Bobby Sands

Bobby Sands
Sands in Long Kesh, 1973 (aged 18–19)
Member of Parliament
for Fermanagh and South Tyrone
In office
9 April 1981[1]  5 May 1981
Preceded by Frank Maguire
Succeeded by Owen Carron
Majority 1,447 (2.4%)
Personal details
Born (1954-03-09)9 March 1954
Newtownabbey,
County Antrim,
Northern Ireland
Died 5 May 1981(1981-05-05) (aged 27)
Maze, County Down,
Northern Ireland
Nationality Irish
Political party Anti H-Block
Spouse(s)
Geraldine Noade (m. 1972–1981)
Children 1
Other organisations Provisional Irish Republican Army
Website Bobby Sands Trust
Military service
Allegiance Provisional IRA
Years of service 1972–1981
Unit First Battalion South West Belfast, Belfast Brigade
Battles/wars The Troubles

Robert Gerard Sands (Irish: Roibeárd Gearóid Ó Seachnasaigh;[2] 9 March 1954  5 May 1981) was a member of the Provisional Irish Republican Army who died on hunger strike while imprisoned at HM Prison Maze after being sentenced for firearms possession.

He was the leader of the 1981 hunger strike in which Irish republican prisoners protested against the removal of Special Category Status. During Sands's strike, he was elected to the British Parliament as an Anti H-Block candidate.[3][4] His death and those of nine other hunger strikers was followed by a new surge of Provisional IRA recruitment and activity. International media coverage brought attention to the hunger strikers, and the Republican movement in general, attracting both praise and criticism.[5]

Early years

Sands was born in 1954 to Roman Catholic parents, John (died 2014)[6] and Rosaleen (died 2018),[7] who were both raised in Belfast. After marrying, they relocated to the new development of Abbots Cross, Newtownabbey, County Antrim, outside North Belfast.[8][9] Sands was the eldest of four children. His younger sisters, Marcella and Bernadette, were born in 1955 and 1958, respectively. He also had a younger brother, John, born 1962.[10][11]

After experiencing harassment and intimidation from their neighbours, the family abandoned the development and moved in with friends for six months before being granted housing in the nearby Rathcoole development. Rathcoole was 30% Catholic and featured Catholic schools as well as a nominally Catholic but religiously-mixed youth football club, an unusual circumstance in Northern Ireland, known as Stella Maris, the same as the school Sands attended and where the training was held. Sands was a member of this club and played left-back.[10][11] There was another youth club in nearby Greencastle called Star of the Sea and many boys went there when the Stella Maris club closed.

By 1966, sectarian violence in Rathcoole, along with the rest of Belfast, had considerably worsened, and the minority Catholic population there found itself under siege. Despite always having had Protestant friends, Sands suddenly found that none of them would even speak to him, and he quickly learned to associate only with Catholics.[10]

He left school in 1969 at age 15, and enrolled in Newtownabbey Technical College, beginning an apprenticeship as a coach builder at Alexander's Coach Works in 1970. He worked there for less than a year, enduring constant harassment from his Protestant co-workers, which according to several co-workers he ignored completely, as he wished to learn a meaningful trade.[10] He was eventually confronted after leaving his shift in January 1971 by a number of his coworkers wearing the armbands of the local Ulster loyalist tartan gang. He was held at gunpoint and told that Alexander's was off-limits to "Fenian scum" and to never come back if he valued his life. He later said that this event was the point at which he decided that militancy was the only solution.[12][13]

In June 1972, Sands's parents' home was attacked and damaged by a loyalist mob and they were again forced to move, this time to the West Belfast Catholic area of Twinbrook, where Sands, now thoroughly embittered, rejoined them. He attended his first Provisional IRA meeting in Twinbrook that month and joined the IRA the same day. He was 18 years old. By 1973, almost every Catholic family had been driven out of Rathcoole by violence and intimidation, although there were some who remained.[13][14]

Provisional IRA activity

In 1972, Sands joined the Provisional IRA.[15] He was arrested and charged in October 1972 with possession of four handguns found in the house where he was staying. Sands was convicted in April 1973, sentenced to five years imprisonment, and released in April 1976.[16][17]

