Tuesday, May 29, 2012

On Thursday Vote NO




 Having an ice cream before the speech

The last few weeks have been even busier than usual for this blog. The run in to the weekend Ard Fheis was hectic accompanied as it was with campaigning in the Fiscal referendum treaty which takes place on Thursday.

We arrived in the Kingdom last Friday afternoon in time to do a run through on the Presidential speech before the Ard Fheis began at 5.30pm.

Each speech has to be approached differently. Sometimes it’s enough to have speaking points to work from. Sometimes you speak without notes. Sometimes there will be a script around which you can ad lib. But the Ard Fheis speech is counted down to the last word. There is a fixed length of time and little opportunity to make a mistake or be spontaneous. It is a very rigid structure and made all the more so because you have 3000 words or so to deal with the big issues of the day while setting out the republican vision and explaining how republican solutions would come at problems differently.

The Ard Fheis speech is changed right up to the last minute which causes some concern, especially for the RTE crew who are trying to ensure that it all runs smoothly.

The weather in the Kingdom was spectacular. One BBC journalist from Belfast mused that as he got off his plane at Kerry airport he thought he had landed in Spain! The sky was blue, there was a light haze over the mountains and a gentle breeze, and the heat was intense.

As Ard Fheiseanna go Killarney’s must rank as one of the hottest – weather wise that is. It was the first topic of conversation in the morning and the start of every conversation before the delegates began to talk politics.



The National Convention Centre looked well. The delegates were attentive; the speakers articulate and enthusiastic. It was by general acclamation a very good Ard Fheis. Even the media coverage wasn’t bad.

But predictably a lot of the interest in my remarks was centred on the austerity treaty. In particular exactly how long I was going to devote to it in my speech. RTE had invited the Taoiseach, Enda Kenny to respond to my criticism of the treaty by giving him the same amount of time I used.

As it turned out he got half a minute longer.

It would have been easier and more informative for the public if Mr. Kenny, as leader of the YES side, had simply agreed to a debate with me but he refused.

Some accused him of running away but that wasn’t the real reason. When the Fianna Fáil leader challenged him on this last week the Taoiseach said;

“Were I to cave in to the pressure that has been around for some days I would be elevating Deputy Adams to the position of Leader of the Opposition …”

And as he made his way into a Cabinet meeting on Tuesday morning the Taoiseach’s response to the possibility of a debate was even more tetchy than usual. He said: “I am not going to be shoved around by Sinn Féin. I am not going to give a platform to somebody who I don't regard as the leader of the Opposition to propagate what are blatant lies and hypocritical assertions."

That doesn't show much respect to the electorate or the intelligence of Irish people.

Fine Gael and Labour are happy with Fianna Fail sitting across the chamber from them acting out the role of an opposition party.

Why wouldn’t they be? After all they are implementing Fianna Fáil policy. It is Sinn Féin that is holding this bad government to account and challenging it’s decisions and policies on the floor of the Dáil and the Seanad.

With their junior partners in Labour reeling from one bad opinion poll result after another the last thing Fine Gael want to do is be forced into treating Sinn Fein as the main opposition party.

It is also now just two days to the referendum vote. As Enda Kenny remarked this is more important a vote than electing a government because the longer term implications for the state are so grave.

Last night in Dublin Sinn Féin held a packed last political rally calling for a NO vote. There were hundreds in the rotunda and genuine enthusiasm about making one last major push for a NO vote.

It’s all to play for. There are many citizens who still haven’t made up their mind about this treaty - and although I have a healthy disregard for polls - the general trend in recent weeks suggests that the gap is beginning to narrow.

As well as the huge number of people who haven’t yet made up their minds, there are many others who feel they are being coerced into voting YES by the scare tactics of Fine Gael, Labour and Fianna Fail.

So, let’s get out there and make it happen. Austerity isn’t working now and won’t start working on 1st June. Neither will it bring stability or certainty. It will mean more cuts. Join with the millions across Europe who are demanding an end to austerity.

