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    Tuesday, March 16, 2010

    “senior staff at the Housing Executive ensured the letter was withdrawn…”

    According to a BBC report, the Housing Executive has asked the police to investigate its inconsistent role in a site at Nelson Street, in north Belfast - which is now owned by the development company, Big Picture Developments - one of whose directors is the chairman of the Policing Board, Barry Gilligan.  From the BBC report

    For years, the Housing Executive opposed the commercial scheme, insisting the land was still designated for social housing. But recently it appeared to change its mind and wrote to planners telling them that it was “withdrawing the request for social housing at the scheme”. It is believed this letter will form part of the police investigation. After it was discovered, senior staff at the Housing Executive ensured the letter was withdrawn and its original position of opposition to the development was reinstated.

    Pete Baker @ 10:36 PM | Comments (5)

    Orange celebrate the green

    Stoneyford’s Pride of the Village [sick] seem in full flow.

    Cllr Brian Heading (SDLP) informs Slugger that celebrations in the village continued with their early start:

    Apparently the band had its weekly practice event last night, a loop hole in the determination is the band walking into a field (Private Property); which is allegedly owned by H*****‘s father. As it is private property they can parade until the cows come home. ..Might be a chance the band could pull a fast one and not parade at all tomorrow night leaving a lot of police resources tied up.

    Also, six are apparently “bound over” from previous indiscretions and may not want to chance it.

    I spoke to a few members of the orange lodge today and they are not happy with the band or its past behaviour. If the determination is ignored by moving on to private property it will be the two fingered salute to the commission, the police and those hoping to build on good community relations.

     

    Mark McGregor @ 09:31 PM | Comments (17)

    To “clarify media reporting…”

    Will Crawley resists the temptation of pointing out that Northern Ireland deputy First Minister, Sinn Féin’s Martin McGuinness, speaking in Washington, may be in somewhat of a glasshouse when he suggests that Cardinal Seán Brady “should consider his position” in relation to the Catholic primate’s actions in 1975.  But will the Sinn Féin president, Gerry Adams, add his considered thoughts on the matter?  Or will we have to wait until after his therapy?

    Pete Baker @ 09:14 PM | Comments (13)

    Yes boss

    When I last looked at Matt Baggott’s comments on armed republicanism it prompted Slugger regular Malcolm to have a few words (I appreciate anyone going to the trouble of adding colours in a response).

    Despite this I’ll risk revisiting the issue.

    Matt Baggott stated:

    “I think to some degree it’s different but it is the same as, for example dealing with street gangs in Brixton”

    However the gang soundbite was raised much earlier by none less than Deputy McGuinness:

    2.45 pm
    As my colleague Martina Anderson said in the House earlier, those people describe themselves as an army. It is not an army that we are dealing with but a gang

    Of course I’m not suggesting they compare notes…......

    Mark McGregor @ 06:27 PM | Comments (31)

    Appeal of judicial review of “smoke filled rooms” appointments rejected

    A BBC report notes that the Belfast Court of Appeal has rejected a challenge to an earlier judicial review of OFMDFM’s appointment of four Victims Commissioners.  According to the report

    But on Tuesday, the court ruled there was no evidence that the ministers involved were motivated by improper political considerations. Nor that they acted on the grounds of political opinion or religious belief.

    That absence of evidence would be because then-First Minister, Ian Paisley Snr, and deputy First Minister Martin McGuinness were not subpoenaed about their un-documented and witness-free meetings, in office, about the eventual appointments.  But it doesn’t mean there’s evidence of absence.  Well, it is “a fragile flower which requires careful tending…”

    Pete Baker @ 03:57 PM | Comments (10)

    Apologies for the delay in registering new commenters…

    This is partly to do with me being in a different time zone (ie, Washington) and partly to do with a spam attack on our registration process. It has nothing to do with the 4IP funding, as the Atticus column in the Sunday Times has suggested. In fact we hope that when the new site is with us in the next few weeks, that it will speed up and open up the commenting process more than it has been in this slow, slightly ‘provisional’ state we’ve been in for a few months now…

    Mick Fealty @ 11:16 AM | Comments (5)

    With policing powers devolved, will Sinn Fein bite the bullet over the dissidents?

