William Borland (loyalist)

William Borland
Born William John Borland
c. 1969 (age 4546)
Nationality British
Other names Bonzer
Organization Ulster Defence Association
Known for Footballer, loyalist paramilitary
Home town Belfast
Title UDA North Belfast Brigadier
Term 2003 - 2004
Predecessor Ihab Shoukri
Successor Andre Shoukri
Criminal charge Blackmail, intimidation, firearm possession
Criminal penalty Nine years imprisonment
Criminal status Released

William John "Bonzer" Borland (born c. 1969) is a Northern Irish former footballer and loyalist activist. He came to prominence in the early years of the 21st century when he served as leader of the North Belfast Brigade of the Ulster Defence Association (UDA) and, as such, one of the six commanders of the movement as a whole.

Early years

In his youth Borland was a talented footballer and he had been on the books of Linfield F.C., the most successful club in the history of the Irish Football League.[1] He also represented Cliftonville F.C., a club associated with the nationalist community in north Belfast.[2]

Borland joined the UDA's North Belfast brigade and became close to Andre Shoukri. In 2000 he was arrested along with Shoukri and his brother Ihab on charges of extortion relating to a Catholic-owned DIY shop in Glengormley on the outskirts of north Belfast.[2] Borland would ultimately serve a brief prison sentence for his involvement in this incident.[1]

Brigadier

In 2003 the North Belfast Brigade experienced a rapid turnover in leadership. Andre Shoukri, who had only succeeded Jimbo Simpson the previous year, was given a two-year prison sentence for possessing a gun.[3] According to UDA rules this meant he had to vacate his position as Brigadier, with his brother Ihab assuming the position. However, Ihab Shoukri was also arrested, along with Mo Courtney, for the murder of Alan McCullough, a former member of Johnny Adair's C Company, who was killed by the UDA after returning from exile in Bolton, despite supposedly having received assurances of his safety from the UDA leadership.[4] The Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) announced that Borland had succeeded the Shoukris as the North Belfast brigadier in September 2003 and suggested that he had ordered a series of attacks against the homes of Catholic residents on the Deerpark Road, an area sandwiched between the loyalist Glenbryn and republican Ardoyne areas.[5] Three families were driven from the area in the first week of attacks, including an elderly Protestant woman who was targeted after speaking out in support of her Catholic neighbours.[6] The incident helped set the tone for Borland's time in charge as his reign was characterised by a growing climate of fear, with the UDA's popularity amongst north Belfast's Protestants falling very low as a result.[7]

Borland's position as leader was not wholly secure, however, and Simpson saw in his appointment an opportunity to make a comeback of his own. Simpson began a whispering campaign against Borland, questioning his credentials for leadership and suggesting that he had done nothing of note during the Troubles. On 13 October 2003 a team of around forty UDA members loyal to Simpson travelled up Borland's native Crumlin Road to attack homes and premises in the Glenbryn and Ballysillan areas in order to launch Simpson's bid for reclaiming the leadership. However, the security forces had prior warning of what was to happen and a combined operation by the police and army quickly defused the situation and killed off Simpson's rebellion. In order to ensure compliance, Borland had a number of the rebels subjected to punishment shootings.[1]

For the Twelfth, in July 2004, Borland led a group of UDA members past the Ardoyne shops as followers of a contentious Orange Order parade at the interface area, despite the Parades Commission stating that the march could only pass the shops without followers. His involvement in the parade led to the Social Democratic and Labour Party's Martin Morgan threatening to resign from the Northern Ireland Policing Board after accusing the PSNI of ignoring the rulings of the Parades Commission due to Borland and the other paramilitaries being allowed to march.[8]

Shoukri's deputy

Andre Shoukri was released from prison in 2004 and returned to his earlier position of brigadier.[3] According to PSNI reports, Borland, who was a close friend and ally of Shoukri, retained a central role in the North Belfast UDA as deputy to Shoukri.[9]

In November 2005, Borland was arrested, along with Andre Shoukri, on charges of extortion. Borland and Shoukri had been recorded attempting to extort money from a worker at a local bar, Bonaparte's, whilst Borland faced separate charges of intimidating a second person and demanding the bars' keys, books and cheque books whilst possessing a gun.[10] According to evidence at the trial, the extortion had been ongoing and, early in the year, the bar manager's husband had been lured to a meeting with Shoukri and Borland where they put a gun to his head.[11]

Imprisonment

Borland, who was based in the Sunningdale district of Ballysillan near Carr's Glen at the time of the trial, was given a nine-year prison sentence after being found guilty of four charges of blackmail and one of intimidation and firearm possession in late 2007.[12]

Borland has subsequently been released and was pictured in The Irish News with Andre Shoukri attending an event to commemorate killed UDA members in north Belfast on Remembrance Day 2011.[13]

Feud

During 2013 a loyalist feud broke out in the North Belfast Brigade between the supporters of leader John Bunting and his ally John Howcroft and dissident members who wanted to replace the existing leadership with Robert Molyneaux.[14] In August 2014 as part of this internal struggle, Borland, who had become associated with the pro-Molyneaux wing, was attacked with a breeze block and shot in the leg close to his home in Carr's Glen. Following the attack both Bunting and Howcroft were arrested on suspicion of involvement.[15]

References

  1. 1 2 3 Ian S. Wood, Crimes of Loyalty: A History of the UDA, Edinburgh University Press, 2006, p. 304
  2. 1 2 Loyalists attempted to kill Catholic businessman
  3. 1 2 Vincent Kearney (21 June 2006). "Why UDA expelled 'unlikely loyalists'". BBC News Page. Retrieved 18 March 2007.
  4. Henry McDonald & Jim Cusack, UDA: Inside the Heart of Loyalist Terror, Penguin Ireland, 2004, pp. 394-396
  5. Mechanisms of Exclusion from An Phoblacht
  6. McDonald & Cusack, UDA, p. 396
  7. McDonald & Cusack, UDA, p. 397
  8. Ardoyne, 12 July — a tale of two reports
  9. Sunday Life, 20 November 2005
  10. £800,000 'spent by Shoukri in two years'
  11. Witnesses in major cases flee the north
  12. "Law catches up with terror boss Shoukri". Belfast Telegraph Page. Retrieved 1 December 2007.
  13. The Irish News, 12 November 2011
  14. UDA feud escalates over bid to oust north Belfast 'brigadier' John Bunting
  15. Fitzmaurice, Maurice (22 August 2014). "Bunting and Pal Held in UDA Feud Shooting". Daily Mirror   via HighBeam Research (subscription required) . Retrieved 18 September 2014.
Preceded by
Ihab Shoukri
Ulster Defence Association North Belfast Brigadier
2003–2004
Succeeded by
Andre Shoukri
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