It is a good and patriotic and positive action to say NO to a Treaty that is bad for you, bad for your family and community, bad for society and entirely without any social or economic merit.

On Thursday. Vote No.





Terry O Sullivan, President of the International Labourers Union of North America who presented Martin and I with their annual award.


Sunday, May 20, 2012

Protecting our National Heritage



Fionnuala Flannagan and Gerry Adams walk down Moore Lane with representatives of the Famileis of the 1916 Leaders.


 All nations have their heroes; men and women who in war and peace overcome adversity and succeed in changing the course of history. In so doing they advance the cause of freedom and the betterment of citizens.

Some are the stuff of myth like the Greek and Norse gods of old, like Hercules and Thor. Every culture has them. Some are real but their actions become the stuff of legend and the stories of their deeds change in the telling over millennia; Fionn Mac Cumhaill and his band of soldiers, the Fianna, or the Ulster hero Cú Chulainn.

But often these are real people who in remarkable acts of leadership and courage and self sacrifice transform the world around them. Leonidas and his 300 Spartans at the pass of Thermopylae, Travis and Bowie at the Alamo, Mandela through his decades of imprisonment and inspired leadership as President, Ghandi and Martin Luther King, Bobby Sands and his nine comrades in the H Blocks. Every nation has them. And when times are tough the names of heroes dead can enthuse a new generation to greatness.

Ireland is no different. Our small island has a rich history of such heroism – mostly as a consequence of colonisation and resistance to it.

The 1916 Rising is one such act of resistance that has had a profound impact not just of Ireland but also the world.

96 years ago the British Empire was the largest ever to have existed in human history. It covered a quarter of the globe and controlled the lives of nearly 500m million or one fifth of the earth’s peoples. It stretched around the world. It was the superpower of its day and it exploited its colonies ruthlessly.

Undaunted by this a relatively small number of men and women in Dublin and other parts of the island struck for freedom at Easter 1916. After five days of intense fighting and with much of the GPO and O Connell Street in flames or destroyed the 300 strong garrison of the GPO evacuated the building to join with other garrisons to continue the fight. In the late evening of Friday April 28th they retreated into the lanes of Henry Street.

There was intense fire from British troops. So the volunteers smashed their way into Moore Street terrace through number 10 which was then Coogan’s Grocers. The republicans tunnelled their way through the walls the length of the terrace with the leadership of Padraig Pearse, Joseph Plunkett, Tom Clarke, Sean Mac Diarmada and a badly wounded James Connolly setting up their head quarters in Number 16.

When it became obvious that there was no way to escape from the area, and concerned for the hardships the conflict was inflicting on the civilian population, the leadership took the decision to surrender. Elizabeth O Farrell made the first dangerous journey to speak to the British General and then it was Pearse who walked to Parnell Street where he formally signed the surrender document.

The republican garrison then marched in ranks up Moore Street to Parnell Street and over to the grounds of the Rotunda Hospital where they were held. Clarke was stripped and abused by British soldiers before being taking away for court martial and execution.

The Taoiseach Enda Kenny has described this area as the ‘lanes of history’ and he is right. From Tom Clarke’s shop on Parnell Street, to the GPO, to Moore Lane and Street where the Garrison retreated, to the spot where one of the leaders ‘The O'Rahilly’ died, to the location of the surrender, to the Rotunda where the garrison was held by the British; these are all places intimately connected to the Rising.

Now they are under threat. Not from the British but from a developer. And while numbers 14 to 17 Moore Street have been designated as a National Monument, only the outside skin of these buildings will remain if a developer, Joe O Reilly, has his way and the whole area is turned into a shopping complex.



Outside Number 16 Moore Street

The developer is in NAMA who are now considering funding this development. In other words Irish taxpayers, Irish citizens may be asked to pay for the vandalising of a national monument.

In recent years this blog has travelled to many other countries. Whether it was the World Heritage site that used to be Robbin island prison under apartheid, or Independence Hall in Philadelphia where the Declaration of Independence and the United States Constitution were debated and adopted; or the Place de la Bastille in Paris where the Bastille prison stood and whose fall was the first act in the French revolution.

