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.

Wednesday, November 30, 2011

Budget 2012, Economy, ERSI

Minister for Finance Michael Noonan said today a  gloomy growth forecast from the Economic and Social Research Institute on the prospects for the Irish economy  will not lead him to change next week’s Budget.
According to the ESRI report, which was published this morning, much weaker economic growth than previously anticipated in Europe will seriously affect the Irish economy’s performance next year.  The report's lead author, Dr Joe Durkan, said Europe faces a repeat of the 1930s Great Depression if the debt crisis is not brought under control
Compared to its last assessment three months ago, the institute is now more pessimistic about next year’s economic prospects by almost every measure, including employment.
At the beginning of September the ESRI believed that the numbers at work in the economy would grow in 2012, the first increase in half a decade. Now it believes that a further net decline of 22,000 jobs will take place between this year and next. Of this, 15,000 will be accounted for by the already much-shrunken construction industry.
Speaking in Brussels today, Mr Noonan said the institute’s latest assessment was in line with other forecasts and the Government was already on “solid ground” with its budget plan.
“Forecasters are changing their forecasts so that’s not unexpected. Ibec changed their forecast, we changed our forecast in preparation for the Budget in the Department of Finance,” Mr Noonan said. “There are two tendencies. One is to mark up growth for 2011 and the ESRI have done that again ... then to mark it down for 2012 and they’ve done that also.”
Mr Noonan, speaking to reporters as he left an EU meeting, said he would not be revising his plans. “I suppose the question is will this change the approach to the budget because the ESRI being a state agency that we take a lot of notice of - it obviously is influential - but it won’t,” he said. “If we you look at their full report, they’re actually predicting that we’ll have a lower deficit than we’ve pencilled in for the budget.
“They’re saying that with the growth rates that we are forecasting we will hit a deficit target of 8.3 per cent at the end of the year so taking their full report into account we don’t have to make any changes in our budgetary strategy.”
Forecasts were moving up and down as a result of the turmoil in the euro zone and the wider global economy, he said. “We’re in a period of great volatility in Europe and indeed in the wider international world so we’ll have to do our best. But we’re about mid-range in the forecast that we have based the budget on so we think we’re on pretty solid ground.
 In its latest Quarterly Economic Commentary, the ESRI stresses the importance of a resolution of the euro area crisis for Irish economic recovery. “As long as Europe remains in crisis, there is little prospect of Ireland returning to a path of sustainable, export-led growth,” the thinktank states.
The unemployment rate will stand at 14.5 per cent on average over the course of the year, the report says, up from an average rate of joblessness of 14.2 per cent this year.
Ireland’s gross domestic product, the widest measure of economic activity, is expected to grow by less than 1 per cent next year. Just three months ago, the institute was predicting an expansion of more than double that rate, at 2.3 per cent.
The ESRI is even gloomier on gross national product, a narrower measure of activity which strips out the effect of multinationals’ profits. Following an increase in GNP in 2011 (the first such increase since 2007), the institute expects a contraction of 0.3 per cent next year.
The institute does not hold back in its criticisms of the policy response to the euro area crisis. The outcome of the latest emergency summit of EU leaders, which took place at the end of October, is “clearly” not adequate to address the problems, the report states. “The present situation contains elements reminiscent of policy during the Great Depression, when a mounting crisis was confronted by an orthodoxy that resulted in great poverty that could have been avoided,” the report adds.
The ESRI report expresses some disappointment at the Government’s Medium-Term Fiscal Statement, which was published earlier this month. It had previously applauded the Coalition’s intention to set out tax and spending plans to 2015 so that households and businesses could plan accordingly. But the effect of the announcements three weeks ago on reducing uncertainty will be more limited than anticipated owing to “somewhat less detail than might have been expected”.
Despite the downward revision to its forecast for next year, the ESRI believes that the Government’s budgetary targets are “achievable”.
Speaking this morning, Dr Durkan warned of the effect a European recession might have on Ireland. "The forecasts that are around for the euro zone next year imply little or no growth on an annual basis. When you take account of the fact that output grew throughout this year it implies that output is actually going to fall from roughly the end of this year until the end of next year and probably well into 2013 as well," he told RTÉ's Morning Ireland.
"What that does is that it affects our exports and because it affects exports, it affects employment and then it affects incomes and that's how it spreads to the economy.
"Even though it seems pessimistic, the truth of the matter is that we don't know how bad its going to be in Europe yet because we think investment has been hit all over the place not just here ... and that could have a much bigger impact than we have built in," he said.
Under the terms of Ireland’s EU-IMF bailout, the Government is obliged to cut its deficit to 8.6 per cent of GDP. The ESRI expects an imbalance between spending and revenue of 8.3 per cent. This, however, is considerably larger than the figure it was forecasting three months ago.
In the bailout documents published yesterday, the reference in the leaked version to levying an annual €100 a year household charge on primary residences has been changed. No cash figure for the household charge was specified.
Reference in the leaked document to a “reform of capital gains taxation” did not appear in the final draft published yesterday. All targets of the amounts to be raised by new tax measures were also omitted.

