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£7.99 |
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Synopsis
"You go to work, and you might be shot dead. You imagine being
horribly maimed in a bomb blast. You come home and wonder if you'll be
shot at the front door. You go to bed with a revolver on the bedside
cabinet. At times you wonder if this is really part of the UK."
This was the world inhabited by Richard Latham during his service with
the Royal Ulster Constabulary - a force that remains an institution of
contradictions and intrigue to many outside observers. Considered by
some to be one of the finest police forces in the world, its officers
are looked upon by others as evil storm-troopers of Unionism and the
British Government. The RUC is now a force undergoing sweeping change in
response to Republican demands, yet for 30 years it stood alongside the
British Army in a war that killed over 300 policemen and injured
thousands more. For 14 years, Latham, an Englishman, served as a police
officer, both in England and in Northern Ireland, before transferring
from the English Special Branch to the RUC in 1991. This is his story,
giving his insight into the grim reality of policing Ulster. The book
brings to light incidents of racism and religious bias experienced by
the author himself. It looks behind the scenes to reveal the extremes of
behaviour, alcohol abuse, womanising and petty corruption that happened.
Paperback
204 pages (6 September, 2001)
Publisher: Mainstream Publishing
ISBN: 1840185120
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