English, asked by wwwaryajain4157, 1 year ago

Water is
more lethal than terror

Answers

Answered by Khushideswal111
0
IRELAND WAS TOLD by the UK Government thirty years ago that using water cannons on rioters in Northern Ireland could be “more lethal than plastic bullets”.

According to a confidential government document released under the 30 Year Rule, the claim was made by the UK’s Secretary of State for Northern Ireland James Prior in a meeting with Irish Foreign Affairs Minister Peter Barry in October 1983.

During the course of the Troubles, 17 people were killed by either rubber or plastic bullets. Eight of these deaths were to children under the age of 18.

These weapons were often described as “non-lethal” by the security forces but the deaths plainly show that this was not the case.

Rubber bullets are often prone to ricocheting and hitting unintended targets, sometimes grievously or fatally. The same is the case for plastic bullets which were introduced later and are lethal at close range.

All but one of the 17 who died from ‘baton rounds’ were from the Catholic community in Northern Ireland.

In the Hillsborough meeting, Minister Berry appeared to be seeking reassurance that alternative crowd control methods were being examined, but Prior defended the use of plastic bullets.

The minutes of the meeting recall the exchange:

Mr. Prior said that only two bullets had been fired in September…He felt that this element of control had an effect. They were not being indiscriminately used as in earlier times. The last death had been in May 1982.

Barry sought information on whether “there was any progress in developing new tactics that would obviate the need for plastic bullets.”

Prior said that ‘tests with water cannon had indicated that their use might be more lethal than plastic bullets”.

Water cannons were eventually introduced in Northern Ireland in 2008

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