Sunday, November 27, 2011

Barman, Child Rape, Mayo

Kevin Owen McDonnell, Barman, Bangor Erris, County Mayo will be sentenced next month after being found guilty of raping two children. The girls were aged 8 and 10 years when they were systematically raped in the toilets of the pub where McDonnell worked in Bangor Erris, County Mayo.
There have been calls for Barmen/women to be vetted as they have access to children. A Mayo man is to be sentenced next month for regularly sexually assaulting and raping two children in the pub where he worked over 11 years ago.
The 39-year-old McDonnell, was convicted at the Central Criminal Court having been tried on 56 charges of sexual assault and rape on dates between June 1999 and September 2000.
The trial heard the girls were between eight and 10 years old at the time of the abuse.
They would go to one of the girls' mother's workplace after school and had developed the practice of watching cartoons in a nearby pub where they regularly used the toilet. They were sexually abused and Raped during these visits by the accused who was a barman.
One of the girls gave evidence that she did not report the abuse until 2008 because she thought it was her own fault. After McDonnell was convicted one victim said her life could now "really begin" while the other said it was a "dream come true".

Croagh Patrick, Death, Mayo

A man found dead on the summit of Croagh Patrick, Co, Mayo, on Friday has been identified as John ‘Vincent’ Walsh, a 62-year-old beekeeper from the Tullamore area of Co Offaly.

Mr Walsh, who climbed the mountain as often as twice weekly, is believed to have made his final ascent on Thursday last sustaining a serious injury in the process.

His body was found on Friday. It is believed he lay overnight near the oratory on the summit. A group of other climbers found around 11.30 am on Friday and raised the alarm.

A coastguard helicopter from Sligo was tasked but was unable to land due to difficult weather conditions. But the chopper did manage to lower a paramedic who pronounced the man dead at the scene.

The body was taken from the mountain later by a team from Mayo Mountain Rescue and transferred by hearse to Mayo General Hospital in Castlebar for a post mortem examination.

Mr. Walsh, a single man, who loved at Derrygolan, Tullamore, was described by the parish priest of Tullamore, Monsignor Sean Heaney yesterday as “deeply religious”.

Budget 2012, Dublin Hotels Special Offers

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NATO, Taliban, The IRA, Sinn Fein