Upon his release, he returned to his family home in West Belfast, and resumed his active role in the Provisional IRA. Sands and Joe McDonnell planned the October 1976 bombing of the Balmoral Furniture Company in Dunmurry. The showroom was destroyed but as the IRA men left the scene there was a gun battle with the Royal Ulster Constabulary. Leaving behind two wounded, Seamus Martin and Gabriel Corbett, the remaining four (Sands, McDonnell, Seamus Finucane, and Sean Lavery) tried to escape by car, but were arrested. One of the revolvers used in the attack was found in the car. In 1977, the four men were sentenced to 14 years for possession of the revolver. They were not charged with explosive offences.[18][19]

Immediately after his sentencing, Sands was implicated in a fight and spent the first 22 days with all furniture removed from his cell in Crumlin Road Prison, 15 days naked, and a diet of bread and water every three days.[20]

Long Kesh years

In late 1980, Sands was chosen Officer Commanding of the Provisional IRA prisoners in the Maze Prison, succeeding Brendan Hughes who was participating in the first hunger strike. Republican prisoners organised a series of protests seeking to regain their previous Special Category Status, which would free them from some ordinary prison regulations. This began with the "blanket protest" in 1976, in which the prisoners refused to wear prison uniforms and wore blankets instead. In 1978, after a number of attacks on prisoners leaving their cells to "slop out" (i.e., empty their chamber pots), this escalated into the "dirty protest", wherein prisoners refused to wash and smeared the walls of their cells with excrement.[21]

Published works

While in prison, Sands had several letters and articles published in the Republican paper An Phoblacht under the pseudonym "Marcella" (his sister's name). Other writings attributed to him are: Skylark Sing Your Lonely Song[22] and One Day in My Life.[23] Sands also wrote the lyrics of "Back Home in Derry" and "McIlhatton", which were both later recorded by Christy Moore, and "Sad Song For Susan", which was also later recorded. The melody of "Back Home in Derry" was borrowed from Gordon Lightfoot's 1976 song "The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald".[24] The song itself is about the penal transportation of Irishmen in the 19th century to Van Diemen's Land (modern day Tasmania, Australia).

Member of Parliament

Shortly after the beginning of the strike, Frank Maguire, the Independent Republican MP for Fermanagh and South Tyrone, died suddenly of a heart attack, precipitating the April 1981 by-election.[25]

The sudden vacancy in a seat with a nationalist majority of about 5,000 was a valuable opportunity for Sands's supporters "to raise public consciousness".[13][26] Pressure not to split the vote led other nationalist parties, notably the Social Democratic and Labour Party, to withdraw, and Sands was nominated on the label "Anti H-Block/Armagh Political Prisoner". After a highly polarised campaign, Sands narrowly won the seat on 9 April 1981, with 30,493 votes to 29,046 for the Ulster Unionist Party candidate Harry West. Sands became the youngest MP at the time.[27] Sands died in prison less than a month later, without ever having taken his seat in the Commons.

Following Sands's election win, the British government introduced the Representation of the People Act 1981 which prevents prisoners serving jail terms of more than one year in either the UK or the Republic of Ireland from being nominated as candidates in British elections.[28][29] The enactment of the law, as a response to the election of Sands, consequently prevented other hunger strikers from being elected to the House of Commons.[30]

Hunger strike

The 1981 Irish hunger strike started with Sands refusing food on 1 March 1981. Sands decided that other prisoners should join the strike at staggered intervals to maximise publicity, with prisoners steadily deteriorating successively over several months. The hunger strike centred on five demands:

  1. the right not to wear a prison uniform;
  2. the right not to do prison work;
  3. the right of free association with other prisoners, and to organise educational and recreational pursuits;
  4. the right to one visit, one letter, and one parcel per week;
  5. full restoration of remission lost through the protest.[31]

The significance of the hunger strike was the prisoners' aim of being considered political prisoners as opposed to criminals. Shortly before Sands's death, The Washington Post reported that the primary aim of the hunger strike was to generate international publicity.[32]

Death

Bobby Sands's grave in Milltown Cemetery.

