Pubdate: Sun, 02 Sep 2007 Source: Observer, The (UK) Copyright: 2007 The Observer Contact: http://www.observer.co.uk/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/315 Author: Henry McDonald Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) TERROR GANGS FIGHT TO KEEP STREET POWER As Hoodlums Invade the Paramilitaries' Turf, the Tarring and Feathering of an Alleged Drug Dealer in Belfast, Cheered on by Locals, Signals a Return to Vigilante 'Policing'. Henry Mcdonald Reports In broad daylight, close to one of Belfast's busiest, trendiest quarters, they staged a brazen 'arrest' operation. Jock Nelson was stopped, searched and, his captors said, was found to be carrying up to six bags of crack cocaine. Although he was 'released' after the drugs were allegedly seized, Nelson's time on 'remand' was shortlived. Forty-eight hours after he was confronted on Belfast's Bradbury Place the alleged drug dealer suffered a humiliating punishment. Those who 'arrested' Nelson on Friday, 24 August, however, were not drug squad officers from the Police Service of Northern Ireland. Instead they came from that section of society offering an 'alternative justice system' to the official rule of law. Jock Nelson fell into the hands of the Ulster Defence Association, and the price he was to pay for his alleged crimes brought back memories of the darkest days of the Troubles. Last Sunday the ex-pub bouncer was tarred and feathered and a placard hung around his neck naming him as a 'drug dealing scumbag'. This act of public humiliation in front of women and children at shops in south Belfast followed a savage beating earlier that afternoon. His mother, Jean Nelson, angrily describes the charge that her son was supplying crack to teenagers as 'slander'. She has said little else except to plead for privacy and to warn reporters that her family, including her son's four children, still live on the Taughmonagh estate. She could also point out that those who carried out the attack are open to charges of hypocrisy. Loyalist and police sources told The Observer this weekend that one of the UDA's most notorious young gunmen - who also lives on the estate, and who is a former associate of Johnny 'Mad Dog' Adair - finances a major cocaine-dealing operation in south Belfast. Although he is strictly 'hands off' the dealing, his money supports a lucrative trade which operates out of a bar close to Belfast city centre. 'I wouldn't mind if they (the UDA) were genuine in wanting to rid their community of drugs,' one veteran loyalist said yesterday. 'But they themselves are up to their eyeballs in drugs in the south of the city. I know people from the east who come over to this power either on Saturday night or early on Sunday morning to buy their coke. Maybe the guy they claim is dealing was queering their pitch.' Nelson has fled Northern Ireland for Scotland and is unlikely to return to Taughmonagh. Meanwhile all traces of the deed have been erased. The spot where he was tarred and feathered has been hosed down and swept up. But the cleaning-up operation was not an act of collective atonement, motivated by shame over what had occurred. On Friday afternoon there appeared to be wide support for this most primitive form of 'justice'. On the surface Taughmonagh is a far cry from the sink estates of urban England where, according to David Cameron, anarchy reigns. The area borders the more affluent, increasingly Catholic upper-middle-class Malone. Yet even Taughmonagh has little or no graffiti on its walls; most gardens have neatly trimmed lawns and carefully tended flower beds. Apart from the odd Union Jack and Red Hand of Ulster flag flapping on street lights there is little evidence that this is a loyalist stronghold, home to Jackie McDonald, the head of the UDA. For those living on the estate, however, the fear of drugs taking hold among young people is widely held. When the victim of the 'tar and feather' attack was forced on to a main road, the placard placed around his neck and his plight filmed by mobile phone, the locals admitted there were cheers of support. Yesterday what Deborah McKinstry, 27, had to say was typical of Taughmonagh residents in their attitude to the incident. 'He was not hurt. He was humiliated, and in a way he deserved it; people like that deserve humiliation. Maybe it was not the right way to go about it, but people are dealing drugs to kids and deserve to be made an example of. There have been worse punishments in the area, OK?' Another mother on the estate, Joanne Stewart, 46, showed little sympathy. 'I know he was supposed to be dealing drugs to wee kids. Generally I don't believe in punishment beatings or anything of a violent nature, but I suppose it's a way of getting a message across.' Amy Clarke, 27, also of Taughmonagh, said Nelson got off lightly. 