The IRA History, FREE to READ 12 Chapter e-Book READ NOW

The IRA History is a 12 Chapter e-Book© that is FREE for you to read. This book is written by a former member of The IRA/Sinn Fein and in keeping with the author’s tradition of never making any money from anything related to the sectarian conflict in Northern Ireland (the north) no money is made from the publication of this book, this book is published in the hope that it will cast light on the sectarian conflict in the north of Ireland.

What is Law? Sexual Crime in Ireland, a Definitive History, FREE 3 Chapter e-Book ©. This 3 Chapter e-Book which was written by a convicted prisoner and funded by the Department of Justice in Ireland, brings together a definitive History of sexual crime in Ireland. Chapter 1 addresses the history and complexity of sexual crime in Ireland over the past 100 years. Chapter 2 addresses the role played by the media in reporting/facilitating sexual criminality. Chapter 3 examines the role of prisons as a punitive/rehabilitative response to sexual crime in Ireland.

IRA Auto-biography, FREE e-Book©, this is a work in progress with four chapters published for you to read, the book will soon be completed and fully published.

Monday, September 5, 2011

Prime Minister on Trial for Political Corruption

While Ireland rewards its corrupt and criminal politicans such as Brian Cowen, John O'Donoghue and Berty 'bags' Ahern with multi-million Euro pensions and benfits, Iceland has put its former Prime Minister on trial for his criminality.

Iceland's former prime minister Geir Haarde has gone on trial over the country's 2008 financial meltdown, a case he describes as a "farce".

Mr Haarde is the only politician to face trial before the Landsdomur, a never-before used special court for cabinet ministers, over the country's economic collapse in which all the major banks failed.

Mr Haarde, 60, told AFP that his lawyers would ask the court to throw out the charges, his third request for a dismissal.

Political analysts have criticised parliament's decision to press charges against the former prime minister.
"Unfortunately the Althingi (the parliament) did not move wisely when it decided to press charges," Gunnar Helgi Kristinsson, a political science professor at the University of Iceland, told AFP.

He claimed that personal vendettas by members of the then-opposition lay behind the charges.

Current Finance Minister Steingrimur Sigfusson has been one of Mr Haarde's toughest opponents and has argued the case is important in principle.

"When it became clear we were heading towards catastrophe ... the record shows very little was done to avoid it," Mr Sigfusson said in July, explaining why he felt the trial was needed.

Mr Kristinsson said that while finding Mr Haarde guilty "may well be in accordance with the law ... to single him out and make him alone accountable for the crash is obviously not in accordance with the people's sense of justice."

In an interview in July, Mr Haarde called the trial "a political farce motivated by some old political enemies who are cloaking this farce under the cover of a criminal trial.

"We saved the country from going bankrupt," he insisted, claiming that if he and his government had acted differently when the banks failed in October 2008, the economy could have fallen off a cliff.

"That is evident if you look at our situation now and you compare it to Ireland or not to mention Greece," he said, adding that the two countries "made mistakes that we did not make ... We did not guarantee the external debts of the banking system."