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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Dionysus99 (talk | contribs) at 11:17, 23 October 2007 (→‎Main Map: new section). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

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Irish name

I do not think it is acceptable to use the ga.wikipedia.org as a reference in this wiki. In any case their is less than 10 instances of the name on google. We (the english wiki) are not in the business of translating terms between languages and then presenting them as if they are the official or accepted term in a given language. If a term is not generally accepted is used then an appropriate citation must be presented on request. No original research applies here, what is on the ga.wikipedia.org website is irrelevant.

Djegan 17:44, 11 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Paragraph removed

The Royal Ulster Constabulary (RUC) was an extremely controversial police force, seen by many Catholics as a repressive institution that operated to keep them under control and deny their civil rights; some sectors within the Protestant population in Northern Ireland also despised the RUC but it was the Catholics who were the most alienated from this police force (Weitzer 1995).

I have problems with this.

  1. It is far too simplistic. It says the RUC was "seen by many Catholics as a repressive institution..." I'm a Catholic, and I'm don't agree with this simplistic summary. Yes, I've seen video of RUC officers beating lumps out of peaceful protestors. However while there may have been individuals who were unsavoury, to claim that this sort of behaviour was institutionalised without citations and counterbalancing arguments is unacceptable.
  2. "many Catholics" and "some sectors within the Protestant community" – This is far too vague for such a forceful argument. What percentage?
  3. To elaborate on counterbalancing arguments; I think if you include arguments about discrimination etc, you might want to mention that the RUC operated in one of the most extreme environments that any police force ever has. You might want to mention the amount of officers killed and injured on duty. You might also want to mention that while the religious imbalance of its membership was partly due to its image, it was also partly due to fear (i.e. Catholic men and women fearing being targetted by republican terrorist organisations).
  4. "the Catholics" – This could be termed derogatory in normal conversation and is unacceptable for an encyclopedia. I don't think you'll find any reference to "the blacks" on Wikipedia, and quite rightly. Note no reference to "the Protestants", rather "the Protestant population". Mark83 12:56, 21 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Unqualified contributions.

Having been a catholic member of the Royal Ulster Constabulary for 15 years and now the Police Service of Northern Ireland, I am shocked to see that the article on the PSNI is so inaccurate and would like to know what qualifications the author has to write it.

The Royal Ulster Constabulary has been and still is known for being the most skilled and competent Police force in the world. The RUC have been asked to assist in Bosnia, Kosovo and Iraq due to the level of professionalism within the force. The Catholic population of Northern Ireland did not have a choice to join the RUC due to the republican criminal population of Northern Ireland informing them that they could not join, and if they did they would be removed from their communities. This is common knowledge within all the communities of Northern Ireland. The catholic members of the RUC joined at their own risk and were protected by the RUC for it. It is a total misconception that the catholic communities were not welcome in the RUC and the uneducated should be aware of this. Even today the republican movement within Northern Ireland does not allow the catholic population to join the PSNI without the fear of retribution. The Royal Ulster Constabulary was not a controversial police force unless you are a member of the republican movement. Wikipedia should not be used as a resource of information due to the lack of evidential truth. Oh, and Demiurge read a proper book and not just propaganda and stop talking rubbish. Also be careful with your use of Vandalism as per the Wikipedia term - please read, Wiki vandalism is generally defined as editing a wiki in a way that is intentionally disruptive or destructive. There are four generally acknowledged types of vandalism: deletion of legitimate information, insertion of nonsense or irrelevant content, addition of unwanted commercial links (spam), and policy violations specific to that wiki. Also if you agree with including the Irish language term form the Police service of Northern Ireland then I would suggest that the inclusion of Welsh, Cornish, Ulster-scotch and Gaelic should also be on the article, otherwise Irish should not be present as it has no relevance to the PSNI. Final point at the change-over of the RUC to the PSNI every member of the PSNI was a member of the RUC so your criticisms are irrelevant. --Wallywing 15:27, 24 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]

The Polish Police Service of Northern Ireland?