Sands died on 5 May 1981 in the Maze's prison hospital after 66 days on hunger strike, aged 27.[33] The original pathologist's report recorded the hunger strikers' causes of death as "self-imposed starvation", later amended to simply "starvation" after protests from the dead strikers' families.[34] The coroner recorded verdicts of "starvation, self-imposed".[34]

The announcement of Sands's death prompted several days of rioting in nationalist areas of Northern Ireland. A milkman, Eric Guiney, and his son, Desmond, died as a result of injuries sustained when their milk float crashed after being stoned by rioters in a predominantly nationalist area of North Belfast.[35][36] Over 100,000 people lined the route of Sands's funeral, and he was buried in the 'New Republican Plot' alongside 76 others. Their graves are maintained by the National Graves Association, Belfast.[37]

Reactions

Republic of Ireland

In the Republic of Ireland, Sands's death led to riots and buses being set on fire.

Britain

In response to a question in the House of Commons on 5 May 1981, United Kingdom Prime Minister, Margaret Thatcher said, "Mr. Sands was a convicted criminal. He chose to take his own life. It was a choice that his organisation did not allow to many of its victims".[38]

Cardinal Basil Hume, head of the Catholic Church in England and Wales, condemned Sands, describing the hunger strike as a form of violence. However, he noted that this was his personal view. The Roman Catholic Church's official stance was that ministrations should be provided to the hunger strikers who, believing their sacrifice to be for a higher good, were acting in good conscience.[39]

At Old Firm football matches in Glasgow, Scotland, some Rangers fans have been known to sing songs mocking Sands to taunt fans of Celtic. Rangers fans are mainly Protestant, and predominantly sympathetic to unionists; Celtic fans are traditionally more likely to support nationalists.[40] Celtic fans regularly sing the republican song The Roll of Honour, which commemorates the ten men who died in the 1981 hunger strike, amongst other songs in support of the IRA. Sands is honoured in the line "They stood beside their leader – the gallant Bobby Sands." Rangers' taunts have since been adopted by the travelling support of other UK clubs, particularly those with strong British nationalist ties, as a form of anti-Irish sentiment.[41] The 1981 British Home Championship football tournament was cancelled following the refusal of teams from England and Wales to travel to Northern Ireland in the aftermath of his death, due to security concerns.

Europe

A Memorial mural to Bobby Sands along Falls Road, Belfast.

In Europe, there were widespread protests after Sands's death. 5,000 Milanese students burned the Union Flag and chanted "Freedom for Ulster" during a march.[5] The British Consulate at Ghent was raided.[5] Thousands marched in Paris behind huge portraits of Sands, to chants of "the IRA will conquer".[5]

In the Portuguese Parliament, the opposition stood for Sands.[5] In Oslo, demonstrators threw a tomato at Elizabeth II, the Queen of the United Kingdom, but missed. (One 28-year-old assailant said he had actually aimed for what he claimed was a smirking British soldier.)[5][42] In the Soviet Union, Pravda described it as "another tragic page in the grim chronicle of oppression, discrimination, terror, and violence" in Ireland. Russian fans of Bobby Sands published a translation of the "Back Home in Derry" song ("На Родину в Дерри" in Russian).[5] Many French towns and cities have streets named after Sands, including Nantes, Saint-Étienne, Le Mans, Vierzon, and Saint-Denis.[43] The conservative-aligned West German newspaper Die Welt took a negative view towards Sands.[5]

Americas

A number of political, religious, union and fund-raising institutions chose to honour Sands in the United States. The International Longshoremen's Association in New York announced a 24-hour boycott of British ships.[44][45] Over 1,000 people gathered in New York's St. Patrick's Cathedral to hear Cardinal Terence Cooke offer a reconciliation Mass for Northern Ireland. Irish bars in the city were closed for two hours in mourning.[5]

The New Jersey General Assembly, the lower house of the New Jersey Legislature, voted 34–29 for a resolution honouring his "courage and commitment."[5]

The American media expressed a range of opinions on Sands's death. The Boston Globe commented, a few days before Sands's death, that "[t]he slow suicide attempt of Bobby Sands has cast his land and his cause into another downward spiral of death and despair. There are no heroes in the saga of Bobby Sands".[46] The Chicago Tribune wrote that "Mahatma Gandhi used the hunger strike to move his countrymen to abstain from fratricide. Bobby Sands's deliberate slow suicide is intended to precipitate civil war. The former deserved veneration and influence. The latter would be viewed, in a reasonable world, not as a charismatic martyr but as a fanatical suicide, whose regrettable death provides no sufficient occasion for killing others".[47]

