Reforming the UDR?

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Reforming the UDR?
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From the 1st July 1992, the 76th anniversary of the Battle of the
Somme, the Ulster Defence Regiment will be merged with the Royal
Irish Rangers to become the Royal Irish Regiment. The UDR, a
force of full- and part-time soldiers which includes 700 women
(known as `greenfinches'), is currently around 6,200 strong, all
recruited from within Northern Ireland aside from a few senior
officers drawn from other regiments of the British Army. Only
about 3% of the regiment come from the minority Catholic
community. Approximately 50% of the UDR are full-time members.
In all, some 45,000 people have passed through the ranks of the
UDR in its 21 year history.
The Royal Irish Rangers, current strength around 1,300, will
lose a battalion and the new combined regiment will number 6,750.
The Rangers are said to be 30% Catholic with half this figure
recruited from south of the border. On this basis the new
regiment's seven `home service battalions' for duty in the North
will not have a significantly higher proportion of Catholic
members than the UDR at present.
The re-styling of the UDR came as part of Defence Secretary Tom
King's restructuring of the British Army announced on 23rd July,
the `Options for Change' Review. The overall plan involves a
reduction of 40,000 troops and the cutting of the 55 infantry
battalions to 38, which will contain around 116,000. Close on one
third of the infantry is likely to be committed to the North of
Ireland at any one time.
At the press conference announcing the new regiment, the
commander of the British Army in Northern Ireland, Lt General Sir
John Wilsey, admitted that the UDR had a serious image problem,
although he claimed that the formation of the Royal Irish
Regiment was a military, not political, decision. He said, `now
the UDR has not sought to be sectarian, one-sided or filled its
ranks with Protestants, but that's the way it turned out'. He
hoped that the new regiment would be a `pan-Irish regiment which
attracts to its ranks from all parts of the community and beyond
from the South'.
Sir Wilsey was speaking just three weeks after the Queen
inspected the UDR at Lisburn on her first visit to the North
since 1977. Her short speech of endorsement of the regiment was
described by one columnist as `a politicised demarche that can
only be regarded as untimely and hamfisted'.
The UDR was formed in 1970 on the recommendation of the Hunt
Report (Report of the Advisory Committee on the Police in
Northern Ireland). Hunt proposed the UDR as a replacement for the
notorious `B' Specials, the exclusively Protestant auxiliary
police force which had been in existence since partition. The
UDR's reputation never escaped its origins.
Three things have discredited the regiment. Firstly, there is
a relatively high rate of recorded criminality among its members.
Between 1985 and 1989, UDR members were twice as likely to commit
a crime as the general public. The UDR crime rate was ten times
that of the RUC and about four times the British Army rate.
Around 120 members/ex-members of the regiment are serving prison
sentences for serious crimes, including 17 who have been
convicted of murder. Four of these (the UDR Four) are serving
life for the murder of Adrian Carroll for which they were
convicted in 1986. The four - Neil Latimer, Noel Bell, James
Hegan and Winston Allen - are protesting their innocence on the
grounds that the only evidence against them was based on
confessions, later retracted, made in Castlereagh Holding Centre,
and contested eye witness accounts from two people. In July, the
Secretary of State referred the case back to the Appeal Court.
The second problem with the UDR concerns the alleged links
between its members and loyalist paramilitary groups. This
`collusion' has amongst other things taken the form of sectarian
assassinations, thefts of arms and the passing on of details of
republicans,

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