A bit of lateral thinking here on the quota front: recruit Polish Catholics! Almost 1000 of the 7700 applicants to the PSNI are Polish, according to the BBC website today. Yes, clearly it is a legitimate police force, so legitimate it has to go to Poland to get Catholics who accept it. This force is a complete joke. Remember Patten (http://cain.ulst.ac.uk/issues/police/patten/recommend.htm) http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/northern_ireland/6251117.stm 89.100.195.42 13:00, 11 January 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Or could it be that these people have realised that as EU citizens they're entitled to apply for a well paid job where they won't be exploited. As a serving PSNI officer a significant number of my colleagues are from the Catholic community and most of them have joined within the last 5 years.

There has often been persecution of Catholics who choose to join the RUC or British army AND Sinn Finn still hasn't fully endorsed the PSNI or joined the police board AND there are plenty of IRA men wondering around who might attack volunteers might deter Catholic from volunteering to join the psni. Perhaps that's why they accept Polsh Catholics? In any case you cannot argue that a Polish Catholic is going to be instinctively unionist. 217.7.209.108 10:29, 7 March 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Collusion

Should collusion be mentioned in a section on this page, the stevend report goes as far as 2003 and the PSNI was founded in 2001 and has the same membership so the allegations relate to current and previous PSNI members? Frainc 09:16 24 January 2007

Policies

The PSNI has many policies why has this one been singled out? The use of informants, including children is governed by the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act (RIPA). PSNI policy by definition has to be RIPA compliant and therefore legal. There has long been a cultural issue within the republican/nationalist movement regarding the use of informants (of any age) and I suspect this section reflects that.

Uniform and Equipment

Removed: The PSNI uniform has been changed from the dark green of the RUC to British police blue, minus the "Bobby helmet".

This is untrue; the colour of the uniform is bottle green, not British police blue.

Andyhmv 00:44, 22 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]


Originally the RUC uniforms were the traditioanl blue but were changed under the Hunt reforms of the early 1970s.

This is also untrue - they were never blue. They were a much darker green that was often mistaken for black.

Recruitment

I've marked this section for questionable POV status, due to the tone of, 'ignoring the fact that "others" make up a sizable majority of the population', and use of the word "unfortunately".

I think it would be a good idea if someone could edit this to outline arguments in favour of, and against, the positive discrimination policy.

C 13:31, 23 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Positive Discrimination

The PSNI has a positive discrimination policy(that is illegal in the UK), of recruiting 50% of its officers from a Roman Catholic background and 50% from a non Roman Catholic background, in order to reverse the serious religious imbalance that existed in the RUC as recommended by the Patten Report. However the Patten Report Stated a recuitment of 50% Catholic and 50% from a Protestant Background. It is not known why the PSNI recuitment is not following the rules set out by the Patten Report or even UK Law positive discrimination The name and symbols of the organisation are designed to avoid alienating either major community. It is hoped that 30% of the force will be made up of Catholics by 2011. By 2006, 20% of PSNI officers were Catholic, compared with just 8.3% of the old RUC. The reason why Catholics didnt join the RUC was they were attacked by the own not protestants. It is also to be noted that the ROI police service does not employ from the Northern Ireland (both sides) however the PSNI has to recruit in the ROI. It must also be pointed out that the ROI police service and the mainland Police Services do not have any such recruitment - that is because they can not get away with it. Also many of the people affected by this illegal policy is taking the British and Mr Patten to the EU Human Rights. —The preceding unsigned comment was added by Craig1212 (talkcontribs) 11:19, 15 May 2007 (UTC).[reply]

Image Change

I'd like to propose a change of the image to something showing the police sub-division of Northern Ireland into policing districts as illustrated here [1]. I think the current image is too large for the limited information it's conveying, which is basically just the political division of Ireland and available on the Ireland, Northern Ireland and Republic of Ireland articles.

I can do the graphic when I get time. I'd also suggest that something similar be applied to the Garda page, but that would require someone with more knowledge and time than me. beano 12:22, 28 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Successor

It is not true to say that the PSNI is the successor to the RUC. Look at the Police (Northern Ireland) Act 1998 - the PSNI IS the RUC, it has just been renamed. The force is the Police Service of Northern Ireland incorporating Royal Ulster Constabulary GC. Traditional unionist 12:01, 1 July 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Main Map

Why is there a map of the island of Ireland rather than the country of Northern Ireland on the main page? The PSNI have no juristiction in the Republic and in most other references to Northern Ireland the just the map of the country is shown rather than the island? Dionysus99 11:17, 23 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]