The New York Times wrote that "Britain's prime minister Thatcher is right in refusing to yield political status to Bobby Sands, the Irish Republican Army hunger striker", but added that by appearing "unfeeling and unresponsive" the British Government was giving Sands "the crown of martyrdom".[48] The San Francisco Chronicle argued that political belief should not exempt activists from criminal law:

Terrorism goes far beyond the expression of political belief. And dealing with it does not allow for compromise as many countries of Western Europe and United States have learned. The bombing of bars, hotels, restaurants, robbing of banks, abductions, and killings of prominent figures are all criminal acts and must be dealt with by criminal law.[49]

Some American critics and journalists suggested that American press coverage was a "melodrama".[50] Edward Langley of The Pittsburgh Press criticised the large pro-IRA Irish-American contingent which "swallow IRA propaganda as if it were taffy", and concluded that IRA "terrorist propaganda triumphs."[51]

Archbishop John R. Roach, president of the US Catholic bishops, called Sands's death "a useless sacrifice".[52] The Ledger of 5 May 1981 under the headline "To some he was a hero, to others a terrorist" claims that the hunger strike made Sands "a hero among Irish Republicans or Nationalists seeking the reunion of Protestant-dominated and British-ruled Northern Ireland with the predominantly Catholic Irish Republic to the south".[39] The Ledger cited Sands as telling his friends: "If I die, God will understand" and one of his last messages was "Tell everyone I'll see them somewhere, sometime".[39]

In Hartford, Connecticut, a memorial was dedicated to Bobby Sands and the other hunger strikers in 1997, the only one of its kind in the United States. Set up by the Irish Northern Aid Committee and local Irish-Americans, it stands in a traffic island known as Bobby Sands Circle at the bottom of Maple Avenue near Goodwin Park.[53]

In 2001, a memorial to Sands and the other hunger strikers was unveiled in Havana, Cuba.[54]

Asia

The Iranian government renamed Winston Churchill Boulevard, the location of the Embassy of the United Kingdom in Tehran, to Bobby Sands Street, prompting the embassy to move its entrance door to Ferdowsi Avenue to avoid using Bobby Sands Street on its letterhead.[56] A street in the Elahieh district is also named after Sands.[57] An official blue and white street sign was affixed to the rear wall of the British embassy compound saying (in Persian) "Bobby Sands Street" with three words of explanation "militant Irish guerrilla".[55] The official Pars News Agency called Bobby Sands's death "heroic".[55] There have been claims that the British pressured Iranian authorities to change the name of Bobby Sands Street but this was denied.[58][59] A burger bar in Tehran is named in honour of Sands.[60][61]

  • Palestinian prisoners incarcerated in the Israeli desert prison of Nafha sent a letter, which was smuggled out and reached Belfast in July 1981, which read: "To the families of Bobby Sands and his martyred comrades. We, revolutionaries of the Palestinian people...extend our salutes and solidarity with you in the confrontation against the oppressive terrorist rule enforced upon the Irish people by the British ruling elite. We salute the heroic struggle of Bobby Sands and his comrades, for they have sacrificed the most valuable possession of any human being. They gave their lives for freedom."
  • The Hindustan Times said Margaret Thatcher had allowed a fellow Member of Parliament to die of starvation, an incident which had never before occurred "in a civilised country".[5]
  • In the Indian Parliament, opposition members in the upper house Rajya Sabha stood for a minute's silence in tribute. The ruling Congress Party did not participate.[5] Protest marches were organised against the British government and in tribute to Sands and his fellow hunger strikers.[62]
  • The Hong Kong Standard said it was "sad that successive British governments have failed to end the last of Europe's religious wars".[5]

Australia

Political impact

Nine other IRA and Irish National Liberation Army (INLA) members who were involved in the 1981 Irish Hunger Strike died after Sands. On the day of Sands's funeral, Unionist leader Ian Paisley held a memorial service outside of Belfast city hall to commemorate the victims of the IRA.[44] In the Irish general elections held the same year, two anti H-block candidates won seats on an abstentionist basis.