Other states take pride in their history and celebrate their struggle for freedom.





The Relatives Present their plan to Gerry Adams and Fionnuala Flannagan

The National Monument that is 14-17 Moore Street in Dublin is a disgrace. It and the terrace it is part of are a derelict slum. It is an insult to the memory of those men and women who it should honour.

Last Friday I visited Moore Street along with the relatives of the leaders who were executed and Fionnuala Flannagan. The relatives have been campaigning for many years for the government to protect and develop this site on behalf of the Irish people.

This week Sinn Féin is introducing into the Dáil a Private Members motion that seeks to do this. The motion was written in conjunction with the relatives and reflects their view of what needs to be done. Thus far 50 opposition TDs have signed up in support of it. I see no reason why the government parties cannot also support it.



Text of Private Members Motion:


That Dáil Éireann –

- Looking forward to the centenary of the 1916 Easter Rising and the Proclamation of the Irish Republic, a landmark in the history of the people of Ireland;

- Recalling that in January 2007, the Minister for the Environment, Heritage and Local Government placed a preservation order on Nos. 14-17 Moore Street, Dublin, under section 8 of the National Monuments Act 1930, on the grounds that the buildings are of national importance by reason of their historical significance as the final headquarters of the 1916 Provisional Government;

- Acknowledging the hard work of the relatives of the Signatories to the 1916 Proclamation of Independence in raising public awareness of the importance of these historic buildings and this historic area of our capital city and in securing the designation of the national monument;

- Viewing with serious concern the deterioration of the national monument which has languished in a vacant and neglected state for many years and the potential threat to the monument under a current planning application;

Resolves to:

- Ensure that the 1916 National Monument at 14-17 Moore St. is fully protected and preserved in its entirety as designated and that the surrounding buildings streets and laneways are retained in such a manner that the potential to develop this area into a 1916 historic/cultural quarter can be fulfilled;

and calls on the Minister for Arts, Heritage and Gaeltacht Affairs to act without further delay to ensure the full preservation of the national monument and to develop a plan to transform the GPO/Moore St. area into an historic quarter and battlefield site so as to protect and preserve the 1916 National Monument and the associated streetscapes and laneways, thus greatly enhancing our national heritage and tourist potential in our capital city as we approach the centenary of the Easter Rising. – Gerry Adams, Sandra McLellan.



Outside Number 16 Moore Street

Wednesday, May 16, 2012

A Tale of Two Worlds

This is a tale of two worlds. One rich and powerful. The other desperately poor, destitute and on the brink of the abyss.

The economic crisis in Europe and the impact of austerity policies in Greece, Spain, Italy and in the Irish state are dominating the news agenda at this time. The talk is of billions of euro. Greece owes hundreds of billions. Spanish banks owe billions. The Irish government has given over €20 billion to bad banks to pay off private banking debt. French banks hold billions of euro of Greek debt – and are watching anxiously the unfolding crisis in that state. And then there is the European Financial Stability Facility with its €200 plus billion and the European Stability Mechanism which has €700 billion. Billions and billions and more billions.

If it were not for the dire social consequences of the austerity policies the reader could be forgiven for thinking this is all about monopoly money.

A few hundred miles south of the European Union there is another world – a wretched world of poverty and hunger where 220,000 children regularly die each year from malnourishment and where one in five children will die before they reach the age of five and which now faces its greatest threat.

The Sahel region cuts a wide swathe across north Africa from the Atlantic Ocean in the west to the Red Sea in the east. The 12 states that make up the area are already among the most impoverished countries in the world. Today they face an unparalleled humanitarian disaster.

Of the 187 states that make up the UN human development index Niger is ranked 186, Chad is 183, Burkina Faso 181 and Mali 175.

The Sahel has endured cyclical crises around food and water but usually it afflicts one or two states at any time. This year at least 8 states are affected and between 15 million and 23 million people are at grave risk, among them one million children and hundreds of thousands of pregnant women.

This crisis is not unexpected. In January the EU’s crisis response Commissioner Kristalina Georgieva visited Niger and Chad and warned that, ‘we are running out of time.’

