Irish republicans opposed to the 1998 peace agreement that ended the Troubles
Dissident republicans (Irish: poblachtach easaontach)[1] are Irish republicans who do not support the Northern Ireland peace process. The peace agreements followed a 30-year conflict known as the Troubles, in which over 3,500 people were killed and 47,500 injured,[2] and in which republican paramilitary groups such as the Provisional Irish Republican Army waged a campaign to bring about a united Ireland. Negotiations in the 1990s led to a Provisional IRA ceasefire in 1994 and to the Good Friday Agreement of 1998.[3][4] Mainstream republicans, represented by Sinn Féin, supported the Agreement as a means of achieving Irish unity peacefully.[5] Dissidents saw this as an abandonment of the goal of an independent Irish republic and acceptance of partition.[6] They hold that the Northern Ireland Assembly and Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) are illegitimate and see the PSNI as a British paramilitary police force.[7]
Since the IRA ceasefire, splinter groups have continued an armed campaign against the British security forces in Northern Ireland. Like the Provisional IRA, each of these groups sees itself as the only rightful successor of the original IRA and each calls itself simply "the IRA", or Óglaigh na hÉireann in Irish (see also Irish republican legitimism).
Groups currently described as dissident republican
^Whitehead, Tom (24 November 2014). "Is Isil the greatest terror threat?". The Daily Telegraph. Archived from the original on 25 November 2014. Retrieved 6 April 2024. It is estimated some 3,530 people died during the Troubles on all sides and more than 47,500 were injured.
^Hoey, Paddy (7 January 2019). "Dissident and dissenting republicanism: From the Good Friday/Belfast Agreement to Brexit". Capital & Class. 43 (1). Conference of Socialist Economists: 73–87. doi:10.1177/030981681881808. This tradition of fractious factionalism became concentrated again in this period because the Good Friday/Belfast Agreement effectively solidified partition and delivered few of the key political aspirations of the Republican movement.
^Goulding, Stephen; McCroy, Amy (2021). "Representing the (un)finished revolution in Belfast's political murals". Critical Discourse Studies. 18 (5): 557. doi:10.1080/17405904.2020.1777176. Dissident Republican is an umbrella terms for splinter groups who (1) rejected the constitutional compromise accepted by PIRA in the GFA in 1998; and, (2) view the PSNI as an illegitimate, imperial paramilitary group.
^Ross, F. Stuart (2012). "It Hasn't Gone Away You Know: Irish Republican Violence in the Post-Agreement Era". Nordic Irish Studies. 11 (2). Dalarna University Centre for Irish Studies: 65–66. eISSN2002-4517. JSTOR41702636. OCLC9980256269.