    “Policing has got to be ruthless” cries the Newsletter, echoing their endless headlines of 30 years ago. In contrast, Henry warns against repeating “the lethal errors of repressive legislation, internment, Bloody Sunday and later the criminalisation programme in the H-Blocks. The mistakes in state policy drove many hundreds, perhaps thousands, of young nationalists into the PIRA’s ranks.” Superficially we have been here before. But the response to counter insurgency didn’t start like that.  Emerging out of communal violence it began with “softly softly”,  “no go areas,” a briefly disarmed police force, and that identical phrase which Hugh Orde would have been wise to have avoided:  “ an acceptable level of violence” from Home Secretary Reginald Maudling. Mauding’s remarks in 1971 were taken as presaging moves towards a new political strategy, so the context is completely different. Everyone seems to agree that political change alone is not so to speak, the magic bullet for suddenly dissipating the residues of insurgency, although politics ought to be able to forestall a major upsurge. But in dealing with political violence, have we learned nothing and forgotten nothing?

    Brian Walker @ 10:33 AM | Comments (17)

    “It was very nice to get the call.”

    To celebrate the week we’re in, I think, the Irish Times have commissioned those delightful Duckworth Lewis chaps to compose a new national anthem… You can listen to it here [mp3 file]

    Walsh doesn’t yet know whether Ireland, Ireland! will be embraced as an alternative anthem, but he’s hopeful. “We’re completely at the whim of The Irish Times and the nation. We’re not getting ahead of ourselves, but we’d like them to sing it before the Scottish game this weekend.”

    Indeed.

    Pete Baker @ 10:32 AM | Comments (4)

    “We’re able to take advantage of the close proximity of the Moon”

    Stunning images of the lunar surface from Nasa’s Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter. You can almost taste the water… Video Credit: NASA/GSFC/Moscow Institute for Space Research/UCLA/MIT.

    Pete Baker @ 10:02 AM | Comments (4)

    Monday, March 15, 2010

    On that ‘robbery’ in Meigh…

    It is notoriously difficult to get a clear picture of any controversial happening in an area in which paramilitaries are active. The bare bones of the ‘robbery’ in Meigh in south Armagh are bizarre to say the least. According to the BBC two men broke into the victims house and “demanded money from the man before shooting him twice in the legs. The men left empty-handed and are believed to have made off in a vehicle.”

    But we understand there is some disquiet in the area over the ‘robbery’ story. One uncorroborated version Slugger has heard casts the ‘robbery’ as a punishment shooting for an incident that took place in nearby Dromintee. That’s something Slugger is no position to confirm. But it seems no less plausible than the robbery story.

    Mick Fealty @ 10:14 PM | Comments (38)

    “the Northern Ireland economy has operated under wartime conditions for nearly four decades”

    Via Newshound, the Sunday Business Post’s Pat Leahy with a timely intervention on a national discussion.  From the SBP article

    So, like the economic benefits of ending partition, it’s not clear that the party’s tax-and borrow plans would actually provide the resources for the stimulus it talks about. Adams suffered a bit of a monstering in a RTE radio interview with Richard Crowley about all this last Sunday, exposing once again his frailty on economic issues. When this happens to Enda Kenny, he gets crucified.

    When Adams does it, it doesn’t affect him within the party. This is partly because economic policy was never as important as the national question, and partly because most voters don’t take Sinn Féin that seriously on economic policy. That’s one of the reasons why the party hasn’t been able get beyond 10 per cent.

    Read the whole thing.

    Pete Baker @ 09:35 PM | Comments (11)

    “I will only resign if asked by the Holy Father.”

    Cardinal Séan Brady is resisting calls for his resignation over his involvement in a 1975 canonical inquiry into allegations of sex abuse by Fr Brendan Smyth, during which the complainants, aged 10 and 14, “signed undertakings, on oath, to respect the confidentiality of the information-gathering process.”  Brendan Smyth was convicted of 17 counts of sexual abuse 20 years later - and brought down an Irish government in the process.  From an iol report

    Asked why he did not see it as a moral obligation to ensure the police were alerted, the Catholic primate said today: “Yes, I knew that these were crimes, but I did not feel that it was my responsibility to denounce the actions of Brendan Smyth to the police.”

    And from an Irish Times report

    Cardinal Brady insisted that responsibility for Smyth was with the head of Smyth’s religious order at the Co Cavan abbey where he was sent after he was stripped of pastoral duties as a priest. “The responsibility for his behaviour rested with his religious superior at Kilnacrott,” he said. The cardinal said he did all that was asked of him by Dr McKiernan in relation to Smyth. “I did act, and act effectively, in that inquiry to produce the grounds for removing Fr Smyth from ministry and specifically it was underlined that he was not to hear confessions and that was very important.”

