The Northern Ireland parade season parade season is that Irish Protestant march through Northern Ireland through several Catholic regions to celebrate Orange Williams' victory at Boyne fight. These parades are held every July and are usually peaceful. But sometimes they are violent. There are many reasons for the tension between the two communities in the queue, such as land, religion, politics, history, social division.
"As early as 1963, civil rights protesters in Northern Ireland compared to Blacks in Alabama and Little Rock, and in Northern Ireland as" black people ". They intentionally sang in March, 1969. Mimic protest march at Selma Montgomery march. Strangely, protesters in Northern Ireland may find more African-American protests than many European protesters - Paris, Prague, Berlin, Rome and London. Looking at their struggle is closer to the struggle of American African Americans. "
In Northern Ireland's London Delhi, thirteen unarmed democratic civil rights demonstrations were shot by British military airborne troops at an event known as "Bloody Sunday". All Northern Catholic protesters are marching to protest British policy to detain suspicious Irish nationalists. British authorities ordered a ban on march and dispatched troops to protest protestors as the protesters advanced. The soldiers fired indiscriminately by protesters, 13 people were killed and 17 people were injured.
During the 'parade season' between the Protestant Orange Parade in Northern Ireland, the tension between the communities increased and often a violent incident occurred. The parade was held in 1690 in commemoration of William Orange's victory at Boyne's battle. It ensured Protestant control and British rule in Ireland. The special flash point led to a series of annual conflicts was Portadown's Garvaghy Road area where the drumcree church's orange parade crossed the main nationalist manor in Garvaghy Road. This parade was banned indefinitely by the nationalists against the march and against the faithful anti - riot of that ban.
In March and April 1966 Irish nationalists / Republicans marched throughout Ireland to celebrate the 50th anniversary of Easter's resurrection. On 8th March, a group of Republicans in Ireland blew up Dublin's pillar of Nelson. At that time, the Republican Army of Ireland was weak and did not participate in military operations, but some members warned that another campaign against Northern Ireland would be resumed. In April 1966, supporters led by Protestant fundamentalist missionary Ian Paisley established the Ultra Constitutional Defense Committee (UCDC). It set up a paramilitary department called Ulster Protestant Volunteers (UPV) to expel Northern Ireland Prime Minister Terence O'Neill. O'Neal is a member of a labor union, but he thinks that it is "too weak" for the civil rights movement and opposes his policy.