BB 12/13/06 NI Soldiers Convictions Revealed SF 12/13/06 Figures Show Criminality Rife In British Army PB 12/13/06 SDLP Protest Army Arrest And Entry Powers PB 12/13/06 Adams Says N.Ireland Timetable Can Be Met SF 12/13/06 Sinn Féin Meet Hugh Orde In Stormont UT 12/13/06 Derry Watchtower To Be Demolished BB 12/13/06 Committee Records 'Not Verbatim' BB 12/13/06 Irish Language Future Is Raised SF 12/13/06 Irish Language Act BN 12/13/06
DUP Rail Against Irish Language Bill BN 12/13/06 Paisley: Remove The Human Rights Commissioner ND 12/13/06 Widow Opens Newry’s Pat Finucane Centre IT 12/14/06 6 Days Murder Toll Rises To 5 After Shooting WL 12/13/06 The Right-Wing IRA Of The 50s RT 12/13/06 Athlone Under Alert As Shannon Rises PJ 12/13/06 Peter Boyle Dead At 71; Tell Us Your Memories BW 12/13/06 Irish Theatre Plans To Purchase Permanent Home IA 12/13/06 IAUC NJ Meeting 12/13/2006
More than 1,300 members of the armed forces have received a criminal conviction while serving in Northern Ireland in the last six years.
The figure was contained in a reply to a Parliamentary question
to Ulster Unionist MP Lady Sylvia Hermon.
She said she was "absolutely shocked" and wants more details on the types of offences committed.
Armed Forces minister Adam Ingram outlined the convictions in magistrates' and crown courts.
Although there was no breakdown of what type of offences were committed, the minister disclosed that the number of convictions of Army personnel for this year up to 30 November was 83.
This was well down on 2003's figure, when there were 300 convictions.
In 2001 there were 242 convictions and it rose a year later to 281.
Two years ago, there were 282 convictions but that dropped to 158 last year.
"I want to know what types of offences are masked by these statistics and what the Ministry of Defence is doing to tackle what is obviously a very serious problem within its ranks," Lady Sylvia said.
Sinn Fein assembly member Philip McGuigan said the
figures illustrated the need for the British Army to withdraw from Northern Ireland.
"People will be shocked at the extent to which criminality permeates the ranks of the British Army serving in the six counties (Northern Ireland)," the North Antrim member said.
Sinn Féin Assembly member Philip McGuigan has said that figures released by the British Government concerning convictions in magistrates and Crown courts received by members of the British Army posted in the six counties were shocking. The figures show that hundreds of British army members were being convicted for
criminality each year.
Mr McGuigan said:
"Nationalists know only too well the criminal behaviour which the British Army have been engaged in since they were first deployed in Ireland. However people will be shocked at the extent to which criminality permeates the ranks of the British Army serving in the six counties.
"Well over 1000 members of the British Army serving in the six counties have received criminal convictions in magistrates and Crown courts over the past six years. Given the fact that this level of criminality within the British Army continues year on year it is clear that it is tolerated by the British Army top brass.
"The only way in which the community in the six counties will be protected from the criminal excesses of the British Army is for the British Army to be removed from the six counties once and for all and for the British government to live up to the commitments it entered into over
eight years ago with regard to demilitarisation." ENDS
Editors Note:
Number of convictions of British Army personnel in six counties in past six years.
Plans to retain search, arrest and entry powers for British troops in the North despite the improved security situation came under fire in the British parliament today.
Northern Secretary Peter Hain said from August next year the military would take on a "fundamentally different" role in the
province and routine military support for the police would cease.
But he said soldiers would remain available for "certain specialised tasks" in support of the police, to maintain public order and carry out searches.
Opening second reading of the Justice and Security (Northern Ireland) Bill, Mr Hain said: "The Bill provides these powers. It creates powers of entry, search, arrest and seizure necessary for the military to carry out their role effectively."
SDLP leader Mark Durkan warned, however, that the measure was "pregnant with implications and potential complications" for the devolution of policing and justice.
"These powers were previously contained in the Terrorism Act 2000. The British government made commitments to repeal those provisions.
"This Bill effectively recycles the very powers the Government had previously committed to repeal," he protested.
Mr Hain said only eight of the 48
provisions in the previous legislation had been put in the Bill and the vast majority had lapsed.
The powers were the "minimum necessary" to manage parades, tackle organised crime and terrorism and other outbreaks of violence.
They would be reviewed each year and repealed when judged to be no longer necessary.
The SDLP's Eddie McGrady said the move potentially created a "hugely difficult political situation" as the actions of the army would not be subject to the same scrutiny as the police.
Mr Hain said the objective was not to have the army involved at all. But where they were, in "isolated" incidents, it would be in support of the police.
The Bill also moves towards a presumption of trial by jury with stronger safeguards for juror anonymity.
Mr Hain said the process towards devolution had been a "long and difficult road" but he was confident the "remaining obstacles" could be negotiated
before "journey's end" next March.
"This Bill helps Northern Ireland further along that road to normality. It puts arrangements in place that are designed for the Northern Ireland of the 21st century, not the Northern Ireland of the 1970s."
For many years trial by jury was not possible because the North was in the grip of a "nightmare of paramilitary terror on a massive scale".
The Borth had now "moved forward enough to enable a return to a presumption for jury trial in all cases, even those that would currently be heard before a Diplock court", said Hain.
Mr Hain said that although the paramilitary threat had greatly reduced it had not gone away completely and there was still a risk of "perverse verdicts - either by intimidation or by 'stacking' a jury to influence its decision".
To minimise the risk the jury system would be reformed with restrictions on the disclosure of personal
information about jurors, better routine checks to identify disqualified jurors and better use of screening of jurors from the public gallery.
He said there would still be "exceptional cases" where the risk of "paramilitary and community based pressures" meant a case could not be tried before a jury but the approach to these would be radically changed.
"The decision to move to a non-jury trial will be made by the DPP for Northern Ireland in future."
He will be required to apply a defined statutory test. Non- jury trial would only be possible where there was a risk to the administration of justice.
"There has been a downward trend in the number of Diplock trials and we want to get to a point where there are no cases at all that must be heard without a jury. However, it would not be appropriate to remove that option entirely."
Mr Hain said considerable progress had been made in "normalising" security
in the North with most routine patrolling by troops now ceased and military bases and installations being closed.
Shadow Northern Secretary David Lidington said he supported the extension of particular powers for the military in the light of the remaining terrorist threat.
He told MPs the most recent summary of the Independent Monitoring Commission said that the IRA was no longer involved in terrorism and it had disbanded some of its structures.
But he warned there were "continuing threats" from other terrorist groups "which, in my view, do justify the retention of certain special powers for the limited circumstances that the Secretary of State has described".
The IMC said the Real IRA remained "active and dangerous" and on the loyalist side the UDA was involved in violence and crime while the UVF was "active, violent and ruthless".
He said: "I think in the context set out by the IMC that the House
has to assess the need for changes in the law."
Mr Lidington said he accepted arguments from the Government that there was still "a need for judge only trials to counter the risk of the intimidation and subversion of the jury system".
