>From MCELROY@zodiac.rutgers.edu Sun May 2 19:45:38 1993 RALLY CROWD 'SPAT' ON PICTURE OF TEENAGE PLASTIC BULLET VICTIM by Conor Macauley Irish Times, Belfast. March 31, 1993 Relatives of children killed by the security forces in Northern Ireland were abused and spat upon at a peace rally in Dublin, it emerged yesterday. A dozen people, whose sons and daughters have died at the hands of the RUC and British soldiers went to Sunday's peace protest outside the GPO. But s they and about 20 supporters joined the 10,000 strong demonstration some of the crowd accused them of being IRA sympathizers whose presence defiled the rally. They were jostled and a placard bearing the picture of plastic bullet victim Julie Livingstone--a 14 year old girl killed in 1981--was spat on. Mrs. Kathleen Duffy, whose son Seamus was killed by a plastic bullet in 1989, said they had been treated with 'contempt'. "We were abused. We were treated with contempt. They asked us why we were there on their day; they said we had no right to be there; they shouted at us that we were IRA; they spat on Julie Livingstone's photograph." "Thanks be to God we went with dignity, and we walked away with dignity." In a statement issued last night, rally organizer Susan McHugh expressed 'regret' at any 'unfriendliness' shown towards any individuals or groups. The families confirmed that one of the organizers left the platform on Saturday to apologise. Street traders had given flowers for their children's graves, they said. The protest was organized in the wake of the IRA bombing in Warrington which killed four year old Jonathan Ball and Timothy Parry (12). It called for and end to violence in the names of the 121 children killed in the trouble to date. The Relatives for justice group, representing the families, asked permission on Saturday for the parents to address the rally. Spokeswoman Ann Bradley said it was refused on the grounds that it might be seen as political and cause embarrassment to the British government. Kathleen Duffy, the other relatives and Ann Bradley all stressed that they were apolitical and opposed to all murders. They have sent sympathy letters to the Warrington bomb victims' parents. Mrs. Duffy said that while a lot of reactions had been adverse. some had been sympathetic and emotional. But she said she could not comprehend how somebody attending a peace rally could 'spit on a fellow Irish person.' While she supported the rally's sentiments, she said she could not understand why, with chidden dying regularly in Northern Ireland, it had taken the murder of two English children to mobilize Irish public opinion. ******