NATO buys off Terrorists who have raped and murdered children, the same approach as used towards Terrorists in Ireland is now being applied by NATO to Taliban Terrorists. In Ireland The Provisional IRA/Sinn Fein and their Loyalist Terrorists counter-parts raped and murdered at will and were given an amnesty by the British Labour Government, the Irish Fianna Fail Government and supported by the Bill Clinton administration in the USA.
The fact that both Republican and Loyalist terrorists continue to murder Irish citizens, with the very same weapons they were supposed to decommission falls silent on the ears of the Politicians who facilitated murderers and rapists. Recently however, attitudes to the murderers and rapists has hardened under new administrations, we have seen the extradition of Sinn Fein/IRA member Liam Dominic Adams, who was protected by the Sinn Fein/IRA leadership including his brother Sinn Fein President, Gerry Adams TD. However, it is not a crime to conceal the rape of a child in Ireland and so Gerry Adams TD does not face prosecution.
The “reintegration” programme, which has the full support of Nato, is intended to keep them from attacking troops from the International Stabilisation and Assistance Force (ISAF).
Those who have attacked and killed British forces are also effectively given an amnesty, which means they will never be put on trial.
The amnesty extends to all Taliban fighters, including those who have taken part in atrocities, such as murdering children, beheadings and hanging women.
The agreement is part of a policy signed by the British Government in which insurgents are being allowed to “walk off the battlefield” and enter a “reintegration” scheme.
Taliban joining the programme are not interrogated but instead are asked to complete a questionnaire explaining their reasons for joining the insurgency.
The strategy has been designed to encourage rank and file Taliban to stop fighting and instead return to their communities with “dignity and honour”.
More than 2,700 insurgents have been reintegrated into mainstream Afghan society since October 2010, with 800 now described as “showing interest in leaving the Taliban”.
Of those, about 90 are from Helmand, where nearly 400 British troops have been killed and more than 5,000 injured.
The reintegration policy has already produced some startling results. In northern Afghanistan, about 900 former Taliban have left the insurgency and violence has decreased by 30 per cent.
But it is not without risk. Maj Gen David Hook, the director of the Joint Force Integration Cell in Kabul, admitted in an interview with The Sunday Telegraph that the programme would be difficult for many British families to accept but insisted that reintegration was vital if peace was to be achieved.
The British general, who previously served as a commander in southern Afghanistan, said he saw some horrendous examples of Taliban brutality, which he said he would have “personally found difficult to forgive”.
The general confirmed that even if the insurgent who murdered five members of the Grenadier Guards battlegroup at a check point in Nad e’Ali in November 2009 entered the scheme, he would not be prosecuted. “This is an Afghan process which the international community signed up to,” said Maj Gen Hook.
“My role is to support the Afghans in that process. This idea of forgiveness has been agreed by the international donors and the UK has given £6.5  million and helped design the programme to deliver peace at the local level.
“We accepted large numbers of IRA back into our own society because we wanted peace in Northern Ireland and I don’t see it any different in Afghanistan.”
Taliban who want to leave the insurgency enter a three-month training programme of “de-indoctrination” where they are taught the values of good citizenship and must vow to severe all links with al-Qaeda, take no further part in violence and uphold the laws of Afghanistan.
Islamic scholars also provide lessons explaining that the true path of Islam is non-violent. During this period volunteers are paid a stipend of about £100 a month.
“We’ve had more than 2,700 Taliban come across and only five have returned to the insurgency,” said Maj Gen Hook.
He said many of those who joined the Taliban had simply had enough of fighting and wanted to return to their families. “General John Allen [the American commander of the ISAF] talks about three natural ways of leaving the Taliban – killed, captured or reintegrated,” he said.
“The prospect of death is a great motivating force. The insurgents are feeling the pinch after a very effective summer of fighting by Nato. The insurgents know that if they continue fighting they will be killed.”
The money — there is a total of £98 million — is handed out by the Afghans who run the scheme, which is under the supervision of Maj Gen Hook.
Those who complete the process are offered a period of vocational training and efforts are made to establish whether they will be welcomed back by their communities.
Maj Gen Hook said: “It’s not a case of, 'Come in and we’ll give you £100 a month.’ Some of these negotiations take weeks while people try to resolve the grievances that are keeping them in the insurgency. Once their grievance has been addressed it’s another powerful reason why they won’t become recidivistic.”
He said it was important to distinguish between draining the Taliban of its numbers and surrendering to them. “This programme is about an individual coming back and seeking forgiveness from his community and the community willing to accept them back,” he said.
“It is not surrender. That forgiveness provides a strong bond between the individual and the community, which is perhaps better than some of the previous attempts [to get men to leave the Taliban] where people have been paid to stop fighting but return to the fight once the money has gone.”
The idea is based on a concept of “afwra”, part of the code that governs behaviour among Pashtuns, the ethnic group from which the Taliban tends to be drawn.
“Afwra is about forgiveness, so both sides have to forgive for it to work and when that forgiveness is given by both sides they lock into each other, which makes it less likely to break down,” he said.
Contact is made with the Taliban by Afghan “outreach” teams venturing into rural areas and trying to establish the reasons why young men are joining the insurgency.
Research had shown that many join the insurgency because of a grievance that is not addressed by central government. Some Afghan men turn to the Taliban for help.
In Helmand, for example, the governor of the province believes that the insurgency could be reduced by 25 per cent if disputes over land rights could be resolved. Maj Gen Hook said: “If you address the grievance then those young men don’t want to fight because there is no reason to fight.”
Despite the relative success of the programme, he admitted that the number of Taliban leaving the insurgency had not been as high as expected.
“There was an expectation that the programme was going to be more successful than it has been and that it is one of the challenges we face,” he said.
“It was designed by people whose experience was Iraq, which from a tribal aspect was far simpler and there was a degree of optimism at the start of the programme but the tribal dynamics in Afghanistan are such that the programme was never going to be the silver bullet that perhaps people thought.
“I see it as a slow process which will eventually reach a tipping point.”
However, critics of the scheme have warned that too few of those defecting are actual insurgents, and that it is failing to undermine the rebels in their southern heartlands.
Hanif Atmar, a former interior minister, said last week: “Of around 30,000 insurgents, only eight per cent have reconciled so far — and 99 per cent of them are not from the south.
“Frankly speaking, it does not work. The eight per cent that are reconciled, most of them are not genuine insurgents, particularly not from the regions that matter.”