He added that he was "predisposed" to the view that a single judge should hear cases where juries were not present rather than three.
Labour former Northern Secretary Paul Murphy said the Bill extended the normalisation process and "hit the right note" in ending most Diplock courts.
However, he argued that jury intimidation would necessitate some trials without them.
Liberal Democrat spokesman Lembit Opik said his party agreed with much of the legislation but it could do a lot more to ensure jury trial became the norm in the North rather than the exception.
Another concern was the "vagueness" of the language in relation to the certificates issue.
This put a
"considerable onus" on the Director of Public Prosecutions on whether to use a jury.
Mr Opik said Lib Dems would oppose third reading unless ministers dropped the bar on appeals against decisions to hold jury-free trials.
Mr Durkan attacked the Bill for allowing Diplock courts - in which judges sit without a jury - to remain.
"Diplock courts remain unjust and with this legislation Diplock courts will remain," he said.
He warned: "The decision as to whether a trial goes to a Diplock court will be taken by the DPP with absolutely no check or challenge available in a court or by a court."
Mr Durkan said that was a "significant change" from what ministers promised before.
"It is continuity Diplock that is now provided for in this legislation and really what we're having is the abnormal relations are now being normalised."
BELFAST (Reuters) - Sinn Fein leader Gerry Adams said on Wednesday a key obstacle to restoring self-rule in Northern Ireland could be overcome within a planned three-month timetable but that difficulties over policing remained.
Speaking after what had been billed as potentially groundbreaking talks with the province's police chief, Adams said he was not yet able to call a special party meeting to change Sinn Fein's policy on supporting the police.
The leader of the province's largest Irish nationalist party said several issues needed to be pinned down first, including when justice powers would be transferred
to Belfast from London, and the role of intelligence service MI5 in Northern Ireland policing.
"Is it possible to do that within the timeframe set out at the St Andrews talks? Yes, it is, but we are not there yet," Adams told reporters.
Policing is the latest sticking point in Northern Ireland's tortuous peace process as feuding parties inch towards the March restoration of a Protestant-Catholic power-sharing assembly under plans drawn at St Andrews in Scotland earlier this year.
Sinn Fein, whose largely Roman Catholic support base wants a united Ireland, has long viewed the province's Protestant-dominated police force with animosity.
Its unwillingness to back the police is a deal breaker for the Democratic Unionist Party (DUP), which has so far refused to share power with the IRA's political ally.
The DUP wants to see proof of Sinn Fein's commitment to law and order before a date for the devolution
of powers is set.
While the DUP did not sign up to a 1998 peace accord aimed at ending a conflict in which more than 3,600 people were killed, it has given guarded support to the St Andrews deal.
A power-sharing assembly, set up under the 1998 pact, was suspended in 2002 following a breakdown in trust between rival parties over the activities of the IRA, which waged a three-decade campaign against British control of the province.
Last month, an already fraught debate about who would fill key positions in a restored assembly ended in disarray after a notorious Protestant paramilitary stormed into the Stormont parliament building armed with a gun and homemade bombs before being immobilised.
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A Sinn Féin delegation led by party President Gerry Adams and including Assembly members Gerry Kelly, Caitriona Ruane and Michelle Gildernew this morning met with the PSNI Chief Constable Hugh Orde in Stormont.
Speaking after the meeting Mr Adams said:
“This mornings meeting is about Sinn Féin intensifying our efforts to get policing right. That is about making sure the PSNI is held fully to account. It is our responsibility as public representatives to ensure that there are effective measures in place to catch and convict
sex offenders, those who prey on the elderly, drug dealers and other gangs involved in criminality.
“It is also our responsibility to ensure an end to political policing, an end to collusion, to get MI5 out of civic policing and to see an end to plastic bullets and any other form of oppressive policing which has been the experience of citizens here.
“So what we need is a police service, not a police force. We need all-Ireland arrangements,, we need common sense, practical, transparent mechanisms of policing which ensure that the type of abuses people experienced here never happen again.
“And for those families who are victims of bad policing we need truth and we need closure. At the meeting today, which was a frank meeting, we raised all of these issues.
“It is our firm view that citizens need and have the right to transparent, accountable civic policing. The Good Friday Agreement promised a new
beginning to policing and today’s meeting is part of our effort to achieve that.” ENDS
The police station and watchtower at Rosemount in Derry are to be demolished.
There has been a long running campaign waged by a number of people in the city to have the station closed and the watchtower taken down.
The closure was approved by the Policing Board in Northern Ireland and it has been welcomed by the Social, Democratic and Labour Party (SDLP) who said the land should now be passed back into public ownership.
A word for word record of the work of the Stormont committee drawing up a programme for devolved government will not be kept.
The previous Preparation for Government Committee had asked the assembly's Hansard clerks to transcribe their debates verbatim.
This included some confrontations between unionists and republicans.
The transcripts also revealed an increasingly co-operative mood on the committee later in the summer.
They also pinpointed areas of agreement, such as the rare consensus between Stormont parties that there should be a single ministry of policing and justice in the future.
BBC Northern Ireland political editor Mark Devenport said that Stormont sources said the decision not to keep transcripts of the latest proceedings is partly practical.
"The
committee has set up six sub-groups examining areas like policing and justice, schools admissions and rural planning," he said.
Audio recordings
"All the committees are working to a tight time schedule and it is felt the potential volume of work might overwhelm the Hansard clerks.
"However, dropping the transcripts may also serve a political purpose as some politicians do not believe the compilation of such a record is conducive to good discussions on sensitive matters."
Audio recordings are being made of sessions where witnesses give the committees evidence in order to enable the committee minutes to be compiled.
Some sub groups are also holding sessions on camera - one sub group has used the Senate chamber to cross-question witnesses about the future of the water service.
However, the Hansard record has disappeared as a source for Stormont correspondents to find out exactly what is
being said during those committee sessions held behind closed doors.
In June, BBC Newsi published a leaked copy of the Preparation for Government Committee Hansard record which revealed adversarial exchanges between the DUP's Ian Paisley Junior and Sinn Fein's Conor Murphy.
Shortly afterwards the assembly decided to publish the transcripts on its own website.
In August, the Ulster Unionist assembly member Alan McFarland criticised political journalists for not paying sufficient attention to the transcripts which he described as "very fascinating".
Mr McFarland said journalists were "just idle" and probably would not read the transcripts even if they were posted out to them.
Now, although the Hansard clerks continue to transcribe the debates held in the assembly chamber, the word for word record of committee proceedings no longer exists.
The government is consulting people in Northern Ireland about whether Irish should be recognised as an official language.
Four options are being considered for the protection and promotion of the language in NI.
The consultation ends on 2 March and it is thought the assembly would legislate on the matter if there was devolution.
The government promised to create legislation encouraging the language as part of the St Andrews Agreement.
It has said it had no preference on which approach should be adopted.
The first option would see Irish become an official language in Northern Ireland like Welsh is in Wales,
giving it an equal footing with English.
That would mean it would be used to a significant extent by state agencies, government and the justice system.