'I suppose he did deserve it, but was it a warning enough? It was a can of tar, cold tar and feathers.' 'That guy was the lowest of the low,' said Peter Browne. 'Nothing is being done. Kids are exposed to God knows what.' No community leaders or, indeed, local UDA members were prepared to comment. One local, who said that he was appalled by the attack, added: 'I can't talk to you, as I have to live here.' One community worker who spoke anonymously contrasted the estate with areas like Croxteth in Liverpool where teenage gangland violence led to the death of 11-year-old Rhys Jones last month. 'Why are these attacks so popular? Because working-class people over here won't tolerate scumbags and hoods taking over their areas. They've been used to paramilitaries keeping the hoods in check for years. They don't want their areas to become like them estates in England where you can't go out the door for fear of being set upon by wee thugs and criminals.' Even though places like Taughmonagh have endured 35 years in a state of near civil war, the social problems on this estate are nowhere near as grave as those in urban Britain or the Republic of Ireland. Unlike Croxteth or gun-ridden estates such as those in Limerick, ordinary criminals don't have the same access to firearms. Illegal weapons remain under the tight control of paramilitaries, who until now have resisted selling guns to local, non-political gangs. Nor are Belfast's drug problems comparable to those of Merseyside or Dublin. There is little or no market, for instance, for heroin or crack in Belfast. One senior Police Service of Northern Ireland detective said: 'Nothing moves in Taughmonagh, not even a dog, without the UDA knowing about it.' The movement's political wing - the Ulster Political Research Group - has issued vehement denials that the UDA was responsible. The MP for South Belfast, Alasdair McDonnell of the SDLP, was sceptical of this claim. He described the attack as 'the work of hypocritical criminals. No one is seriously suggesting a rival gang can operate on the Taughmonagh estate without the UDA's knowledge or blessing. I have no doubt the UDA had a hand in this. It deserves our condemnation and nothing else.' But there were few others putting themselves forward to condemn the tarring and feathering. The incident had echoes of a similarly publicly staged act of savagery carried out by the UDA nearby five years ago. Less than a mile from Taughmonagh, the UDA on the Seymour Hill estate captured and then 'crucified' on a wooden stile a notorious convicted joyrider from west Belfast. There is a feeling throughout republican and loyalist communities that their areas are spinning out of control; that young criminals who were fearful before the peace settlement of being beaten or shot by the IRA or UDA or UVF believe that they can now do whatever they want. This suspicion was realised last week in Ardoyne, a Sinn Fein stronghold in north Belfast where the IRA operated its brutal street 'justice' for decades. Last Wednesday night, youths from Ardoyne carried out a mass, unprovoked sortie into the nearby Protestant Twaddel Avenue. During the attack they hurled petrol bombs at a house where an 18-day-old baby was sleeping. The family have since fled the street. Sinn Fein condemned the violence, but appeared powerless to stop it. In recent years the IRA used its muscle to quell clashes on this sectarian interface. But now, officially disbanded and decommissioned, it is unable to act physically to prevent such incidents. There have been further examples across Belfast this summer of paramilitary 'law and order' losing its grip. On the night of 8 August, youths in the Markets area now loyal to the Continuity IRA defied Sinn Fein and built a bonfire to commemorate the 36th anniversary of internment. Emboldened by drink, mobs went on the rampage and burnt posters of Sinn Fein election candidates on the pyre alongside the Union Jack they set alight each year. It was a message of defiance and an acknowledgment that the 'hoods' know that the IRA's hands are politically tied when it comes to 'policing' their own communities. The attack at Finwood Park last Sunday - deliberately filmed not only for the Taughmonagh estate but also the world - took place in front of a church, a community centre and a row of shops. The aim was as much to reassert control of the estate as to put an alleged dealer out of business. On Friday evening a number of children were playing in thepark across from where the horrific scene was acted out. One child came up to The Observer and boasted that he had witnessed the attack. 'It was class. We just stood around laughing at it, it's his own fault,' he said, sniggering. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake