Zusammenfassung der Ressource
BELFAST: PROBLEMS
AND SOLUTIONS PUT
IN PLACE
- RACISM AND
VIOLENCE
- Arson, spitting, stoning,
human excrements on
doorsteps, pipe bombs,
ransack,g of houses
with baseball bats and
crowbars (Source 4)
- Descrimination against ethnic
minorities, such as Ugandans,
Romanians, Muslims and
especially Chinese (the latter is
the largest minority in Belfast)
(Source 4)
- THE STEWARTSTOWN ROAD
REGENERATION PROJECT (Source 5):
This project offers solutions to
both the decay and environmental
degradation at the road frontage,
and the persisting tension between
the Lenadoon and Suffolk areas.
The project aims to provide a safe
environment, where the population
will feel confident and positive, and
provides economic developments
(shops and offices) and family
facilities (play schools and crèches)
and overall brings divided
communities together. Experts say
that this project has proved to be a
"stable socio-technical
constellation", and that projects
such as this one facilitate friendly
encounters amidst Catholics and
Protestants, and therefore eases
the tension at the interface of the
two neighbourhoods.
- Ku Klux Klan
graffiti and
swastikas
(Source 4)
- "One family was shot at
through their kitchen window,
a number of Muslims were
stabbed, one was left in a
coma after a beating, others
had legs and noses broken" (doc 4)
- Belfast has a majority of
Protestant wardens (Source
3) and due to The Troubles,
tension also persists between
Catholics and Protestants
- No mosque is provided for the
Muslims, who are as many as 4.000
to 5.000 in Northern Ireland, and
even if a planning permission is
granted, the Muslim communities
are too afraid of suffering the
consequences of a mosque being
built (Source 4).
- HISTORICAL
BACKGROUND
- The Troubles (political wars that started in the
sixties, commonly misunderstood as wars
between two Christian denominations, but in
reality the contestants were more concerned
about national self-determination, housing and
employment. Essentially, a majority of Protestants
were fighting to stay part of the UK, whereas a
majority of Catholics were fighting to be
independent. In the end over 3.000 people died, it
was a period of extreme violence - there were
bloody riots on the streets) resulted in a heritage
of religious and ethnic tensions which explain the
reasons and sources for most of the problems in
Belfast today (Source 5).
- Northern Ireland has only had a
racial descrimination legislation
for 10 years and society needs time
to change "The situation now is
what might have happened in
Britain in the 1950's" (doc 4)
- The population is accustomed
to hate and violence towards
other cultures (The Troubles)
- PLENTIFUL ACCESS
TO GUNS - INCREASE
OF VIOLENCE AND
ITS POSSIBILITY
(Source 4)
- POLITICAL INVOLVEMENT
- British National
party - in favour of
feeling against tiny
number of asylum
seekers (Source 4)
- White Nationalist party
- threatening anti-racist
activists (Source 4)
- Loyalist Paramilitaries have not yet
issued a statement saying attacks on
minorities will not be tolerated, and
they control "young lads" with "fear of
punishment beatings. Furthermore,,
anyone that participates in these
vioent and racist attacks is linked to
the paramilitaries (Source 4)
- SEGREGATION
- Protestant and Catholic wards in Belfast are
separated by "Peace Walls" - it is a temporary
establishment, that may protect the population, but
also increases tension because the communities live
closely amongst each other and narratives of past
violence are transmitted on both sides, Therefore
racism and hate regarding opposing communities
can still be felt (Brendan Browne's article and
Source 2)
- IN JANUARY 2012, THE INTERNATIONAL FUND FOR
IRELAND LAUNCHED A 2 million pound INITIATIVE
TO BRING DOWN THE WALLS AND PROMOTE
CROSS-COMMUNITY CONTACT AND SHARED
COMMUNITY SPACE (Brendan Browne's article)
- UNIVERSITY OF ULSTER STUDIES SHOW
THAT 15 YEARS AFTER THE GOOD FRIDAY
AGREEMENT IN 1998, 76 PERCENT OF THE
POPULATION WANTS TO SEE THE WALLS
COME DOWN (Brendan Browne's article)
- THE DEBATE ON THE PEACE WALLS IS
COMPLEX : AT THE SAME TIME THEY
SEGREGATE THE POPULATION AND BREED
HATE IN OPPOSING COMMUNITIES, BUT ON
THE OTHER HAND, THEY DO PROVIDE
PROTECTION, AND THE PEOPLE LIVING
CLOSEST TO THESE WALLS DO NOT WISH
NEARLY AS MUCH TO HAVE THEM COME
DOWN, OUT OF FEAR OF THE POSSIBLE
OUTCOME WHICH IS RENEWED VIOLENCE
(Brendan Browne's article)
- IMPACTS OF
SECTARIAN
DIVISION IN
BELFAST ON
CITY PLANNING
AND
ORGANIZATION
- Middle-class
Protestant ghettos are
more deprived than the
Catholic ones, namely
academically (Source 6)
- ATTEMPTS AT BLURRING
SOCIAL, ECONOMIC, ETHNIC
AND POLITICAL DIFFERENCES (Source 6)
- More Protestants move to
the outskirts, whereas the
Catholics mostly stay confined
in the city center, and if they
move out, they move to the
Western outskirts, away from
Protestants (Source 6)
- STOP-LINE AT POLEGLASS:
government provided housing where
Catholics can move to in the outskirts
of town, and feel safe - less
confinement for them in the city
center and ghettos (Source 6)
- Sectarian patterns of living,
schooling, shopping, working
and recreation impact the
transportation and planning
of the city (Sources 6 and 3)