Six months ago the UN World Food Programme was warning of a pending catastrophe. It identified the points of crisis, the states affected and the likely cost of dealing with this effectively. It estimated that it would need around $700 million.

This is a large amount of money but it pales into insignificance when set against the billions being spoken of in Europe or the billions more in the budgets of the rich states that make up what is called the developed or first world.

Thus far only about half the money needed by the UN has been received. The main aid agencies; World Vision, Action against Hunger, Save the Children and Oxfam and others like Concern, are urgently trying to raise money also. But they currently have only achieved 20% of their goal of $250 million.

The reports from the region are reminiscent of the accounts from the Ireland at the time of the Great Hunger when the dead lay at the side of roads their mouths green from eating grass.

One World Food Programme worker described what he has recently witnessed in the Sahel: ‘I’ve been to areas where some communities are reduced to eating wild plants, wild berries. Things that normally animals would eat. And they have no way of feeding themselves and their children. So you could say that technically in certain parts of the Sahel people are desperate and have nothing, literally nothing, left to eat but wild leaves.’

An aid worker with World Vision described the situation in Mauritania where many refugees from Mali have sought refuge. He said: ‘People are arriving with nothing. They’re living in camps which are just sheets on sticks with a few pots and pans. And there’s a fierce wind blowing across the desert. The heat is unbearable. And so there we’re able to see the extent of that suffering already playing out in those refugee camps.’

The reasons for this crisis are many. Climate change and drought are important factors. So too are issues like poverty, population growth, poor government and political infrastructure and governance systems, a lack of money, and the impact of several conflicts which have forced hundreds of thousands to be displaced.

It is generally accepted that a significant cause for the latter was the conflict in Libya which saw many foreign workers from the Sahel forced to return home. This has led to a loss of income into already very poor areas and increased instability.

A conflict in Mali has seen an estimated 160,000 people forced to flee their homes into neighbouring states whose resources are at breaking point. Another 200,000 Malians have fled their homes within the Mali state adding to its crisis.

All of this is contributing to an increasingly desperate situation.

In this tale of two worlds there is an onus on the richer world - despite its economic difficulties – to reach across the Mediterranean Sea and into the Sahel to provide the food and medicines and sustainable investment our neighbours need to live.

The EU, which is the biggest contributor of aid to the region needs to do more, both in direct funding and in pushing individual EU states and other countries to contribute. But there is a more fundamental issue that must be addressed – how to build indigenous sustainable economic and agricultural systems that can meet the challenges of nature and man without whole populations being put at risk of starvation and disease.













Wednesday, May 9, 2012

Where now for Europe?

There have been a whole series of elections in European states in the last week. Voters in Britain, Italy, Greece, Germany and France have all gone to the polls. Most of the media focus has been on the electoral outcomes in France, with the election of a Socialist President Francois Hollande, and on Greece where the government parties saw their support sharply decline.

In effect the elections in France and Greece were referendums on the strategy of austerity which French President Nicolas Sarkozy and German Chancellor Angela Merkel championed and successfully imposed on the EU in the last two years – austerity lost!

The defeat of Sarkozy and of other conservative parties and governments is evidence of a tide of change that is taking place in many European countries.

Since the economic crisis gripped Europe the conservative governments that dominate the EU have pursued austerity policies. In March they agreed to the introduction of an Austerity (Fiscal Compact) Treaty.

The result of this ideological adherence to austerity has been a deepening of the economic and banking crisis within Europe. State deficits have increased, public services have been slashed, unemployment has soared and poverty has increased.

Nowhere has this been more apparent than in the south of Ireland. Since 2008 there have been five austerity budgets and €24.6 billion worth of cuts. Government growth predictions for the economy have had to be reduced time and time again. In that same period the Irish state has seen its exchequer deficit – which austerity was supposed to cut - double from €12.7 billion in 2008 to €24.9 billion in 2011.

At the same time the social and human consequences of the austerity policies pursued by the government has been grave. Almost 15% or half a million citizens are out of work; emigration is again widespread; huge cuts have been inflicted on health and education and other public services; and new taxes have added to the distress of households.

Ordinary citizens understand, better than the governments of Europe and the spin doctors of austerity that you can’t cut your way out of a recession. Imposing deep cuts to public services; reducing wages and welfare payments, and imposing new taxes on low and middle income families in a recession just makes the recession worse.

Quite clearly austerity is not working. The election results across Europe are evidence that there is a ground swell of opinion among citizens now defiantly fighting back against austerity policies. They are voting out those politicians and parties pursuing austerity.

On May 31st citizens will have their opportunity to vote in a referendum. The choice before them is to either endorse austerity, by writing it into the constitution, or voting No and joining the growing European wide movement that is demanding an end to austerity, as well as investment in jobs and growth.

With the popular tide in Europe demanding jobs and in an effort not to be wrong footed by the growing opposition to austerity, Fine Gael, Labour and Fianna Fáil have rediscovered the importance of a jobs and growth strategy.

Monsieur Hollande is now flavour of the month for all three parties as they trip over each other rushing to declare their support for his position and some even claiming that they were saying all of this before he was!

Citizens will not be fooled by this. Or by the rhetoric. The truth is that prior to a succession of EU summits Sinn Féin urged the government to ensure that growth and jobs were at the heart of any subsequent agreement. It rejected this sensible approach.

On the contrary it chose to sign up to a Fiscal Compact Treaty that will lock this state into austerity policies for years to come and will see the government hand significant fiscal sovereignty over to bureaucrats in Europe.

Under the Troika deal the government and Fianna Fáil agreed to a bailout programme that commits this government to €8.6 billion of additional cuts for the next three years. Under the Austerity Treaty the work of reducing the structural deficit to 0.5% will mean more cuts of €6 billion. In addition the state has signed up to giving €11 billion to the European Stability Mechanism.

Where does the government plan to get this money? Thus far it has failed to say.

Of equal importance is the political direction the Austerity Treaty is taking. The head of the European Central Bank Mario Draghi spelt it out last week. Speaking in Barcelona Draghi set out his vision for Europe in the next ten years. He said: “We want to have a fiscal union. We have to accept the delegation of fiscal sovereignty from the national governemnts to some form of central authority.”

This means that the Irish government has chosen to go down a path which will lead to Europe deciding what our tax regime is; how much citizens will pay in taxes and how much is paid out on welfare to those in need.

Do Irish citizens want to be a province of a European super state where technocrats – who have taken a succession of bad decisions for Europe in recent years - take decisions for Irish citizens with no accountability?

So, where to now? Austerity is in retreat but conservative governments across Europe, and Enda Kenny, Eamon Gilmore and Micheál Martin, remain ideologically committed to austerity. The referendum on May 31st is an opportunity for Irish citizens to say enough and no more to austerity. Vote No for Jobs and investment in the economy.



Monday, May 7, 2012

Who owns our natural resources?



This blog left the Dáil late last Wednesday night and traveled to Castlebar in County Mayo. It was a beautiful evening and a peaceful drive – if a bit long. Mayo is a beautiful part of the country. I have been there many times over the years most recently in March for a public meeting on the crisis in Rural Ireland.


After that event I met with some community activists from Rossport in County Mayo who have been involved for many years in the campaign around Shell and the Corrib gas field.


They briefed myself and Martin Ferris about their ongoing concerns, including the behaviour of the Gardai and the actions of the private security firm, Integrated Risk Management Services (IRMS), that is used by Shell in the area.


I told them I would visit the area and last Thursday morning we arrived into Bangor and met local Sinn Féin activists and Corrib gas community activists.


I travelled around several of the Shell sites and visited the Shell-to-Sea camp. This blog witnessed for myself the unnecessary numbers of Gardaí being used to protect the Shell facilities – the Garda presence has cost €20 million thus far and at a time when other communities are being stripped of Garda stations on Garda numbers.