The media coverage that surrounded the death of Sands resulted in a new surge of IRA activity and an immediate escalation in the Troubles, with the group obtaining many more members and increasing its fund-raising capability. Both nationalists and unionists began to harden their attitudes and move towards political extremes.[63] Sands's Westminster seat was taken by his election agent, Owen Carron standing as 'Anti H-Block Proxy Political Prisoner' with an increased majority.[64]

The Éire Nua flute band inspired by Bobby Sands, commemorate the 1916 Easter Rising on the 91st anniversary.

The Grateful Dead played the Nassau Coliseum the following night after Sands died and guitarist Bob Weir dedicated the song "He's Gone" to Sands.[65] The concert was later released as Dick's Picks Volume 13, part of the Grateful Dead's programme of live concert releases.

Songs written in response to the hunger strikes and Sands's death include songs by Black 47, Nicky Wire, Meic Stevens, The Undertones, Eric Bogle, Soldat Louis and Christy Moore. Moore's song, "The People's Own MP", has been described as an example of a rebel song of the "hero-martyr" genre in which Sands's "intellectual, artistic and moral qualities" are eulogised.[66] The U.S. rock band Rage Against the Machine listed Sands as an inspiration in the sleeve notes of their self-titled debut album. and as a "political hero" in media interviews.[67]

Celtic F.C., a Scottish football club, received a €50,000 fine from UEFA over banners depicting Sands with a political message, which were displayed during a game on 26 November 2013[68] by Green Brigade fans.[69]

Bobby Sands has been portrayed in the following films:

Family

Sands married Geraldine Noade while in prison on robbery charges on 3 March 1973. His son, Gerard, was born 8 May 1973. Noade soon left to live in England with their son.[13]

Sands's sister, Bernadette Sands McKevitt, is also a prominent Irish Republican. Along with her husband, Michael McKevitt, she helped to form the 32 County Sovereignty Movement and is accused of involvement with the Real Irish Republican Army (RIRA).[75]

Bernadette Sands McKevitt is opposed to the Belfast Agreement, stating that "Bobby did not die for cross-border bodies with executive powers. He did not die for nationalists to be equal British citizens within the Northern Ireland state."[76] The RIRA was responsible for the Omagh bombing on 15 August 1998, in which 29 people, including a mother pregnant with twins, were killed and more than 200 injured. This is the highest death toll from a single incident during the Troubles. Michael McKevitt was one of those named in a civil suit filed by victims and survivors.[77]