The second alternative would be to recognise Irish as having equal validity as English, but this would fall short of the status afforded to Welsh.
A third option would be to recognise Irish as a traditional, historic, indigenous or minority language, according it public recognition but again falling short of official and equal status.
The final plan would be to aspire that Irish would become an official language or have equal status in the future.
Commissioner
Sinn Fein's Caitriona Ruane said there should also be an Irish language commissioner for Northern Ireland.
"This would ensure that there was an end to the piecemeal approach and foot-dragging that has characterised the implementation of previous commitments to the Irish language," she
said.
The SDLP's Dominic Bradley urged all Irish language groups to respond to the consultation.
"The Irish language community who want to use Irish as the language of daily life need the strongest possible guarantee of their rights enacted in law," he said.
However, the DUP's Nelson McCausland said Irish language legislation would be blocked by unionists in the assembly which was why there was such a short period of consultaion on it.
"In effect the government seems intent on rewarding and encouraging the intransigence of republicans," he said.
Sinn Féin Human Rights and Equality
Spokesperson, Caitriona Ruane MLA commenting on the launch of the consultation on the Irish Language Act has said that the legislation must not be diluted and said that Sinn Fein want to see the creation of a Language Commissioner and sufficient resources to support the full implementation of the legislation.
Ms Ruane said:
"Sinn Féin has consistently raised this issue with the British government and at St. Andrews the British government committed itself to 'introduce an Irish Language Act.'
"Irish language speakers in the north are entitled to the same rights and entitlements as everyone else.
"Of course, there will be resistance to an Irish Language Act but it is essential that this consultation process delivers maximum protections and fundamentally ensures that there are sufficient resources to promote Irish.
"Sinn Féin also want to see a specific commitment to an Irish Language Commissioner
similar to the one operating in the south to ensure that there is an end to the piecemeal approach and foot dragging that has characterised the implementation of previous commitments to the Irish language.
"Beimid ag cinntiú go bhfuil cearta do Ghaeilgeoirí, agus creatlach dleathach d'fhorbairt na teanga mar a mholtar san Acht seo, beidh muid ag cinntiú go mbeidh siad ag croí-lár na gcainteanna idir muid féin, an dá rialtas agus na páirtithe eile." ENDS
Plans for an Irish Language Act will outrage the "vast majority" of people in the North, Democratic Unionists warned the British prime minister Tony Blair today.
Mr
Blair said the proposals were only at consultation stage and insisted that nobody would be forced to speak Irish under any such legislation.
The exchanges in the British parliament came after Blair's government published a document setting out possible approaches to the legislation.
An Irish Language Act was part of the deal agreed at the St Andrews talks and would put the language on an equal footing with English.
The British government is consulting on the plans - which reflect on the experience of the Republic and also Wales - until March 2.
However, the DUP's Iris Robinson said the measures would "outrage the vast majority of people in Northern Ireland".
She asked Blair: "Would you confirm that in the event of devolution it would be entirely for the Assembly to determined whether such a Bill would proceed and in what terms?"
Mr Blair replied: "I can assure that nobody is going to be forced
under the provisions of any such Bill to speak the Irish language. Of course not."
He added: "In relation to the consultation document that has been put out, we will obviously wait for responses.
"But the sooner it is possible, of course, to get devolution up and running again the easier it will be for these decision to be taken where, I am sure, the people of Northern Ireland would wish them to be taken."
Paisley Calls For Removal Of Human Rights Commissioner
13/12/2006 - 18:07:28
The head of the Northern Ireland Human Rights Commission should be removed from office, Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) leader Ian Paisley claimed today.
During the second reading of the Justice and
Security (Northern Ireland) Bill in the House of Commons, Mr Paisley launched a hard-hitting attack on the chief commissioner Monica McWilliams, questioning her suitability because she was at the centre of a libel action he won during the last Assembly.
He also called on the British government to rein the Human Rights Commission in rather than give them new investigatory powers in prisons under the Bill.
Mr Paisley told MPs: "I think she is not fit to be that and she should not be there.
"The sooner the Government removes her from her position and puts in a neutral person into that position the better for everybody.
"I think the Human Rights Commission has failed. Having a debate about the legality of war in Iraq, what is that going to do to the ordinary people on the streets of Belfast trying to get human rights and trying to go about their business?
"Then, there's Northern Ireland involvement in
the 11-Plus - you all know my views about that anyway - I don't think that's a matter for the Human Rights Commission and there are other matters.
"They are always putting their foot in matters that are no business of theirs and I think it is time that they were reined in.
"I would make a plea to the minister he has got to rein in this commission and say there is your bailiwick.
"You have not a worldwide global appointment. You have a job to do in Northern Ireland. Go on and do the job for Northern Ireland."
The DUP's East Antrim MP Sammy Wilson continued the barrage of criticism, claiming he would be hard pressed to come up with any high profile cases the Human Rights Commission had been involved in.
In a reference to the previous commission before Monica McWilliams took charge, he told MPs: "I think if you spoke to people in Northern Ireland if they were aware of the Human Rights Commission at
all, the only thing they would be aware of is the in-fighting which has occurred - where half of the people who served on the Human Rights Commission dropped out halfway along and refused to even go to the meetings.
"The chief executive or chairman of it or whatever it is called left or was put out because of the way in which the Human Rights Commission operated."
Mr Wilson was challenged by Ulster Unionist MP Lady Sylvia Hermon whether the DUP had any influence over one of its party members, Jonathan Bell, who served on the current commission.
The East Antrim MP replied: "It would be most bizarre, I think, and I think we might come in for some condemnation if we were seen to be pulling the strings of someone who is supposed to be an independent member in it, albeit coming from a particular persuasion."
The SDLP's Eddie McGrady said the investigatory powers granted to the commission were one of the
positives in the Justice and Security (Northern Ireland) Bill.
However he noted the Equality Commission, the North's Police Ombudsman and Children's Commissioners had such powers but for six years the Human Rights Commission had been denied them.
The South Down MP added: "What Government gives in one hand, too often it claws back with the other.
"And that, regrettably, is what is happening with this Bill.
"Because, for example, the commission can only use its investigatory powers for matters arising after January 1, 2008.
"The commission cannot get access to any information or documents before that date, even if relevant to situations arising after that date.
"So it will be years before the commission will be able to carry out proper investigations and get the full picture.
"Six years of waiting for these powers it seems has not been enough. It might be another four or five before
the commission will, in practice, be able to carry out proper investigations.
"And even then, this Bill provides for huge exceptions to the commission's powers.
"Extraordinarily, the commission is expressly prohibited from considering whether any of the intelligence services has acted in a way which is incompatible with human rights.
"And they are prohibited from dealing with any other matter concerning human rights and the intelligence services.
"Now let's be clear about this. It's not merely that the commission will not have the power to demand to speak to MI5 officials or see their documents. They can't even ask.
"So in this regard the commission will actually have fewer powers than it already had."
A NEWRY branch of the Derry-based Pat Finucane Centre was officially opened by the murdered solicitor's wife, Geraldine, yesterdaY to coincide with International Human Rights Day.