Budget 2012, Cuts, Disability, Social Welfare

Budget 2012 will see many Makey-up groups having their unjustified public funding cut, and about time, people have been living off the backs of the disabled and victims of violence for too long, hundreds of millions are being paid by workers each year to support the luxury lives of Millionaire 'charity' CEOs, we now need to see the Government take more such action and end what has become a 'victims' industry.

The Minister of State for Disability has today rejected claims that the Government's decision to withdraw its annual funding would set back the disability agenda by 15 years.

Kathleen Lynch says most of the funding was being pumped into administration and the running of the People With Disabilities in Ireland's (PWDI) national headquarters.

The organisation claims that the move will have a detrimental effect on the lives of many people with disabilities, and that it shows a complete disregard for the voluntary work of hundreds of members.

The cut of around €900,000 is due to be implemented from the end of next month.

Labour Minister Kathleen Lynch said that with a Budget around the corner, tough decisions have to be made.

"I don’t agree with PWDI in their assessment of where it leaves the disability sector," she said.

"It has always been my intention … that people with disabilities themselves would, in, fact, have a voice.

"PWDI was set up to hear that voice at local, regional and national level. Unfortunately, the majority of the funding was going on administration and running their national headquarters. That was never what it was about.

"We were facing into a Budget and we really had a decision to make."

Saturday, November 26, 2011

Kevin Owen McDonnell, Barman, Bangor Erris, Mayo, Raped Children

Kevin Owen McDonnell, Barman, Bangor Erris, County Mayo will be sentenced next month after being found guilty of raping two children. The girls were aged 8 and 10 years when they were systematically raped in the toilets of the pub where McDonnell worked in Bangor Erris, County Mayo.
There have been calls for Barmen/women to be vetted as they have access to children. A Mayo man is to be sentenced today for regularly sexually assaulting two children in the pub where he worked over 11 years ago.
The 39-year-old man, was convicted at the Central Criminal Court having been tried on 56 charges of sexual assault and rape on dates between June 1999 and September 2000.
The trial heard the girls were between eight and 10 years old at the time of the abuse.
They would go to one of the girls' mother's workplace after school and had developed the practice of watching cartoons in a nearby pub where they regularly used the toilet. They were sexually abused and Raped during these visits by the accused who was a barman.
One of the girls gave evidence that she did not report the abuse until 2008 because she thought it was her own fault. After McDonnell was convicted one victim said her life could now "really begin" while the other said it was a "dream come true".
Other Stories
Life for Liars
Following a number of high profile cases involving false allegations of rape and sexual assault calls have been made for anyone making such false allegations to face a sentence of up to life in prison, as the consequences for the victims of such false allegations are on an equal power with real victims of rape and sexual assault.
RTÉ LAST night rebroadcast its apology to Fr Kevin Reynolds regarding its libel of the priest in the Prime Time Investigates – Mission to Prey programme.
The decision to re-record the apology and rebroadcast it after last night’s Nine O’Clock News was taken by director general Noel Curran. It followed criticism of the original apology, broadcast on November 17th last, after members of the RTÉ board raised questions at a meeting this week about the manner in which the original apology had been run.
Fr Reynolds was told in advance the apology was to be rebroadcast last night. The first broadcast of the “correction order” demanded by the High Court after RTÉ settled the case was criticised by viewers, who said it was read out at speed and in a monotone.
The action for libel made over the programme resulted in a seven-figure settlement by RTÉ in favour of the priest on November 17th.
Since then, two inquiries have begun into why the programme-makers went ahead with the allegation Fr Reynolds had raped a minor and had a child in Kenya 30 years ago, yet failed to take up his offer of a paternity test.
It has been learned Mr Curran offered to step down from his post after the results of the paternity test of Fr Reynolds became known. This was confirmed by a spokesman for RTÉ last night.
The spokesman said Mr Curran, as editor-in-chief, told board chairman Tom Savage he was prepared to step down. The offer had been made “in recognition of the gravity of the error made by the programme and of the injury done to Fr Reynolds, and notwithstanding that the decision to broadcast the programme was, as is normal in RTÉ, made at divisional rather than corporate level”.
“The offer was firmly rejected by the chairman on the basis that Mr Curran was not involved in the decision-making process on the programme. It was agreed that the imperative was for the director general, as chief executive and editor-in-chief, to lead the internal investigation into how the programme was originated, prepared and produced for air in a defamatory form.”
The spokesman said the activity set in train by Mr Curran, including internal reviews and an external review by Press Ombudsman John Horgan, would be completed before a meeting of the RTÉ board on December 15th.
Mr Curran plans to make a series of recommendations to this meeting. The spokesman added RTÉ news managing editor Ed Mulhall and current affairs editor Ken O’Shea had both offered to step aside after talks with Mr Curran prior to the meeting of the board last Wednesday.