See also

References

  1. "1981: Hunger striker elected MP". BBC On This Day - 10 April. Retrieved 16 October 2014.
  2. "Legacy of Cage Eleven". Nuzhound.com. Retrieved 26 April 2010.
  3. "Hunger Strike 1980–82". BBC News. Retrieved 26 April 2010.
  4. "CAIN: Politics: Elections: Westminster By-election (NI) Thursday 9 April 1981". Cain.ulst.ac.uk. 9 April 1981. Retrieved 26 April 2010.
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 "CAIN archive at the University of Ulster". Cain.Ulst.ac.uk. 5 May 1981. Retrieved 26 April 2010.
  6. "Respects paid to father of Hunger Striker Sands". The Irish News. 18 June 2014. Retrieved 24 June 2017.
  7. "Bobby Sand's mother Rosaleen has died". The Irish News. 12 January 2018. Retrieved 12 January 2018.
  8. Feehan, Bobby Sands MP and the Tragedy of Northern Ireland, p. 17
  9. Sands, Writings from Prison.
  10. 1 2 3 4 O'Hearn, Bobby Sands: Nothing but an Unfinished Song
  11. 1 2 Donegan, Lawrence (23 November 1999). "Never mind poor old Evita, cry for Star of the Sea". The Guardian.
  12. Feehan, Bobby Sands and the Tragedy of Northern Ireland, pp. 13–14
  13. 1 2 3 4 David Beresford (1987). Ten Men Dead: The Story of the 1981 Irish Hunger Strike. London, UK: Harper Collins Publishers. ISBN 0-586-06533-4.
  14. O'Hearn, Nothing but an unfinished song: Bobby Sands, Chapter 1.
  15. Geraghty, The Irish War, pp. 68–70
  16. Morrison, Biography, cain.ulst.ac.uk; accessed 20 October 2015.
  17. Hanke, Philip (2011). Bobby Sands – An Irish Martyr?. GRIN Verlag. p. 20. ISBN 978-3-640-85967-2. Retrieved 10 October 2015.
  18. English, Armed Struggle: The History of the IRA, pp. 196–198
  19. Kevin Toolis (12 December 2011). Rebel Hearts. Pan Macmillan. pp. 133–. ISBN 978-1-4472-1748-0. Retrieved 10 October 2015.
  20. Hanke, Philip (2011). Bobby Sands – An Irish Martyr?. GRIN Verlag. p. 21. ISBN 978-3-640-85967-2. Retrieved 10 October 2015.
  21. Taylo, Provos, The IRA and Sinn Féin, pp. 251–52
  22. 1989, Mercier Press, ISBN 0-85342-726-7
  23. 2001, Mercier Press; ISBN 1-85635-349-4
  24. "Back Home In Derry - Christy Moore". ChristyMoore.com. 17 February 2012. Retrieved 24 June 2017.
  25. "Frank Maguire, Ulster M.P., Dies; Helped Defeat Callaghan in 1979 - The New York Times". The New York Times. Retrieved 4 May 2018.
  26. "CAIN: Events: Hunger Strike: Beresford, David - Chapter from 'Ten Men Dead'". ulst.ac.uk. Retrieved 20 November 2015.
  27. BBC News,1981: Hunger striker elected MP (April 1981)
  28. Julian Haviland, "Bill to stop criminal candidates", The Times, 13 June 1981, p. 2.
  29. Gay,"Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original on 21 March 2006. Retrieved 28 September 2013. (October 2004).
  30. Carol, Constitutional and administrative law, p. 112
  31. ON THIS DAY 1981: Violence erupts at Irish hunger strike protest, BBC News
  32. Washington Post, 3 May 1981, pp. 2–3.
  33. Bobby Sands profile, cain.ulst.ac.uk; accessed 20 November 2015.
  34. 1 2 O'Keeffe, "Suicide and Self-Starvation Suicide and Self-starvation", Philosophy, Vol. 59, No. 229 (Jul. 1984), pp. 349–63
  35. Malcolm Sutton. "An Index of Deaths from Conflict in Ireland". CAIN. Retrieved 7 September 2007.
  36. "A Chronology of the Conflict – 1981". CAIN. Retrieved 7 September 2007.
  37. "University of Ulster CAIN archive". Cain.ulst.ac.uk. Retrieved 26 April 2010.
  38. "1981 5 May, Margaret Thatcher House of Commons PQs". Margaret Thatcher Foundation. Retrieved 26 May 2007.
  39. 1 2 3 "Bobby Sands". The Ledger. Lakeland, Florida. 5 May 1981. Retrieved 26 April 2010 via Google News.
  40. Tom Shields (23 February 2003). "Pitch Battles; What can an English public school-type tell us about". Sunday Herald. Herald and Times Group. Retrieved 25 May 2007 via FindArticles.
  41. Lash, Scott & Lury, Celia, Global Culture Industry: The Mediation of Things, Polity, 2007, p. 49 ISBN 0-7456-2482-0
  42. "Punker siktet for majestetsfornærmelse". Oslo: Aftenposten. 7 May 1981.
  43. Colin Randall (13 August 2004). "French intelligentsia ponders what should be done with killer". The Daily Telegraph. London, UK. Retrieved 25 May 2007.
  44. 1 2 Russell, George (18 May 1981). "Shadow of a Gunman". Time. Retrieved 14 August 2007.
  45. "NYU". New York University. Retrieved 26 April 2010.
