I remember it well. We need some of that fiery spirit today. Nowadays the trade unions organize memorial services for a burnt tram.

Sean B
3 months ago

An Irish government that stood up to England? Unbelievable in this day and age. People taking the law into their own hands and burning down an embassy? Unbelievable in this day and age. Nowadays we are as likely to hear about this type of atrocity perpetrated by the Irish government against its own people.

Would you support a decision by Ireland to copy the UK's "Rwanda Plan", under which asylum seekers are sent to the safe - but third world - African country instead of being allowed to remain here?

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