    Meanwhile, as a separate Irish Times report notes - Monsignor Maurice Dooley, former Professor of Canon Law, said Cardinal Daly had “no obligation whatsoever” to report anything to the gardaí. “There is no law in Ireland or statute that requires that clergy report crimes to the police,” he added. Monsignor Dooley pointed to paragraph 1.16 of the Murphy report, saying: “it says quite clearly that the clergy, the bishops and so on, had no obligation to report anything to the police”. “Is it a sin against the law of God not to report matters to the police …no I don’t think so…because there are certain people exempt from this moral obligation to report to the police,” he said. [added fuller quote]

    Pete Baker @ 09:23 PM | Comments (88)

    NI football national anthem

    According to the News Letter Phil Coulter who wrote Ireland’s Call is open to writing a new song for the Northern Ireland football team. Unsurprisingly the suggestion of a new anthem appears to have somewhat polarised political opinion though Kenney Donaldson of the UUP seems to have started the proposal. Of course if God Save the Queen was replaced for the NI football team, it might set a precedent for other sporting organisations as suggested here on Ulster Times.

    Turgon @ 08:14 PM | Comments (48)

    PMS: new moderator; same story

    Last week Liam Clark’s column in the News Letter again addressed the issue of the Presbyterian Mutual Society. The new moderator elect Norman Hamilton has again suggested that: “We really do care about what happens to you but we can’t fix it.” The current moderator Stafford Carson of course conveniently forgot (or mentally reserved) the high value properties which the PCI owns and clearly has no intention of mortgaging, let alone selling to help the PMS savers: instead stating that the PCI only owned churches and halls and had no other assets. In addition, however, Liam Clarke is asking about the £42 million central investment portfolio and why none of it has been invested in the PMS, nor used to help the savers. Presbyterian moderators seem to have difficulties remembering money: or for that matter it seems certain passages of scripture such as the ninth commandment:

    “Thou shalt not bear false witness against thy neighbour.”

    and Mark 12: 38-40:

    “And he said unto them in his doctrine, Beware of the scribes, which love to go in long clothing, and love salutations in the marketplaces,
    And the chief seats in the synagogues, and the uppermost rooms at feasts:
    Which devour widows’ houses, and for a pretence make long prayers: these shall receive greater damnation.”

    Turgon @ 07:50 PM | Comments (10)

    UUP and P&J: battles, unicorns and the Northwest passage

    The dust has settled on the Policing and Justice vote and as Mick and others pointed out, despite the UUP’s decision not to support the vote there seems to have a conspicuous absence of the sky falling in on anyone’s heads. Now with the advantage of a little time it might be worth looking (somewhat less hysterically) at possible reasons why the UUP made the decision they did and what if any the political ramifications of these decisions may be.

    Turgon @ 05:03 PM | Comments (32)

    “this failure to communicate the seriousness of the situation…”

    At the time of the recall of Irish pork over a dioxin contamination Sinn Féin’s Pat Doherty sought to blame the UK’s Food Standards Agency for the delay in a Ministerial response in Northern Ireland.  And, as RTÉ reported in January, the Irish government’s Inter-Agency Review Group [pdf file] concluded that “Communications between agencies, industry and consumers were both timely and informative.”  But the NI Assembly’s Agriculture Committee has just published their own Dioxin Inquiry report.  And they have concluded that

    28. The Committee has concluded that the key weakness and sole contributory factor to the near collapse of the Northern Ireland pig industry was the absence of appropriate communication to the Northern Ireland authorities by those in the Republic of Ireland, particularly on 6 December 2008. The Committee believes that the remissness of the Minister for Agriculture, Fisheries and Food in contacting the Minister for Agriculture and Rural Development in Northern Ireland on or before 6 December 2009 was a critical failure and proof that the cooperation heralded by the Department for Agriculture and Rural Development in the All Island Animal Health Strategy does not exist and that the evidence received during the inquiry proves that this strategy is not working.

