
Addressing around 800 republicans, who had travelled from all across the island for the 1916 Societies event, he told them to “rally the forces” against British imperialism.
The Tyrone man spent 53 days on the first H-Block hunger strike while serving a life sentence for the murder of UDR man Stanley Adams, 29, in 1980.
Branding Stormont a “venial, futile, powerless institution”, he also hit out at the Dail, which he said was “devoid of character” and “trading on the sovereignty of its people”.
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In a not-so-veiled attack on republican politicians he told the men, women and children gathered that republicanism is a cause “that stands above and beyond the selfish pursuit of self aggrandisement”.
Adding that a “genuine republican” would “give what they have without concern for personal safety, personal advancement or personal career”.
“We are challenged to find the unity of purpose and bring together the currents, forces and streams of people,” he added. “We have to rally the forces. Rally the people that will break the chains that bind us.”
The annual commemoration, now in its fourth year, was marked with a parade from Galbally Community Centre to St Joseph’s Chapel.
Families and ‘blanket men’ followed a colour party and five bands to the grave of hunger striker Martin Hurson, where between songs and speakers, wreaths were laid and the names of dead hunger strikers and the 1916 Proclamation read out.