Orangemen ‘determined’ to overturn Drumcree ban

Parades Commission has prohibited Garvaghy Road section of parade since 1998

Orangemen on Garvaghy Road on their way to Drumcree in 2000. Photograph: Bryan O’Brien

Orangemen banned for 20 years from completing the controversial Drumcree parade have insisted their determination to overturn the prohibition has not dimmed.

The parade in Portadown, Co Armagh was a major flashpoint in the 1990s and early 2000s, with the annual event marred by intense violence on a number of occasions.

While tensions have dissipated over the last two decades, Portadown Orangemen continue to campaign to be allowed to walk along the predominantly nationalist Garvaghy Road. They hold a small protest every week.

The Parades Commission, the government-appointed panel that adjudicates on contentious marches, has prohibited the Garvaghy section of the parade since 1998.

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At the annual main Drumcree parade on Sunday, Darryl Hewitt, the Grand Master of Portadown District LOL (Loyal Orange Order) No 1, accused the Commission of “pandering to a hard-line republican agenda”.

He challenged Northern Ireland Secretary James Brokenshire to dismiss the Commission members.

‘Show some mettle’

“They must go and the call from this place this afternoon is that the Secretary of State must show some mettle, and once and for all sack the whole lot of them,” he said.

“However, we attempt to complete our parade each and every Sunday — a fact that most people in Northern Ireland are not aware of.

"This has been the case since July 1998 when our late District Master Harold Gracey said that we would remain on protest until our rights have been restored.

“Our resolve has not diminished over the weeks, months and indeed years.

“No-one should be in any doubt, Portadown District are in this for the long haul. We will not be deflected from seeking to achieve our objective.”

In its determination on the 2017 Drumcree parade, the Commission said preventing Orangemen from accessing the Garvaghy Road was “necessary, proportionate and fair”.

Commissioners said there was no consensus between Orangemen and nationalist residents on the format of any potential future talks to mediate a resolution.

In the absence of any locally-agreed accommodation, the Commission said there would be a “high potential for public disorder” if the parade was allowed to proceed on its notified route.

A proposal to transfer the responsibility for regulating parades from Westminster to Northern Ireland politicians was agreed in the 2014 Stormont House Agreement.

That plan, which would have seen Stormont ministers developing a new way to manage parades and protests, has yet to materialise, amid ongoing political stalemate in Belfast.