    Pete Baker @ 03:56 PM | Comments (2)

    Northern Ireland split over Irish unity

    From the Belfast Telegraph a new poll on identity gives the following response:
    42% said they considered themselves Irish
    39% British
    18% Northern Irish

    And on unification:
    36% in favour of United Ireland
    55%  to remain in UK
    (Can’t quite find out the missing 9%)

    Interestingly on expectations:
    Will NI still be part of the UK by 2021?
    Yes: 42%
    No: 42%

    Here’s the BBC report - Irish identity tops new Northern Ireland Poll.

    Dewi @ 01:03 PM | Comments (82)

    “I utterly refute any wrong doing on my behalf in discharging my duties..”

    Declan Gormley, one of the non-executive directors sacked by the Northern Ireland Regional Development Minister from the Board of NI Water, is to seek legal advice. The BBC report has several quotes

    “I do not agree with the decision and believe it was unmerited and without due cause,” [Mr Gormley] said. “I utterly refute any wrong doing on my behalf in discharging my duties as a non-executive director at Northern Ireland Water during my 20 months on the board. “At all times I have acted in accordance with my responsibilities as a company director, and reiterate that I have done nothing during my period on the board which would merit any sanction never mind dismissal.”

    Pete Baker @ 12:52 PM | Comments (27)

    Can David Cameron be sure he understands the intentions of the Ulster Unionists?

    Some of those getting hot under the collar at my bringing to the surface the spectrum of opinion in the thinking of Conservatives and Unionists can expect ongoing commentary. I recall the Speaker’s Conference promoted by Enoch Powell, which started in 1978. Powell’s contention was that Northern Ireland was democratically under-represented at Westminster. He set about correcting that and moved Northern Ireland from being represented by 12 members of parliament to 17 and eventually to 18 in 1983.

    Eamonn Mallie @ 09:55 AM | Comments (33)

    No agreement about the personal side of Gordon and Dave

    I’ve a fond memory of two journalists in the old Stormont pressroom in the days when members of the trade actually took verbatim shorthand notes. One was from the Newsletter, the other from the Irish News. They would do separate “takes” in turn, that is, make notes of proceedings and later at the corner of the big long table, swap notes to piece together the raw account of the debate. Then they would go off and file completely different reports for their respective unionist and nationalists readers.  When it comes to seeing the same thing through different eyes, journalists are no different from the rest of us.
    Ben Brogan The Telegraph

    The Tories should be delighted with the outcome of Dave’s session with ITV and Trevor McDonald. It produced a far more rounded and more useful portrait of its subject than Gordon Brown’s stilted two-hander with Piers Morgan did of him

    Simon Hoggart The Guardian

    Would he ever contemplate firing George Osborne? What did they expect him to say? “No, even if he were convicted of grievous bodily harm and downloading child porn, he would keep his job”?

     

    Brian Walker @ 09:36 AM | Comments (5)

    Sinn Fein could bridge the gap between the Tories’ and government…

    Well that’s the theory… In reality the polls are still bouncing around too much to really judge whether they’d be needed to make a difference, but James Forsyth argues that Sinn Fein’s abstentionist seats bring down the Tories requisite target number of seats…

    Mick Fealty @ 09:35 AM | Comments (7)

    On the folly of ‘separate, but equal..’

    Kevin Cullen has a great piece on the slowly corrosive character of the ‘separate but equal’ principle in yesterday’s Boston Globe.

    Mick Fealty @ 08:36 AM | Comments (6)

    Dáil Éireann must set about taking back control over its own affairs…

    Noel Whelan has been looking over the new reforms at Westminster, and approves of the new rebalancing of power between parliament and the executive and wonders if Ireland could learn from those reforms:

    Mick Fealty @ 07:42 AM | Comments (2)

    Sunday, March 14, 2010

    Bloody Sunday: Once again, politics trumped truth….

    Derry has more than its fair share of unfinished business viz a viz the troubles. Earlier today Eamonn McCann gave the Annual Lecture at the St Patrick’s Festival, Coatbridge, Glasgow. The following is an extract in which he argues that political processes has obscured the outcome of the Saville Inquiry:

    Mick Fealty @ 10:22 PM | Comments (16)

    Straight up for St Patrick

    Mick has already noted Gerry Adams attendance at one St Paddy’s dinner. Dinners and other aspects of his visit are being presented in a very different manner elsewhere and certainly not as a ‘smoking’ issue but an ‘anti women and gay schedule’.

    “I am against exclusion, I am for inclusivity”

    ‘Gerry Adams to attend straight-only parade after night in men-only club’.

    Mark McGregor @ 10:14 PM | Comments (22)
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