Irish Hunger Strikers Michael Gaughan (1950-1974)
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Michael Gaughan, the eldest of six children, was born in Ballina,
Co Mayo. After finishing his schooling, he left Ireland for England, in search
of work. Whilst in England, he joined the IRA and became an active Volunteer
in a London-based ASU. During a fundraising mission, he was captured and ultimately
convicted of arms possession and conspiracy to rob £530 from a London
bank.
He was initially sent to Wormwood Scrubs, where he spent two years before being
transferred to Albany Prison. In Albany, Gaughan requested political status.
Prison officials responded to his request by placing him in a solitary punishment
cell.
Eventually, he was transferred to Parkhurst prison where four
of the Belfast Ten were on hungerstrike for political status. On March 31st,
1974, Michael Gaughan, along with Frank Stagg, Paul Holme, and Hugh Feeney,
joined the strike.
Force-Feeding
British policy at this time was to force feed hungerstrikers in a particularly
brutal manner: Six to eight guards would restrain the prisoner and drag him
or her by the hair to the top of the bed, where they would stretch the prisoners
neck over the metal rail, force a block between his or her teeth and then pass
a feeding tube, which extended down the throat, through a hole in the block.
The process would leave the prisoner bruised and battered. And, even on an unconscious individual, it carried the additional danger of the tube passing mistakenly into the trachea and the lungs rather than into the esophagus and stomach.
Michael Gaughan suffered this brutal procedure seventeen times in the course of his hungerstrike. The last time was on 2 June, the night before his death. On 3rd June, 1974, he died from injuries suffered when food lodged in a lung punctured by a feeding tube. He had been on hungerstrike 67 days. He was 24 years old.
Michael Gaughan left a final message for his comrades and his country:
I die proudly for my country and in the hope that my death
will be sufficient to obtain the demands of my comrades. Let there be no bitterness
on my behalf, but a determination to achieve the new Ireland for which I gladly
die. My loyalty and confidence is to the IRA and let those of you who are left
carry on the work and finish the fight.