The new office in Abbey Yard will be open on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays and will provide advice and information for people concerned about collusion.
The office is being managed by Alan Brecknell, whose father was killed by the Red Hand Commando in a loyalist attack on Donnelly's Bar in Silverbridge in 1975.
"I have been working with the Pat Finucane Centre for five years working with between 30 and 40 families from Armagh, Tyrone, Newry, Louth and Monaghan area and there was an opportunity to open an office in the area and we wanted to take it," he explained.
"It gives people an
opportunity to come in and talk to us receive advice and find out how our work is going in with the different cases we are involved in."
Mr Finucane, a prominent defence solicitor from north Belfast, was shot dead at his home in front of his family by the UDA in February 1989. The loyalist paramilitary group said they shot Mr Finucane because he was a member of the IRA, an allegation repeatedly denied by the Finucane family who believe collusion between loyalists and the security forces was involved.
Speaking at the opening of the new centre, Mr Finucane's widow Geraldine said: "It's very important to open this centre in Newry following on from the recent publication of the report into the collusion that went on in this particular area and I think it's vital that the Pat Finucane Centre has an office here so it's made easy for people to contact them and follow up on the work."
Welcoming the opening of the
centre, Sinn Fein councillor Brendan Curran said: "Anything that highlights the situation surrounding the collusion and killing of Pat Finucane or anything that helps bring the whole episode to an end I would welcome." "It's absolutely fantastic," added SDLP councillor Gary Stokes. "There's as much need for a centre like this in Newry as anywhere else and I would invite people to come in and use it as much as possible."
To contact the Pat Finucane Centre, telephone (028) 3025 1491.
Murder Toll In Six Days Rises To Five After Dublin Shooting
Conor Lally and Ruadhán MacCormac
A well-known criminal was shot dead in the International Financial Services Centre (IFSC) in Dublin
last night, bringing the number of people murdered since last Friday to five.
Gerard Bath Byrne (25), was shot up to five times in the head just before 9pm outside the Mace supermarket on Lower Mayor Street in the IFSC. He was taken to the Mater Hospital where he was pronounced dead.
He was originally from Ferryman's Crossing, not far from where he was shot, and was heavily involved in crime, according to Garda sources.
He had recently been implicated in a grenade attack on a property in the north inner city which was part of feud between well-known criminal families.
Byrne was arrested in Raheny, Dublin, some months ago when gardaí believed he was on his way to carry out a murder.
He had also threatened a number of detectives attached to specialist Garda units which are involved in the fight against organised crime. He was heavily involved in armed robbery and was very well known to
gardaí.
Four other people have been murdered in the last six days: postmaster Alan Cunniffe was shot dead in Kilkenny last Friday; Martin "Marlo" Hyland, a major drug dealer, and Anthony Campbell, a 20-year old apprentice plumber who happened to be working in the house where Hyland was staying, were shot in Finglas on Tuesday morning; and Dundalk man Aidan Myers was killed on Tuesday evening outside the town.
In the IFSC last night, uniformed gardaí cordoned off a section of Lower Mayor Street and diverted traffic from either end.
Local residents described hearing several loud shots and seeing two men in balaclavas speeding away in a car that was parked nearby. For the seven or eight minutes it took for an ambulance to arrive, they said, a lone security guard tended to the victim's wounds with tissue paper.
"The bangs were so loud, I thought a lorry was after losing its load," said one. "It's like
Goodfellas or something. No mercy. It's hard to believe.
"I was in the front room with the TV on and I could hear the shots clear as day. I've never heard gunfire, but it sounded like a machine gun. The loudness of it.
"They riddled him, head and chest, and the blood, it was pumping out of him. They knew what they were doing."
Last night's killing will put the Government, particularly Minister for Justice Michael McDowell, under intense pressure over its performance on tackling record levels of gun crime and gangland murders.
Opposition parties last night claimed the latest killings necessitated a response from the State as forceful and determined as that seen in the wake of the 1996 murder of Veronica Guerin.
Earlier yesterday, Mr McDowell said the outbreak of gangland violence was so serious it was undermining society's sense of well-being.
He made his comments after the family of Anthony
Campbell said they doubted his killers would ever be caught. The Minister said while he could not guarantee the double Finglas murder would be solved, gardaí were doing all they could to bring those responsible to justice.
Mr McDowell defended comments he made two years ago when he said a number of gangland killings at the time represented the "last sting of a dying wasp".
At that time, he said, the Blanchardstown-based Westies gang had been dismantled. However others, including "Marlo" Hyland, had "stood into their shoes".
Four of the five murder victims since last Friday were shot dead. The other victim, Aidan Myers (37), Cox's Demesne, Dundalk, Co Louth, was killed by a drunken gang late on Tuesday night just outside Dundalk.
He was attacked by gang members who went on a cross-Border crime rampage in South Armagh and Co Louth late on Tuesday and in the early hours of yesterday during which
they hijacked a number of cars before ramming the vehicle Mr Myers and a friend were travelling in.
They then apparently fatally assaulted him on the road when he got out of his friend's car.
Gardaí are working on the theory that a group of Travellers who hijacked a number of vehicles in an almost identical cross-Border rampage in September may have been involved in the latest attack.
Gardaí investigating the Finglas murders believe those responsible are close associates of Hyland who wanted him dead because his activities were attracting too much Garda attention.
Last night's killing in Dublin brings to 24 the number of gun homicides this year.
Thomas Carolan continues his series about
the history of Irish Republicanism
The Irish Free State changed its name to “The Republic of Ireland” in April 1949, 27 years after it was founded at the end of a two and a half year war of independence against the occupying forces of the British Crown. Simultaneously the 26 County state withdrew from the Commonwealth.
The Free State, the “maximum concession” which Britain had been prepared to make to insurgent nationalist Ireland, had given Dominion status within the British Commonwealth to 26 Irish counties. The King of England would remain King of Ireland.
This “compromise” had been imposed on Republican Ireland by British threats of “immediate and terrible” resumption of war, and only after a bitter year-long civil war, which the Free State party won with the backing of Britain and of all the forces of social conservatism in Ireland.
That Free State party, now called Fine Gael, was the strongest
party in the coalition government which changed the name of the “Irish Free State” to “The Republic of Ireland” in 1949.
In fact the major changes as between the constitution of the Irish Free State of 1922 and that of the Republic of Ireland had already been carried through a dozen years before 1949, by the party that lost the civil war, De Valera’s Fianna Fail. 1949 gave a measure of satisfaction to most 26 Counties people; yet it was no more than a change of name, a mere “dictionary Republic”.
Withdrawing from the Commonwealth put additional barriers between the 26 and Six-County Irish states.
It was accompanied by a large international propaganda campaign, in which the 26 Counties government (a key component of which was Clann na Poblachta, the party of the “physical force” Republicans of the late 1920s and 1930s) and De Valera in opposition, combined to indict Britain for partitioning Ireland.
That
propaganda campaign would have only one important consequence: it would breathe new life into the all-but- defunct underground Republican movement.
The campaign placed ending partition at the heart of nationalist Irish endeavour, one of the two “great national goals” (the other was the revival of Gaelic as the main language of the people: in fact Dublin let economic erosion and emigration radically reduce the population of the Gaelic-speaking pockets which existed at the time of independence).
It sanctified the delusion — the ideological lie — that the fundamental reason for partition was the British commitment to maintain it so long as a Northern Ireland majority wanted it, and not the fact that the people in north-east Ulster wanted it.
It thereby fostered the delusion that Northern Ireland could be sensibly defined as “British-occupied Ireland” and buttressed the physical-force-on-principle
Republicans’ idea that war against “the Crown forces” there could “liberate” “British-occupied Ireland”.
If “anti-partition” propaganda failed to move either the Unionist majority in the Six Counties or the British state, it moved young, patriotic Irish Catholic men and women; and its failure moved them to want to try the methods of the rump IRA, those sanctified alike by nationalist romance and by success at the beginning of the 1920s (in liberating the 26 Counties — where, in contrast to the Six Counties, or strictly speaking four of the six counties, the big majority wanted to be so liberated).
This, for example, is the simple-minded call of the Sinn Fein/IRA Republicans in a newspaper advertisement for a meeting in Clare in 1953, to commemorate “The Manchester Martyrs”, three Fenians, Allen, Larkin and O’Brien, publicly hanged in Manchester in 1868.
Big headline: “86 years ago England’s
revenge”
Smaller headline: “Force Against Force”.
And the message: “The same old story, the same old cause, the same old methods. Ireland her own from shore to shore. The west’s awake! The west’s awake!” (using the title of a well-known nationalist song by Thomas Davis).
From the mid-1940s, as the gates of the internment camps and jails in which so many of them had spent the long, slow years of the World War opened to turn them loose, the shattered forces of physical-force Republicanism began to knit together in new organisations — politically, in Sinn Fein, and militarily, in a revived illegal “Irish Republican Army”. In 1948 they started a monthly paper, The United Irishman.
The heroic perseverance of those men and women, their indomitable spirit, can only evoke respect and admiration in socialists. If we are anything like as good in our own cause, then we will be worth something to the working
class and to socialism.
Leon Trotsky greatly respected the revolutionary Republican tradition. In June 1936, replied (in his own English) to a letter from Nora Connolly, James Connolly’s daughter: “Since my early years I have got, though Marx and Engels, the greatest sympathy and esteem for the heroic struggle of the Irish for their independence. The tragical fate of your courageous father met me in Paris during the war. I bear him faithfully in my remembrance...”
“The revolutionary tradition of the national struggle is a precious good. Would it be possible to imbue the Irish proletariat with it for its socialist-class struggle, the working class of your country could, in spite of the numerical weakness of your population, play an important historical role and give a mighty impulse to the British working class now paralysed by the senile bureaucracy.”
The tragedy of revolutionary Republicanism in much of
the 20th century — most pointedly of those who have thought they were socialists as well as Republicans — lies in the contradiction between the heroism and selflessness of its militants and their inadequate, narrow, threadbare, and not infrequently reactionary, ideas and goals. Their ideas of Northern Ireland bore little relationship to the realities. If that was “British-occupied Ireland”, then the main “British occupiers” were the majority of the population — Irish people with a distinct origin, tradition and identity.
By the 1950s the physical-force-on-principle Republicans were as lost politically as the European explorers who found America and thought it was India and the people living there, “Indians”.
The root of their ideological lying to themselves lay in Catholic-nationalist Ireland’s inability emotionally and intellectually to accept the fact that their nationalism could not encompass the people of
the whole island, and in their refusal to see the distinction between the geographical fact of a single island and the political postulate of a single Irish people.
By the 1940s that postulate was, in the light of long experience, simply preposterous.
In the Six Counties the need for this ideologising lay in the oppressed status of the Catholic minority there as second-class citizens, and in the fact that the Catholics in the Protestant heartlands of north-east Ulster would always be in a minority in anything other than a single united Irish state. Their situation made it difficult for them to formulate the issues clearly.
The physical-force Republican movement began to piece itself together in the second half of the 1940s and picked up momentum in the early 1950s. Politically this was the most inadequate, narrow, and downright reactionary “Republican” formation in Irish history. The early Provos, at the end
of the 60s and early 70s, were their progeny and in key particulars the same people.
The Dublin trade union official Matt Merrigan, writing in the New York Labor Action and in the London Socialist Review(the distant ancestor of Socialist Worker) described those who launched a new military campaign in Northern Ireland (in 1956) as possessing the traits of fascism. He was not mistaken.
Essentially, uniting the island was now the only concern of physical-force Republicanism. But their Catholic Irish nationalism could never — whatever attitude the British state took — be a basis for persuading a majority of the Unionists, whose felt national identity was British, to unify Ireland. Decidedly the opposite.
The only conceivable constitutional basis for a bourgeois — or indeed a working-class socialist — united Ireland would have to be some sort of federal system that would accommodate the British-Irish minority’s
autonomy within a united Ireland — that is, a democratic republican programme. Accommodating the Irish Protestant-Unionist minority would mostly likely also involve the creation of some looser confederal relationship between Britain and Ireland — the opposite to withdrawal from the Commonwealth (which, for that reason, De Valera was privately against). History had shown that the two objectives of the Republicans, Irish unity and Irish independence, were mutually exclusive.
The idea of “British-occupied Ireland” implied an attempt to conquer the Northern Ireland Protestants, who in fact were the real “British occupation forces”. Both De Valera and the parties that formed the 1948-51 coalition government in Dublin ruled out any such conclusion.
They knew it was not possible. The most that a concerted drive to conquer the North could achieve would be to annex to the independent Irish state the Catholic-majority
areas along the Border — that is, move the Border north and east. They positively did not want that: the existence of a big Catholic minority in the North constituted their strongest argument against Partition (and in the 1960s and 70s it would destabilise the Six Counties and be the undoing of the Protestant government in Belfast).
There was, and after 1949 remained, a very important distinction between Fianna Fail and Fine Gael in that Fianna Fail (like the Provisional IRA and Sinn Fein today) simply “blamed England” for not “persuading” or coercing the Six Counties Unionists into a united Ireland, and Fine Gael, not closing its eyes entirely to Northern Ireland realities, tended to look more for an intra-Irish and not a British solution.
But for the self-reconstituting physical-force movement of the late 1940s, stimulated by the crescendo of official anti-partition propaganda, war on the “Crown Forces”
in “British-occupied Ireland” became their reason for the existence of their movement.
The idea of invading the Six Counties had been rejected in the discussions of the late 1930s which had redefined physical-force Republicanism in the aftermath of De Valera’s settlement with England. Instead the IRA, forming an alliance with Germany, had declared war on England.
Now they would try invading the North. In their model of revolution, the time was always ripe for revolutionary action; or revolutionary action would make it ripe. Everything depended on recruiting enough revolutionary soldiers and procuring enough guns, bombs, and ammunition.
