The problem of the Irish nationalists and the Irish citizens of the Ulster Federation breaking between Protestant North and Catholic South is a controversial and deeply rooted, highly complex issue. There have been many attempts to solve these problems in order to regain peace on this island, but no problems have been found. Both Irish nationalists and Ulster alliances have strong reasons to fight their own causes. Over the years the parties have claimed that their final goal has achieved a small victory, but the balance of 1914 can be inclined in some way. No
In Northern Ireland, the festival of St. Patrick's Day was influenced by sects. The majority of the population is a member of the Protestant Ulster Federation and the minority is a Catholic Irish nationalist regarded as an Irish. Although this is a holiday, the Northern Ireland trade union government officially did not keep the day of St. Patrick. During the conflict known as "trouble" (the late 1960s to the late 1990s) the public St. Patrick's Day celebrations were rare and tended to be associated with the Catholic community. In 1976, at the celebration of Saint Patrick's Day in Danganon, soldiers exploded the car bomb outside the bar in a crowded paradise, four civilians were killed and many others were injured. However, some Protestant members have tried to re-declare the festival, and in 1985 the Orange Order held its own St. Patrick's Day parade.
The Liberal Party, reflecting the vote in the House for the Irish nationalists, proposed "Autonomy" to Ireland. Correspondingly, Ulster Protestant and the labor union organized Ulster volunteers. This is a paramilitary force that would threaten the government's civil war if taken. The White Star liner "Titanic" was the world's largest ship when she launched. He insisted that he was also a builder and owner of her, but in the voyage of the maiden from Southampton to New York, it collided with the iceberg and sunk in a few hours and 1,503 people died. The Titanic can carry more than 3,500 people, but the fact that you only have enough lifeboats to save 1,178 people caused a great loss of life.
In response to the Irish nationalist group, protestant loyalty and trade union community formed their own paramilitary organization. These groups include Ulster Defense Association (UDA) and Ulster Volunteer Corps (UVF). On the surface, the purpose of these groups is to protect Northern Ireland from Catholic political infringement and to stop violence by nationalists and Republican paramilitary groups. But both sides of the Northern Ireland conflict, Protestant loyalty, majority of the members, and Catholic nationalists and Republican people were involved in sectarian violence. Violence has expanded to shoots, explosions, riots, threats to neighborhoods and eviction. On the one hand, the war of liberation, on the other hand law and order, terrorism, and the fight against national security, over 3,500 people lost their lives in conflict.
"Trouble": Northern Ireland - a case study of a community losing trust in the police organization