  46. "The Saga of Bobby Sands", Boston Globe, 3 May 1981.
  47. "Bobby Sands and Mahatma Gandhi", Chicago Tribune, 28 April 1981
  48. "Britain's Gift to Bobby Sands", The New York Times, 29 April 1981
  49. "The Death of Bobby Sands", San Francisco Chronicle, 6 May 1981
  50. "Sands' hunger strike and the fate of Ulster" Boston Globe, 1 May 1981, p. 9
  51. Edward Langley, "IRA brutalities, Terrorist propaganda triumphs", Chicago Tribune, 9 May 1981, W1-8-4
  52. "Leaders call Sands' death useless". Lakeland Ledger. Gatehouse Media. 16 May 1981. Retrieved 26 April 2010 via Google News.
  53. "Hunger Strikers Memorial, Hartford, CT". Irish Northern Aid Committee. Retrieved 26 April 2010.
  54. "Adams unveils Cuba memorial to Bobby Sands". BreakingNews.ie. 18 December 2001. Retrieved 25 May 2007.
  55. 1 2 3 The Times, 11 June 1981.
  56. Bobby Sands: Nothing But An Unfinished Song by Denis O'Hearn ( ISBN 978-0-7453-2572-9), p. 377
  57. Majd, Hooman. The Ayatollah Begs to Differ. Doubleday. 2008, pp. 244–45.
  58. Irlandinit-hd.de, British government pressure Ireland to change the name of Bobby Sands Street
  59. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 30 March 2008. Retrieved 8 January 2007.
  60. "Lai See". South China Morning Post. Retrieved 20 November 2015.
  61. "The Capital of Iran Has a Burger Joint Dedicated to an IRA Hunger Striker". VICE. 16 January 2015.
  62. "Over Three Decades On The Death Of Bobby Sands Still Resonates". The Huffington Post UK. Retrieved 20 November 2015.
  63. W.D. Flackes and Sydney Elliott, "Northern Ireland: A Political Directory" (Blackstaff Press, Belfast, 1999), at p. 550, notes that at the 1981 District Council elections on 20 May 1981, "the results showed a decline in support for centre parties".
  64. Nicholas Whyte. "Ark Election website". Ark.ac.uk. Retrieved 26 April 2010.
  65. A Long Strange Trip by Dennis McNally, p. 542
  66. Boyle, Mark. "Edifying the Rebellious Gael", Celtic Geographies: Old Culture, New Times (David Harvey, ed). Routledge, 2002, p. 190; ISBN 0-415-22396-2
  67. Rage Against the Machine: Articles Archived 18 April 2007 at the Wayback Machine., ratm.net; accessed 20 November 2015.
  68. "Celtic fined €50k for Bobby Sands banner". Archived from the original on 21 November 2015. Retrieved 20 November 2015. Celtic Football Club has been fined €50,000 over a banner depicting IRA hunger-striker Bobby Sands
  69. "Celtic Green Brigade's Bobby Sands Banner - Is It Offensive? (POLL)". Retrieved 20 November 2015. The Green Brigade supporters displayed a banner of Sands alongside Scottish warrior William Wallace, in an effort to highlight hypocrisy of the Scottish government, which has jailed Celtic fans for singing Republican songs in commemoration of Sands.
  70. PeterJordan (25 December 1996). "Some Mother's Son (1996)". IMDb. Retrieved 20 November 2015.
  71. info-3375 (1 October 2001). "H3 (2001)". IMDb. Retrieved 20 November 2015.
  72. Thorpe, Vanessa (11 May 2008). "Anger as new film of IRA hero Bobby Sands screens at Cannes". The Observer. London, UK. Retrieved 14 May 2008.
  73. Bobby Sands film wins Cannes award. Available on RTE.ie. Retrieved 26 May 2008.
  74. "Bobby Sands story to become movie". BBC. 16 May 2007. Retrieved 25 May 2007.
  75. Toolis, "McKevitt's inglorious career", The Observer, 10 August 2003.
  76. English, Armed Struggle: The History of the IRA, pp. 316–17
  77. "Omagh civil case 'unprecedented'". BBC News. 7 April 2008. Retrieved 11 April 2014.
  • Bobby Sands Trust official website, contains poetry and writings by Sands
  • Bobby Sands at Find a Grave
  • Biography from Irish Republican website at the Wayback Machine (archived 31 July 2008)
  • Bobby Sands diary entries & biographies of the ten hunger strikers
  • Timewatch: Hunger Strike – a Hidden History (Otmoor Productions/BBC 1993), imdb.com
  • "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2 April 2008. Retrieved 21 June 2009. secret diary written during the first seventeen days of his hunger strike, before being moved to the prison hospital.
Parliament of the United Kingdom
Preceded by
Frank Maguire
MP for Fermanagh and South Tyrone
9 April – 5 May 1981
Succeeded by
Owen Carron
Preceded by
Stephen Dorrell
Baby of the House
9 April – 5 May 1981
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