
Last modified: 2013-05-18 by rob raeside
Keywords: northern ireland | 
Links: FOTW homepage |
search | 
disclaimer and copyright | 
write us | 
mirrors
There was the Flags and Emblems Act of 1954. According to Chris Ryder in The RUC: A Force Under Fire (London: Mandarin, 1992) this act:
'outlawed the display of a flag likely to cause a breach of the peace - clearly the Irish tricolour - and made it an offence to interfere with the display of the Union flag.' (p. 82).
Jan Oskar Engene, 8 March 1996
The act of the Northern Ireland Parliament (1922-1973) was repealed by the UK Parliament sometime in the 1980s.
Roy Stilling, 8 March 1996
The publication of the report,
Transforming 
Conflict: Flags and Emblems by Dominic Bryan and Gordon Gillespie, Institute 
of Irish Studies, Queen's University, Belfast, March 2005, puts a different spin 
on this. 
Regarding the contribution above by Jan Oskar Engene, this is the Flags and 
Emblems (Display) Act (Northern Ireland) 1954, passed by the now non-existent 
Northern Ireland Parliament. The quoted author is probably partisan in his 
interpretation of the Act ["clearly the Irish tricolour"], as the above cited 
report states that under Section 2(1) of the above referenced act, the police 
were given the power to "order a person who erected an 'emblem' to remove it, or 
for the officer to remove it, if the officer felt it would lead to a breach of 
the peace."  However, there was a specific exemption for the Union Flag 
under Section 2(4), which was excluded from the provisions of the Act. There is 
no reference to the flag of any other nation. 
The above cited Queen's University report states that "The only recent 
legislation dealing specifically with flags has been the Flags (Northern 
Ireland) Order 2000 which gives the Secretary of State for Northern Ireland 
power to make regulations regarding the flying of flags at government buildings 
(s.3(1))." (Paragraph 3.7 of the report)
The report goes on to provide in detail further examples of legislation which 
applies to the operation of Government policies in Northern Ireland more 
generally, not specific to flags and emblems, but including its implementation 
of policies on these, viz Terrorism Act 2000, Fair Employment and Treatment 
(Northern Ireland) Order 1998, Northern Ireland Act 1998, Human Rights Act 1998, 
Article 10 European Convention on Human Rights, Lawful limitation of Convention 
rights, Public Processions (NI) Act 1998) (Secretary of State can "revoke" or 
"amend" banners to be carried by parade participants), Protection of the Person 
and Property (Northern Ireland) Act 1969, Conspiracy and Protection of Property 
Act 1875, Public Order (NI) Order 1987, Protection from Harassment (NI) Order 
1997, Fair Employment and Treatment Order (Amendment) Regulations (Northern 
Ireland) 2003, various council powers and by-laws and torts.
Colin Dobson, 27 February 2006
Some may be interested in reading the report of the Ad Hoc Committee of The 
Northern Ireland Assembly (www.niassembly.gov.uk) on the Draft Flag Order (as 
the Flags (Northern Ireland) Order 2000 then was). At the time of the report I 
was working for a member of the committee.
Michael Carchrie Campbell, 27 February 2006
I am listening / watching this debate from Tuesday 25th February in the Northern Ireland Assembly ... it is merely a proposal to have an ad hoc committee to discuss flags, symbols and emblems ... and it is a bitter acrimonious row. The following links may be of interest:
See also: