Build Casement Now | Protecting our environment | Trade War Demands United response | International Palestinian Child Day
Build Casement Now
The delay in building the new Casement Park is totally
unacceptable. Like many Gaels of my age I grew up with Casement. I played
there for our school teams and enjoyed sports days as well. I have watched
umpteen games over the decades. Until 2013. That was the last time Casement
Park hosted a game. On 10 June 2013.
That was the Ulster
Senior Football Championship quarter-final between Antrim and Monaghan. Since
then the site has been derelict. A sullen lump of waste ground. Antrim
Gaels have been denied the use of our county ground and a generation of
young athletes are being denied the right to play there. It is a
disgrace.
The history of failure to build the new Casement and all the
twists and turns, of mistakes and upsets and set-backs, would take too long to
record here. But what is for sure is that the delay now rests with the Minister
of Communities Gordon Lyons,the DUP and the British Secretary of State Hillary
Benn.
The DUP are fighting a sham fight - one doomed to failure-
over the Irish language as part of their electoral strategy. Casement is also
now a victim of these machinations. But unlike the Irish language there was no
widespread public or street campaign in support of Casement.
I am glad to hear that this is now going to start. Next
Saturday, April 12, the day of the Antrim v Armagh Senior Football game in
Corrigan Park there will be a protest. Gaels and other sports fans are being
asked to assemble at Rossa Park at 9 am before leaving at 9.30 to walk the
short distance to Casement Park where a protest will be held. This columnist
welcomes that initiative. Bígí linn ansin.
Protecting our environment
The blue skies and warm weather of recent days is a reminder
that spring will soon give way to summer. Everywhere the trees and flowers are
coming into bloom and the dark evenings are retreating as our daylight hours
increase. Regrettably, this change in weather also brings with it acts of
vandalism, in particular the setting of wildfires that present a real danger to
hill walkers, animals, local wildlife and the natural fauna.
The huge fires on the Mourne Mountains at the weekend were a
depressing reminder of this behaviour and of the dangers they present. Over
recent days 100 firefighters fought around 150 wildfires in Down and
Antrim. Some of the fires stretched for miles destroying forestry and
property and in the Hilltown area homes had to be evacuated. The Silent Valley
Mountain Park, a favourite for visitors, which had just opened after nine weeks
because of Storm Éowyn, was again closed to the public.
For the firefighters the high winds meant that the danger in
the Mournes was especially challenging as they battled to contain the blazes.
They deserve our thanks and solidarity for their exhausting work
protecting our natural environment and the lives and livelihoods of local
people.
But it isn’t just the Mournes, with its spectacular mountain
tops and ridges, rivers and streams, forests and gorse covered hillsides,
separated by miles of stone walls. that is under threat. Summer brings similar
destruction to the Belfast Hills. How many times have the people of Belfast
looked up at Black Mountain only to see fires dotted across the hillside with
their smoke trails stretching for miles? The fires and the huge amounts of
smoke they generate present a real risk to the lives of Hill Walkers and
wild life.
A lot of effort has gone in over recent years to the
conservation of the Belfast Hills and of the Mournes. I occasionally walk the
Black Mountain trails along with many others. The scenery is spectacular. The
Belfast Hills are a constant in the lives of all of us who live in this city.
All parts of Belfast can see the Hills. The Black Mountain or Sliabh Dubh. The
Divis and Colin Mountains or An Colann and An Dubhais. Wolf Hill and Cave Hill
or Beann Mhadagáin. There are other hills across the metropolis. The
Craigauntlet and Castlereagh hills. These slopes hug Belfast in one long, soft,
green embrace. They are the backdrop to the city and the main natural feature,
particularly of the west of Belfast.
That these should be threatened by the actions of a small
number of arsonists is unacceptable. I would urge everyone to be vigilant in
protecting our Hills and mountains.
Trade War Demands United response
The U.S. President Donald Trump has initiated the most
dangerous trade war of modern times. His widespread imposition of tariffs
threatens untold damage to the world’s economies. In the USA the stock
market has declined sharply and senior economists are warning of a deep
recession. These too will adversely impact world economies. There is no
indication that President Trump intends to change direction. On the contrary he
appears to be digging in.
The consequence for many countries will be serious but the
danger to Ireland, with its two economies and a 20% tariff imposition on EU
goods and a 10% tariff on goods coming out of the North is even greater.
The Southern economy linked as it is to the EU will respond
as part of the European Union. The North is handcuffed to a failing British
economy and to a British government which has already demonstrated through its
recent economic budget that it couldn’t care less about the people of the
North.
So, how do we face up to a deepening trade war and
potentially one of the worst economic recessions in generations? The
initial answer is to build on the growing all-island trade that is already
benefiting the two economies. We need what Seanadoir Conor Murphy last week
described as a “serious collaborative approach from the Irish government and
the northern Executive to protect businesses and the all-Ireland economy.” A
crucial next step would be an early meeting of the North-South Ministerial Council.
The fact is that it was the close working relationship
between the Irish government, the Executive and the European Union which was
critical in charting a course through the Brexit debacle. In the longer term
Irish unity is the best response to the disruption that Trump policies and
geopolitical tensions are causing.
International Palestinian Child Day
First, let me congratulate Francesca Albanese who
despite a despicable campaign by Israel and its allies to have her sacked, will
continue in her role as UN Special Rapporteur on human rights in the
occupied Palestinian territories until 2028. She has been a champion for the
people of Palestine as Israel’s genocide continues to kill and wound hundreds
every day.
Last Saturday, 5 April, was International Palestinian Child
Day. It was an appropriate opportunity to draw attention to Israel’s deliberate
genocide of children in the Gaza Strip and the west Bank.
Over 17,000 have been killed. Many thousands more have lost
limbs. Tens of thousands of children in Gaza have lost one or both parents
since Israel launched its genocidal war. Children have also been deprived of
shelter, food, and water. And currently Israel is blocking essential aid and
medicines from entering Gaza.
Whatever other issues there may be in the news cycle today
we must never forget the Palestinian people and we have to continue to campaign
on their behalf. In our millions we are all Palestinians.
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