So, from the early 1950s, the IRA a-forming engaged in raids for arms on British army and RUC barracks in Northern Ireland and in Britain. They would not from this point on engage in conflict with the 26 Counties state. If cornered in the 26 Counties they would lay down their
weapons and surrender.
The raiders sometimes succeeded in getting away with weapons; sometimes they were caught and jailed. A new generation was hardened and tempered in Britain’s jails. Among them was an Englishman with an Irish mother, John Stephenson, who, gaelicised as Sean MacStiofain, would be the first Chief of Staff of the Provisional IRA in 1969.
It was all very small scale, no more than nuisance-level stuff. But the attendant publicity won them recruits from among young people whose opinion of the “Six Counties problem” had been formed in the history lessons in Southern schools and by the official propaganda of the state and the Southern political parties, especially Fianna Fail and Clann na Poblachta.
Ardent young people were steeped in romanticised nationalist history, in a sado-masochistic fundamentalist Catholicism with its central cult of the scourged and crucified God sacrificing himself for
humanity, and in the mystique of the “blood sacrifice” of the “men of 1916” — which was more poetic myth than history. It was difficult for them to understand why the Southern Establishment and the constitutional nationalist parties did not use force. Difficult for them to forgive them for not doing it.
Dominic Behan - who came from a Stalinist-Republican family in Dublin — brilliantly portrays this mindset in his song, “The Patriot Game”, about Fergal O’Hanlon, an adolescent Republican killed in January 1957 on a raid into Northern Ireland.
“My name is O’Hanlon, and I’ve just turned sixteen. My home is in Monaghan, and where I was weaned I learned all my life cruel England’s to blame, So now I am part of the patriot game.
This Ireland of ours has too long been half free. Six counties lie under John Bull’s tyranny. But still De Valera is greatly to blame For shirking his part in the Patriot game...
I
don’t mind a bit if I shoot down police They are lackeys for war never guardians of peace...”.
The elements of the mindset are all here: the revolutionary (indeed, quasi-anarchist) attitude to the state; the identification of the Six Counties ‘problem’ as only another episode in the long heroic struggle of Catholic Ireland to be free of England; the bitterness towards the “shirking”, cowardly, traitorous, aged ex-Republican Establishment of the 26 Counties; the will to sacrifice everything; and even the wish for martyrdom.
In a cause which blended and melded religion and national feeling until they were inextricable, there was more than a little in common with today’s Islamist would-be martyrs. The young men from puritanical, poor, self-mythologising Catholic Ireland who attacked along the partition border also felt that they represented a religion and a culture and an ancient civilisation far superior to the
English embodiment of what Yeats had named “the filthy modern tide”.
This “second generation” of Republicans of the era after the De Valera Constitution of 1937 grew up in an Ireland considerably different from the Ireland of the 1930s. Then, the echoes of the Irish national revolution of 1916-23 still reverberated. Much was as yet unsettled. Emigration had more or less stopped in the 1930s, and the pressure to “find a solution” to social problems within Ireland was strong. There was a strong current then of populist left- wing Republicanism.
Even the right-wing IRA of that time in the Irish small towns and the countryside took into itself and gave distorted expression to all sorts of social conflicts. On a rank and file level it was very much a movement of the town and country labourers. Its rejection of the existing Irish states allowed it to express revolutionary social drives, as in its time anarchism had
done in the countries of southern Europe. Socially, the IRA functioned as a quasi- anarchist movement. (See Workers’ Liberty 58, October 1999, for a more detailed account of the social role of the IRA in the South).
For the “second generation”, rising out of the grave of the Republican movement smashed at the beginning of the 1940s, everything was changed. Populist left-wing Republicanism was almost forgotten (though its main proponents, Paedar O’Donnell and George Gilmore, were still alive: they would begin to regain influence in the 1960s).
Mass emigration — a thousand a week from a population of not quite three million all through the 1950s and 60s — siphoned off much of the old social tension. The town and country labourers had fled — often followed by their families - once World War Two made jobs abundant in England’s cities.
The rule of the bourgeoisie was stabilised. The radical smaller bourgeoisie
who had backed De Valera had grown fat. Within its bourgeois-democratic facade, Ireland was more of a theocracy than Portugal or Spain, ruled as they were then by clerical-fascist regimes.
It was the world of the Cold War, in which everywhere the Catholic Church was the vanguard of the struggle against “Communism” (that is, Stalinism) and every sort of socialism. Public life in Ireland was deeply right wing and heavily hierarchical and authoritarian, in a way and to a degree which it is difficult now even to imagine.
One way into it for us will be to look at public life in a typical southern “Republican” town at that time, Ennis in the county Clare. Ennis was the centre of De Valera’s constituency, the county town, with an urban population of about five thousand and maybe two times that many people in the surrounding rural areas. It was a market town, a town of boys’ and girls’ colleges, the local centre of
business and state administration. In its range of functions and activities it was a small city.
It is a very old town, and one of the few in Ireland not founded by Vikings, Normans, or English. It had grown up, from the 13th century, on an island in the River Fergus, around a Franciscan monastery and as the seat of a local king. It had a long tradition of nationalism and militant Catholicism.
There, in the mid 18th century, the Methodist John Wesley, when he tried to preach in the market place, had been howled down by Catholics, who legally had few rights under the anti-Catholic “Penal Laws”; there, in 1828, Daniel O’Connell had been returned to parliament to win “Catholic Emancipation” in 1829.
There, the first avowedly Parnellite MP, pledged to disrupt the Westminster Parliament in pursuit of Irish Home Rule, had been elected in 1880; there Parnell had delivered a famous speech advocating the tactic of
“shunning” the enemies of the peasants, the policy that became known as “boycotting”, after its first well-known target.
There, one of the first two Sinn Fein MPs pledged to leave the London Parliament and set up an independent Irish Republican parliament in Dublin had been elected in 1917 - Eamonn De Valera.
It was also a town with a — sometimes militant — labour movement, though the proletarians were a minority of less than 25% among the shopkeepers, monks, priests, civil servants, school and college teachers, lawyers, and doctors, etc (see Workers Liberty no.58, October 1999).
We will look at the public and political life of Ennis in 1953.
“An Tostal” — or Ireland At Home — was a short-lived attempt to create a kitsch-Irish annual event for tourists. The first was celebrated throughout Ireland at Easter 1953.
In Ennis it was opened on Easter Sunday by “the Lord Bishop Dr Rogers”, coadjutant Bishop
of the Diocese of Killaloe.
In a public ceremony in the grounds of the courthouse — a large and imposingly columned limestone building, built in the 1840s to cow the taigs — Bishop Rogers blessed the members of the FAC (territorial army), the organisation of national ex-servicemen (ex-members of the Free State army), members of the “old IRA” (veterans of the War of Independence), the Catholic Boy Scouts, the blue-uniformed Red Cross and the light-blue uniformed ambulance volunteer organisation known as the Knights of Malta. He also blessed flags for “The Irish Countrywomen’s Association” and for business firms and for airlines operating out of Shannon Airport (15 miles away)...
