Hunger Strike: Margaret Thatcher’s Battle with the IRA, 1980-1981

€28.00

The hunger strikes of 1980-81 were a confrontation between British Prime Minister Margaret
Thatcher and the iron will of Irish republican prisoners in the H-Blocks of Long Kesh, in an
attempt to break the British policy of criminalising paramilitary prisoners. The prisoners’
ultimate demand, to be granted a ‘special category status’ that distinguished them from
other prisoners, led to two hunger strikes. The first, in 1980, ended without success for the
prisoners; the second, led by Bobby Sands, resulted in ten prisoners starving themselves to
death. The consequences of the hunger strikes changed Irish politics and British-Irish relations
forever, beginning the long path to eventual peace with the signing of the Good Friday
Agreement in 1998.

Now, with the release of recently declassified documents, Thomas Hennessey forensically
examines the origins and evolution of the prisons dispute, leading up to the first hunger
strike of 1980, and setting the scene for the final confrontation with the British Government
in 1981. Alongside republican protagonists – Bobby Sands and Gerry Adams – Margaret
Thatcher’s personal role in the hunger strikes is analysed in detail, including her clashes
with Charles Haughey and Garret FitzGerald, and also revealing her authorisation of the
backchannel between MI6 and the IRA. Hennessey also addresses the controversial issues
surrounding the hunger strike, in particular, whether there was a deal on the table that
could have ended the strike in July 1981, and whether it was accepted by the prisoners in
the H-Blocks.

Hunger Strike is the definitive account of one of the seminal events in modern Irish history.

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ISBN:
9780716531760
Author:
Thomas Hennessey