
“Same old mural, same old force”. According to this board on Oldpark Road, Belfast, the PSNI is still the same as the old RUC, colluding with loyalist paramilitaries.
Click image to enlarge
Copyright © 2005 Peter Moloney
M02415



Sixteen year-old Glen “Spacer” Branagh was killed by a premature blast bomb during a riot on Remembrance Sunday, 2001. His portrait is on a board at the centre of UDA flags and guns (and the tigers of Tigers Bay).
“If the Provos and the pan nationalist front and the British and Irish governments keep trying to succeed in a united Ireland then they may prepare themselves for another 30 bloody years for the battle will have just begun.”
The term “Pan Nationalist Front” was used (first by nationalists) to describe the co-operation between John Hume (SDLP) and Gerry Adams (Sinn Féin) in 1994 that led to the IRA ceasefire and the Downing Street Declaration.
Edlingham Street, north Belfast
Click image to enlarge
Copyright © 2005 Peter Moloney
M02413 M02412 M02414


“Remembering six sons of the New Lodge: Jim Sloan, Jim McCann, Brendan Maguire, Tony ‘TC’ Campbell, John Loughran, Ambrose Hardy. Murdered by British state forces as part of the occupation of our country on the night of the 3rd and 4th February 1973”. Two of the Six (James Sloan, James McCann) were killed by the UDA outside a bar and four (Tony Campbell, Ambrose Hardy, Brendan Maguire, John Loughran) among the crowd that gathered by British Army snipers from their positions on top of the flats, using night-vision sights. Previously seen in 2002.
Donore Court, New Lodge, north Belfast
Click image to enlarge
Copyright © 2005 Peter Moloney
M02410 M02411


Volunteers from the IRA’s 3rd battalion, Belfast Brigade, Billy Reid, Sean McIlvenna, Rosemary Bleakley, and Michael Kane are shown walking down New Lodge Road. Gibraltar victim Dan McCann is included in the 16 faces in the apex. The main image is on boards while the knotwork and dedication are on brick. “I measc laochra na nGael go raıbh a nanamacha.”
Click image to enlarge
Copyright © 2005 Peter Moloney
M02409 [M04401] [M04402] M04403 [M04404]

This mural of UDA A Battalion volunteers, led by John McMichael, is a repainted version of a previous one at the same site (see 1995 M01183 and 2001 M01518). The name of Samuel Curry has been added on the right-most column. The wall in front has been painted with steps (obscured by the cars) with the words “In proud memory of our fallen comrades who lost their lives in the conflict – we forget them not.”
Rowland Way, Sandy Row, south Belfast
Click image to enlarge
Copyright © 2005 Peter Moloney
M02408

The UVF emblem is broken in two. For the whole, see C01427.
Wellwood Street, Sandy Row, south Belfast
Click image to enlarge
Copyright © 2005 Peter Moloney
M02407

The graffitied UFF mural in (the former) Albion Street, Belfast, previously seen in 2001, is repainted and the background changed to blue from white.
Click image to enlarge
Copyright © 2005 Peter Moloney
M02405

Here is the Dark Days mural – combining imagery of WWI battlefield with a quote from Deuteronomy (7.2) – towards the end of its life, in 2005. Previously seen in 2001.
Blythe Street, Sandy Row, south Belfast
Click image to enlarge
Copyright © 2005 Peter Moloney
M02404

South Belfast UDA commander Robert Dougan killed by the IRA on February 10th, 1998 while sitting in a car outside Balmoral Textiles in Dunmurry, two months before the Good Friday Agreement was signed. “Murdered by the enemies 10th February 1998. In memory of our fallen comrade – gone but not forgotten. Quis separabit.”
Blythe Street, Sandy Row, south Belfast
Click image to enlarge
Copyright © 2005 Peter Moloney
M02402