There was also a large number of uniformed private security guards employed by Shell at all the sites and along parts of the road. These men were all dressed alike in dark blue uniforms, with yellow bibs and hard hats. On a cold, overcast morning they were all wearing dark glasses. Although we were on the public road they made a point of coming out from behind their gate to stand and stare. Their behavior was reminiscent of the RUC of old. The atmosphere was tense and intimidatory and for local people who have to put up with this everyday it is clearly intrusive and unwelcome.


At one point we were passed by a convoy of Shell lorries. A Garda Van preceded the convoy which then had a second Garda van at the head of the convoy proper. There was then an IRMS van behind that; then the lorries and then a follow up IRMS car and Garda car. I was told that this is typical and is used even when Shell is disposing of septic tank waste.


After touring the sites I met with some of the community activists, including some who were imprisoned, to discuss the situation. It is clear there are two broad dimensions to this issue. One is the Shell operation. And the other is the very invasive security operation that accompanies it.

We discussed the legal avenues available for challenging both. The Bay where the Shell operation is advancing is an NHA (National Heritage Area) and is also designated by the European Union as an SAC (Special Area of Conservation).

In addition last November the European Commission renewed its threat to impose substantial fines on the Irish government if turf-cutting takes place on protected bogs this year. EU environment commissioner Janez Potocnik told MEPs that he may seek a legal injunction if it is found that EU environment law is being defied.

The Commissioner was speaking as environmentalists told the Petitions Committee of the European Parliament that the EU’s habitats directive has been consistently broken.

At the same time Shell is digging a huge tunnel through bogland to facilitate gas pipes coming ashore from the gas fields. It appears to this blog that Shell could well be driving a coach and horses through EU law. It is also likely that Shell may be in breach of a Parks and Wildlife recommendation.


There is work to be done in respect of all of this.

There is also the outstanding issue of the contracts under which Shell is carrying out this work and the absence of benefit coming to the state from the exploitation of this very valuable natural resource. The government needs to learn from the Norwegian approach to the exploitation of natural resources.


It also should also take urgent action to cut the excessive policing bill, lessen tension in the area by reducing the numbers of Gardai involved in protecting Shell, and by curbing the intrusive tactics of the private security firm.


Decades of mismanagement and dishonest decisions by government has resulted in a handover of our natural resources to multi-national companies with little benefit to the Irish people.


It was a corrupt Fianna Fáil Minister, Ray Burke, who introduced new licensing terms in 1987, abolished royalties and state participation in the exploration of our oil and gas reserves.


Companies were given 100% tax write offs for exploration and development costs. This was reinforced 5 years later when the then Finance Minister Bertie Ahern reduced corporation tax on oil profits to 25% and new licensing terms, beneficial to the multi-nationals, were also introduced.


But the exploitation of the Corrib Gas field also illustrates the failure of government to have a sensible partnership agreement with the exploration company. Corrib will bring little or no benefit either to the local community or to the Irish people. In addition, the gas will be sold to An Bord Gáis at the market rate.


This government, on behalf of citizens, should now move to acquire a majority state shareholding in our oil and gas. The government should also introduce an effective taxation and royalty regime that ensures that this state has the financial resources to get rid of the state debt, and regain our economic sovereignty by ending the involvement of the EU and IMF and ECB in our affairs.


A sensible exploitation strategy would also provide the funding necessary to create jobs and build a first class public service infrastructure fit for purpose for the 21st century.


The island of Ireland is rich in natural resources. The natural resources include natural gas, petroleum, peat, copper, lead, dolomite, barite, limestone, gypsum, silver and some zinc. Industries based on these and other natural resources include fishing, farming, forestry and mining.


The Democratic Programme of the First Dáil Eireann declared that ‘the nation’s sovereignty extends not only to all men and women of the nation, but to all its material possessions, the Nation’s soil and all its resources, all the wealth and all the wealth-producing processes within the Nation’ and that ‘all right to private property must be subordinated to the public right and welfare’.


Contrary to this successive Irish Governments have sold off our natural resources. Far from ensuring that those resources have been used to the benefit of the Irish people Irish governments have squandered them in a most shameful manner. This has to change.





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