“His Lordship” as the Clare Champion called him, told them that the flags “denoted service” to the country and to their fellow men. The “Blessing of God” was on all the flags and he hoped they would be used in the service of God, of their
country and their fellow men.”
He was “glad to see that the first act of those present at the opening of An Tostal was to march to the cathedral and kneel before the feet of Jesus Christ”… glad to see “their young soldiers stand as a guard of honour” at the Cathedral “to their eucharistic king and pledge loyalty and fealty to him…”
He presented each of them with a special flag. Members of the FAC had formed a guard of honour inside the Cathedral, around the altar rails during mass. When the wafer which was “the body and blood” of Christ was help up in a golden monstrance — shaped like a spikey sunburst — the soldiers presented arms.
At a special concert, an army band played music, “The march of the Dalcassians”, written especially for the occasion by Dr Regge, the Belgian professor of music at the town’s St Flannan’s college, named for the quasi-mythical first Bishop of Killaloe in the Dark Ages.
On the
Tuesday there was a lecture on “The land of the Dalcassians”. The Dalcassians were a Clare sept that produced the great king Brian Boru in the 10th and early 11th centuries.
There was a clay pigeon shooting contest; a golf-club contest; an exhibition by the Red Cross; a “Tostal Publicity Dance” at 7s 6d a ticket (labourers in the town earned about £3 a week); and a concert by the “Ennis Massed Choirs”.
Finally, on the last Sunday, there was a special service at the Cathedral to mark the end of An Tostal. Afterwards, De Valera, the senior Clare TD and still Taoiseach, took the salute at a “march past” in the square, standing on a plinth at the foot of a giant column on which, high up in the sky, stood a statue of Daniel O’Connell.
“Marching past” were the organisations that marched past Bishop Rogers at the start of An Tostal, and others. Pupils — a lot of them future priests — at St Flannan’s College; pupils
from the school run by the Christian Brothers (a monk-like teaching order); from the vocational school, from the nun-run college and boarding school; from the convent (nun-run) girls’ school, and from the (priest-managed) boys’ National School; Irish dancers in stylised “ancient” costumes; workers from the one real factory in the town (making laces and braid) and from the tiny, foreign- managed, and recently-started cultured pearl factory; members and employees of the Ennis Urban Council; and the Ennis Fire Brigade.
There was also a beauty contest to select “Miss An Tostal”, and an exhibition of the “national game”, hurling.
This was a tightly managed world, at the head and heart of which stood the bishops, priests, friars, and nuns. The nuns also ran the County Home, the renamed workhouse established under the British Poor Law, which was hospital, infirmary, fever hospital, and pauper asylum.
The strange mix
of kitsch invented tradition, militarism and piety, Republicanism and abject, though addled, king- worship, which I have described, was not one culture in a pluralistic society. It was the only culture, organising and permeating the entire life of the townspeople. There would have been weak “other cultures” in Dublin and Cork: but otherwise this culture ruled everywhere, saturated everything.
The newspaper of the town and country, the Clare Champion, was run by the McGuire family, who were members of the Ancient Order of Hibernians. A ramshackle, old-fashioned, under-edited paper, packed with information on the lives in the town, it was more like a political “cadre paper” (or more like The United Irishman) than a modern newspaper. There is no reason to suppose it was exceptional.
Every issue would have consciousness-forming articles about events in the nationalist or Catholic calendar — about uprisings and
resistances to the foreign heretical tyrants (taught also in school history), but with special reference to Clare.
The cause of Ireland was always the cause of Catholicism, and vice versa — that was the message. It was an integrated world outlook. The dominant ideal was one of a society of small producers.
The clergy made systematic propaganda against socialism.
It was the aftermath of the defeat of the Mother and Child scheme (see Solidarity 3/56). The clergy thought of England (now Tory-ruled) and Northern Ireland as “socialist” because of the post-war Labour government’s reforms.
In February 1953, under the headline “Lecture on socialism”, the Clare Champion reported extensively on a talk given in the town by a Jesuit priest, Paul Crane of the “Oxford School of Social Studies”. It was presided over by Bishop Rogers and attended by the priests of the town, including the clerical teachers at the Christian
Brothers school and St Flannan’s College, and National school teachers — the intelligentsia of the town.
Rogers declared that: “God has stamped each soul with a very distinctive brand and has given to every individual the right to earn and be independent. It would be a very sorry prospect if the state was to help not only the necessitous but everybody else as well”.
Rogers “noted” “the schemes put forward to remove the ills of mankind” and was “very disturbed by socialism, communism, and other ‘isms’.”
The other “isms” included fascism, though he didn’t name it. In the 1930s Rogers’ coadjutant Bishop, Dr Fogarty, had been an outspoken Blueshirt fascist, and it would be surprising if Rogers hadn’t been one too.
The English Jesuit despaired of England and, though he didn’t mention it, of the North. “The Englishman did not know how his country stood through the prices of commodities because socialism was
controlling the rent of his house, the price of the coal he bought, and subsidising other commodities”. The state should not do such things. In England, “socialism wanted to plan the life of the individual for him. A man was left without any motive for extra effort by the so-called free social services. The state then had to tax heavily...” Socialism sapped the will to work.
A vote of thanks to the lecturer and to Rogers for presiding was passed unanimously.
These people — and the IRA — subscribed to an idea of Ireland as a simple commodity producing society. It had little purchase on the modern industrial society in north- east Ireland.
This was the social and mental world in which arose the second generation of Northern-Ireland-focused physical- force Republicans.
It was defined not by Irish Republicanism as a democratic revolutionary creed which aimed like Wolfe Tone to “unite the people of
Ireland, Protestant, Catholic, and Dissenter”, but by the ethnic-sectarian “history”, Catholic identity, and outlook of the Catholic Orange Order, the Ancient Order of Hibernians.
This IRA/ Sinn Fein was deeply right wing and profoundly Catholic. Their monthly publication, The United Irishman, was a narrow-minded piece of ethnic-sectarian devotional literature, celebrating the past, lauding martyrs, propagating a fantastically distorted picture of the Ireland (and especially the Northern Ireland) which they proposed to transform by guns and bombs.
They subscribed to all sorts of right-wing mental and political debris from the 1930s and 40s. Influential writers in The United Irishman believed in such things as “Jewish capital”, which was the cause of all that was wrong with capitalism. They were still oriented to the alliance with Hitler’s Germany that had consumed the previous Republican movement (some of whom, of
course, survived to shape the re-formed movement).
A layer of these “Republicans” were devotees of a cult of the Virgin Mary called “Maria Duce” (Duce as in Mussolini’s equivalent of Hitler’s “Führer”, “Il Duce”), run by a fascist priest, Father Dennis Fahy.
Fahy had published an edition of “The Protocols of the Elders of Zion”, the forgery about “the world Jewish conspiracy” concocted by the Tsarist secret police, the Okhrana, at the beginning of the 20th century, and described accurately by one writer as a “warrant for genocide” - for the slaughter inflicted on the Jews of Europe in the middle of the 20th century. The title of Fahy’s edition was Waters Flowing Eastward.