Northern Ireland Assembly News

The Northern Ireland Assembly Committee for Justice visited Forensic Science Northern Ireland (FSNI) yesterday. As well as a tour of the alcohol, drug and toxicology labs and the DNA unit, the Committee was shown a mock crime scene to demonstrate how evidence is gathered.

Committee Chairman, Paul Givan said: “Our visit has been very interesting. What we have learnt about the processing and storage of DNA will be very helpful when the Committee is considering proposed changes to the policy on DNA/fingerprint retention. This will form part of a Bill to be brought forward by the Department of Justice early in the New Year.

“We also received a very informative briefing from Stan Brown, FSNI Chief Executive. He spoke about the challenges facing the organisation, new developments in DNA technology and progress on the new accommodation being built to improve laboratory facilities.

“The Committee appreciated the opportunity to meet FSNI staff and discuss their work which plays a crucial role in the investigation and prosecution of crime in Northern Ireland.”

Members the Assembly Committee for Justice on a visit to Forensic Science Northern Ireland.
Pictured L to R: Alban Maginness MLA; Stan Brown, Chief Executive Forensic Science Northern Ireland; Committee Chair, Paul Givan MLA; Peter Weir MLA and Committee Deputy Chair, Raymond McCartney MLA
Membership of the Committee:
Chairperson: Paul Givan MLA
Deputy Chairperson: Raymond McCartney MLA
Sydney Anderson MLA
Stewart Dickson MLA
Colum Eastwood MLA
Seán Lynch MLA
Jennifer McCann MLA
Basil McCrea MLA
Alban Maginness MLA
Peter Weir MLA
Jim Wells MLA

Sex Crime, Fr Reynolds, Life for Liars, RTE

Life for Liars
Following a number of high profile cases involving false allegations of rape and sexual assault calls have been made for anyone making such false allegations to face a sentence of up to life in prison, as the consequences for the victims of such false allegations are on an equal power with real victims of rape and sexual assault.
RTÉ LAST night rebroadcast its apology to Fr Kevin Reynolds regarding its libel of the priest in the Prime Time Investigates – Mission to Prey programme.
The decision to re-record the apology and rebroadcast it after last night’s Nine O’Clock News was taken by director general Noel Curran. It followed criticism of the original apology, broadcast on November 17th last, after members of the RTÉ board raised questions at a meeting this week about the manner in which the original apology had been run.
Fr Reynolds was told in advance the apology was to be rebroadcast last night. The first broadcast of the “correction order” demanded by the High Court after RTÉ settled the case was criticised by viewers, who said it was read out at speed and in a monotone.
The action for libel made over the programme resulted in a seven-figure settlement by RTÉ in favour of the priest on November 17th.
Since then, two inquiries have begun into why the programme-makers went ahead with the allegation Fr Reynolds had raped a minor and had a child in Kenya 30 years ago, yet failed to take up his offer of a paternity test.
It has been learned Mr Curran offered to step down from his post after the results of the paternity test of Fr Reynolds became known. This was confirmed by a spokesman for RTÉ last night.
The spokesman said Mr Curran, as editor-in-chief, told board chairman Tom Savage he was prepared to step down. The offer had been made “in recognition of the gravity of the error made by the programme and of the injury done to Fr Reynolds, and notwithstanding that the decision to broadcast the programme was, as is normal in RTÉ, made at divisional rather than corporate level”.
“The offer was firmly rejected by the chairman on the basis that Mr Curran was not involved in the decision-making process on the programme. It was agreed that the imperative was for the director general, as chief executive and editor-in-chief, to lead the internal investigation into how the programme was originated, prepared and produced for air in a defamatory form.”
The spokesman said the activity set in train by Mr Curran, including internal reviews and an external review by Press Ombudsman John Horgan, would be completed before a meeting of the RTÉ board on December 15th.
Mr Curran plans to make a series of recommendations to this meeting. The spokesman added RTÉ news managing editor Ed Mulhall and current affairs editor Ken O’Shea had both offered to step aside after talks with Mr Curran prior to the meeting of the board last Wednesday.

Friday, November 25, 2011

Hotel Special Offers, Irish Times


Welcome to this week's Something for the Weekend newsletter, giving you a sneak preview of what's coming up in the weekend edition of The Irish Times.

This week, we're giving you the chance to win a luxury weekend stay at the Clarion Hotel Sligo.  Plus, you can now download The Irish Times news app on iPhone or Android for free!


Something for the Weekend
Win a luxurious weekend break at the Clarion Hotel Sligo
 
We have teamed up with the Clarion Hotel in Sligo to give you the chance to win a relaxing two night stay for two people.

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In THE IRISH TIMES tomorrow
WeekendReview
Weekend Review
Travellers on Travellers

A group of teenage girls, a band of women, a social worker and a gay man from the Travelling community tell Rosita Boland about their lives, their outlook, their individual achievements and their personal struggles as part of a 40,000-strong Irish subculture.

Continues on Monday in The Irish Times 
Two Special Supplements
Magazine
Books
On Saturday, the 'Books Every Teen Should Read', and on Monday the 'Books Every Under 12 Should Read'.
Schools
Ahead of the rest: Áine Kerr meets teens from all over Ireland who are top of their schools.
GO
WeekendReview
House swap
Home from home on holidays: Sandra O'Connell on the growing trend towards house swaps.
Roddy Doyle
Roddy Doyle on translating 'The Government Inspector' for the Abbey Theatre.
 
Coming up next week in The Irish Times
Budget
 

In Monday's PriceWatch: We look at what changes are likely to be announced in the Budget, how they will affect individuals and what, if anything, people can do to protect themselves before the details are announced.

Read PriceWatch on Monday in The Irish Times  
The Irish Times: free mobile app
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Apps
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Food & Wine Magazine Christmas Show
...visit the Food & Wine Magazine Christmas Show, taking place this weekend at the RDS. Kids under 12 go free!

Find out more

 

Budget 2012, Social Welfare, Lone Parent Payment

It is fantastic to listen to people complain about those on social welfare, every single person in this country from Judges, Barristers, Politicians down to the lowest socio-economic position in this country have benefited from Social Welfare payments all their life (Children’s Allowance). Ryanair Millionaire, Michael O'Leary recieves 1200 Euro per month for his four children, and he has called on the Governement to stop this Bastardisation of the social welare system.
Everyone in this country including millionaires and tax exiles have benefited and continue to benefit from social welfare payments each month (children’s allowance). This is the greatest bastardisation of the social welfare system in the history of the state.
Each year tens of millions of social welfare payments are collectively paid to the most financially better of people in Ireland, so called charity CEOs on salaries/expenses claims of 300K get social welfare payments (children allowance), politicians with extensive property portfolios/200K salaries/expenses claims for everything from meals to travel/ receive social welfare each month, Judges on 300K/expenses and so forth receive social welfare each month (Children’s Allowance).
The family and friends of these millionaires are paid social welfare each month. So who is it that is pointing the finger at those on social welfare? Is it the hypocrites, the liars, the tabloid rags, the greedy, the deviant, the criminal, the corrupt or is it all of the above.
Our social welfare system was set up to help those who have financial difficulties, the disabled, the elderly, the infirm, the redundant, it was never meant to pay for the wives of millionaires to get their legs waxed, their hair styled, their fur coat cleaned.
Ireland must look at itself with a critical eye, it may make the middle-classes feel good about themselves by pointing their finger at the poor and dispossessed, it may make the right wing deviants feel good about themselves by talking about the little people while turning a blind eye to the corruption and the criminality of those sitting closest to them, however, it’s time for change.
It is time to do with the hypocrites what we have done with the Catholic Church, expose them, expose the millionaire’s wives who are getting social welfare each month (Children’s Allowance), while children starve on our streets, while children are molested because we don’t have the money to provide social workers, while children are homeless, while children are taking their own life because they can see no hope.
It’s time to end the bastardistion of our social welfare system by hypocrites and liars, let the millionaire’s wives pay for their own wax job or hair do, let the Judges reflect on their own social welfare payments, rather than criticise those before them for being on social welfare. If Ireland could export hypocrisy we would be the richest nation in the world.
The Department of Social Protection will bear the brunt of cuts in next month’s budget, accounting for €700 million of the €2.2 billion reductions in expenditure.
Cuts in the department’s budget will account for a third of all expenditure adjustments. With the budget for capital projects being cut by €750 million, the upshot is that Social Protection will account for half the cuts in current departmental spending.
Minister for Social Protection Joan Burton was originally told she had to produce cuts of €822 million from her department.
However,  she succeeded in recent weeks in convincing Cabinet colleagues that with the increase in the number of unemployed to 447,000 and because Social Protection’s outgoings are largely demand-led, a cut of that magnitude was not feasible.
Speaking this morning, Ms Burton said the country “faces a very tough situation” and each department is going to have to trim spending.
Ms Burton said she is trying to reform social welfare because there has been a “very large build-up of spend in the last couple of years”.
She said that since she became Minister, she has been “astonished” by the number of schemes and conditions in social welfare. “We should be able to bring those down into a much more limited number of schemes,” she added.
Social protection is the Government’s biggest spending department, paying welfare, pension and benefits to 1.4 million people each month and with an annual budget of €21 billion.
The bulk of its spending is on welfare. As the Government has committed itself not to cut the rates of primary social welfare payments, it will have to find alternative savings within the department.
“It is going to be very difficult. The talks are still on going. At least with the reduction in targeted cuts from €822 million to €700 million, there is less of a hill to climb,” said a well-placed Government source.
Department officials are understood to have focused on three areas to find the bulk of the savings: eliminating social welfare fraud; cutting the rent supplement bill; and “activation” measures for the unemployed to satisfy the conditions of the memorandum of understanding with the EU and the IMF.
Ms Burton launched an anti-fraud initiative in September in which she contended that new fraud control measures could achieve as much as €625 million in savings next year.
The department has also been in discussions with the Department of the Environment in relation to reducing the substantial cost of rent supplement which cost €516 million last year, and €376 million until the end of September this year. Some 95,800 families and individuals living in privately rented accommodation claim the supplement.
While social welfare rates will not be cut, the memorandum of understanding with the troika requires activation measures, which could mean that the long-term unemployed who do not take up training or job offers have their welfare tapered over time.
Savings may also be made by confining each social welfare recipient to only one primary payment that would be immune from cuts. However, that could be highly politically sensitive as those who receive more than one primary payment are mainly widows and carers.
The department has argued it is difficult to find cuts when its payments have increased as the dole queues have grown. In addition to an increase in the number of unemployed, there have been substantial increases in other benefits. These include the back-to-school clothing and footwear allowance. There were 160,000 applications in 2010 costing €77 million. The number of applications has increased to 193,000.
It is also expected that cuts in the Department of Health will amount to €400-€500 million, with the savings from the moratorium on public service recruitment from the Croke Park deal expected to yield a figure of several hundred million.
Separately, the Cabinet yesterday approved the capital projects that will be axed following the decision that their budget will fall by €750 million. The biggest casualty will be the Metro North project. Details of other axed projects will be announced tomorrow.
One of the flagship capital projects is the new national children’s hospital at the Mater Hospital campus in Dublin.