Fahy had published pamphlets in the 1930s, in one of which he classified Trotsky’s “Fourth International” as only a front for the more militant policies of Stalin’s state.
He was a crank, but not an isolated one. Fahy was Professor of
Philosophy and Christian History at the Holy Ghost Missionary College, Dublin, a man of some influence in Ireland.
Maria Duce preached corporatist economics, anti-semitism and anti-”communism”, and it found ready believers among the mid-1950s Republicans, influenced as they were by other reactionary ideas from the 1930s and from their alliance with fascism in the early 1940s. This was one of the aspects of the Republican movement which led Matt Merrigan to classify it as fascistic.
A freak of political history is that one of the Fahyites, Gery Lawless, became a sort of Trotskyist in London in the early 1960s (see WL.58).
Such was the “Republican” movement that “invaded” Northern Ireland in December 1956.
Residents in the town of Athlone are on flood alert this evening after an alarming increase in water levels on the river Shannon.
Athlone Town Council has told people living in council housing estates on the west side of the town close to the river that if their houses become flooded due to the rising levels the council will provide alternative accommodation for them.
The council has also told local businessses that they will supply sand bags to prevent
flooding on their premises.
Some sand bags have already been put in place at homes in the Strand area and high winds have already led to flooding in the area.
This morning the Irish Farmers' Association President, Padraig Walshe, visited flooded farms in the Shannon callows and called on the Government to bring forward a new programme of development work for drainage along the river and its tributaries.
Mr Walshe says that much of the river needs to be cleaned and re-developed to alleviate flooding.
Farmers in the Clonboney area near Athlone were moving cattle to higher land this afternoon.
Severe weather conditions have also been causing further flooding and dangerous driving conditions on roads in the south and west.
A fresh Atlantic storm has seen high seas, driven by winds gusting up to 100km/h, hitting coastal areas from west Cork to Donegal.
Driving conditions have been described as
hazardous and while all main roads are open to traffic several minor roads in counties Galway and Mayo are again impassable.
The worst hit areas include Ballinrobe and Shrule in Co Mayo.
Met Éireann said southwest gales would occasionally reach storm force 10 in places today.
Peter Boyle - who went from raging movie characters to a beloved curmudgeon on TV’s “Everybody Loves Raymond” - is dead at 71.
Boyle died Tuesday evening of multiple myeloma and heart disease, a New York Presbyterian Hospital spokeswoman said. He had suffered a severe stroke in
1990, leaving him unable to speak for six months.
He would recover from that to create the defining role of his career. As Frank Barone in “Raymond,” Boyle was able to say deeply cynical things, yet be loved by the viewers and the show’s other characters.
That was a huge leap from the role that first made him famous. In the title role of “Joe” - a low-budget, 1970 film - Boyle played a tough-talking, blue-collar conservative. He fumed bitterly, then killed several hippies, including (by accident) his friend’s daughter.
It was the type of role that Hollywood could easily have used to stereotype him. Boyle also gave a warmly comic touch to the monster in Mel Brooks’ 1974 “Young Frankenstein,” but three years later he was playing right- wing Sen. Joseph McCarthy in a TV movie.
The real Boyle may have been the opposite of his early characters. He became a friend of John Lennon, who was the best man at his
wedding.
There was a warmth and a dry humor that he brought to any role. A tall Irish-American who spent three years as a Christian Brothers monk, Boyle became the perfect picture of Barone, the acerbic head of an Italian-American family.
Funeral arrangements have yet to be announced. Boyle is survived by his wife, Loraine, and two daughters, Lucy and Amy, according to TMZ.com.
Irish Repertory Theatre Plans To Purchase Permanent Home
By BWW News Desk
The Irish Repertory Theatre, 132 West 22nd Street, has raised $4.2 million in gifts and pledges in a $6 million capital campaign to secure a permanent home in New York, it was announced today by Ellen
McCourt, Chairperson of the Theatre's Board of Directors.
For the past year the Irish Repertory Theatre has been in the "quiet phase" of the capital fund-raising effort, called The Campaign for a Permanent Home, and has secured a number of leadership commitments. Francis J. Greenburger, president of Time Equities, Inc., has made a leadership gift of $1 million, and the Theatre will honor his gift by naming its Mainstage space for Mr. Greenburger. Other major gifts and pledges include those from Ellen and Frank McCourt, Genevieve Smith, Susan Hynes McCallion, James and Ellen Hillman, Patricia Smith, the Dorothy Strelsin Foundation, Robert Sterling Clark Foundation, I & J Brown Foundation, and the One World Foundation.
City and State agencies have recognized the Theatre's needs and responded generously as well. Significant government support includes grants from the City of New York ($1.75 million), the Manhattan
Borough President's Office ($500,000), various agencies of the State of New York ($300,000), and Assembly Member Richard N. Gottfried's Office ($50,000).
While still seeking additional leadership and major gifts, the Irish Repertory Theatre's Campaign for a Permanent Home will now be expanded to reach out to its broader member and donor base, and to other theatre supporters throughout the region and beyond. The Theatre is seeking gifts and grants at all levels to meet a deadline of December 2006, when the current lease expires. Prospective donors may contact the Theatre by mail, phone (212.255.0270), or through its website, www.irishrep.org.
The Theatre's purchase and Campaign achievements to date comes at a critical juncture when performance spaces in New York are disappearing, with such notable theatres as the Promenade
Theatre, Variety Arts, Perry Street Theatre, New Perspectives, Blue Heron, and Greenwich Theatre all losing their spaces to real estate development.
Ciarán O'Reilly, the Theatre's Producing Director, noted, "The Irish Repertory Theatre is convinced that we, and other small and threatened theatres, make a vital and indispensable contribution to the cultural and economic fabric of New York City. Our goal of acquiring our facilities and thus continuing to grow artistically and institutionally is part of a larger effort by the City to maintain its international cultural leadership role. By owning our space, we want to strengthen our contribution to New York's continued cultural pre-eminence."
The goal of the campaign is to acquire the Theatre's current space in Chelsea, where the Theatre has operated two performance theatre spaces and rehearsal, production, and administrative facilities since 1995. The Irish Repertory
Theatre leases the first and second floors and basement of the building, which the owner is converting into condominium properties.
Now that the building is being converted into condominiums, the Irish Repertory Theatre has taken an option to buy its current space with the goal of securing a permanent home for long into the future. Negotiations with the landlord have been completed, with the closing expected before year- end.
The Campaign for a Permanent Home presents a number of named gift opportunities to honor leadership contributions. The Box Office will be named in recognition of the gift from Ellen and Frank McCourt and the Concession Area in honor of the Dorothy Strelsin Foundation. Other spaces offered for recognition include the Theatre as a whole, the Lobby, Dressing Rooms, and other areas.
The Irish American Unity Conference chapters 5 and 9 will meet at Christ Church, 3 Cottage Place in Ridge-wood, New Jersey, at 7:30 p.m. Guest speaker is William “Pat” Schuber, a professor of leadership studies at Fairleigh Dickinson University. He will talk about Patrick Clayburn, Confederate general from Cork. Public is invited. Call 201- 447-5197.