Barman Raped Children

There have been calls for Barmen/women to be vetted as they have access to children.

A Mayo man is to be sentenced today for regularly sexually assaulting two children in the pub where he worked over 11 years ago.

The 39-year-old man, who cannot be named for legal reasons, was convicted at the Central Criminal Court having been tried on 56 charges of sexual assault and rape on dates between June 1999 and September 2000.

The trial heard the girls were between eight and 10 years old at the time of the abuse.

They would go to one of the girls' mother's workplace after school and had developed the practice of watching cartoons in a nearby pub where they regularly used the toilet.

They were sexually abused during these visits by the accused who was a barman..

One of the girls gave evidence that she did not report the abuse until 2008 because she thought it was her own fault.

After he was convicted one victim said her life could now "really begin" while the other said it was a "dream come true".

The accused is to be sentenced today.

Abortion, GPs, Sligo

In the eyes of the Catholic Church the termination of the life of an unborn child is a Reserved sin, anyone Catholic found to have committed abortion or facilitated abortion are by their actions excommunicated from the Catholic Church. Those people who carryout or facilitate abortion are no longer members of the Catholic Church and if they continue to attend the Catholic Church they do so under a falsehood. Anyone carrying out or facilitating abortion and then later get married in the Catholic Church, are not lawfully married under Cannon Law.

SLIGHTLY MORE than 50 per cent of Irish GPs believe abortion should be available to any woman who chooses it, a survey shows.

The study earlier this year of 500 established GPs and almost 250 GPs in training reveals 48 per cent of respondents had a consultation in the previous six months with a woman either before or after she had travelled abroad for a termination of pregnancy.

The study, carried out by Dr Mark Murphy, a GP with the Sligo General Practice Training Scheme, is understood to be the first piece of research to look at both the attitudes of GPs to abortion and their clinical experiences of termination. The study, based on a postal/e-mail survey of randomly chosen family doctors, also highlights health problems for women related to the issue.

It will be presented today at a national research conference at Sligo General Hospital.

Some four in 10 respondents feel a woman’s healthcare suffers because of the requirement to travel to have a termination. In terms of women’s physical health, GPs report difficulty with aftercare. One respondent noted: “Many women do not attend for aftercare with their Irish GP as they are ashamed or embarrassed and often present too late with infection/bleeding.”

Respondents also noted the psychological stress involved, with one commenting: “Illegality and having to travel abroad add to the traumatic effect of what is already a complex situation and a decision not taken light-heartedly by many women.”

Of established GPs surveyed, 52 per cent said abortion should be available to any woman who chooses it, and 24 per cent said it should only be allowed in very limited circumstances, such as with “a real and substantial risk to the life of the mother”. Specific examples cited by respondents include rape or sexual abuse, maternal cancer and major foetal anomalies.

Some 11 per cent said abortion should never be available, while 13 per cent expressed no definite opinion.

Dr Murphy said he hoped the research would highlight circumstances in which women who choose to have an abortion abroad may suffer adverse health consequences.

Noting the terms pro-life and pro-choice did not accurately describe the spectrum of views of the majority of GPs surveyed, he said: “A maximum of 11 per cent of GPs surveyed agree with our current legislation regarding abortion. At a very minimum, 75 per cent of GPs feel there are situations in which abortion should be available in Ireland.”

Some 4,402 abortions were performed in the UK in 2010 on women who reported residence in the Republic. It is not known how many women from here travel annually to mainland Europe for terminations.

Thursday, November 24, 2011

Copyright, Database right, EU Commission Ruling

Internet service providers cannot be required by national courts to install filters that would prevent the illegal downloading of files, an EU court said today.

The ruling is a blow to artists who had sought to have their intellectual property rights protected.
“EU law precludes the imposition of an injunction by a national court which requires an internet service provider to install a filtering system with a view to preventing the illegal downloading of files,” the EU Court of Justice in Luxembourg said in a statement after today’s ruling.

SABAM, a Belgian company representing writers, composers and editors, established in 2004 that users of an internet service provider called Scarlet Extended SA were illegally transferring files.

A Belgian court last year sought the EU top tribunal’s guidance on whether forcing an ISP to stop illegal file sharing on its network is in line with the EU’s rules.

But the Court of Justice of the European Union ruled today that this would require monitoring of all electronic communications of all of Scarlet’s customers, infringing on their rights, and violated EU law.
The ruling may also have some impact in Ireland. In 2009, High Court judge Mr Justice Peter Charleton granted an injunction instructing Eircom to block controversial website Pirate Bay, which provides links to locations where copyrighted material such as music can be downloaded for free. Its activities have been the subject of numerous lawsuits.

The injunction was part of a settlement with record labels that saw the telecoms operator implement a "three strikes" rule that would see persistent file sharers cut off from its broadband service.
The Internet Providers Association of Ireland said the ruling set an "extremely important precedent" for ISPs, and would undoubtedly be seen as a landmark judgment.

"This outcome is of particular importance for us since the Department of Jobs, Enterprise and Innovation in June tabled wording for a statutory instrument which would purportedly bring Ireland into line with its European obligations under the copyright and e-commerce directives," the group said in a statement.

"The injunctions regime provided for in the broad wording of the proposal, however, could potentially encompass not only blocking but mass filtering obligations and furthermore, the eventual introduction of a graduated response system is not inconceivable in these conditions. Today’s ruling will certainly set limits on this."

DIT, USI, Protest, Budget 2012

Third-level students held a symbolic funeral procession through the streets of the capital today at what they warned would be "the death of education" in next month’s Budget.
The protest, organised by the Union of Students in Ireland (USI), was part of wider campaign against an anticipated hike in student fees currently being considered by the Minister for Education, Ruairí Quinn.
The rally, from the Department of Education on Marlborough Street to Leinster House, failed to draw anything like the numbers at last week’s “Stop Fees” protest march which saw up to 20,000 students march on Government Buildings.
At the front of today’s rally, students, dressed in funeral attire and carrying a large banner emblazoned with the words “RIP The Death of Education 1922 – 2011”, marched behind a hearse.
When the rally reached Kildare Street, several students removed a coffin from the hearse and carried it on their shoulders to Leinster House before laying a wreath at the gates of the building.
In his speech at the rally, USI president Gary Redmond told the crowd that any further increases in student fees or cuts in student supports would be the "death sentence for education" and severly undermine the country’s economic recovery.
"Every single cent spent on education is an investmemt in economic recovery and an investment in Ireland’s future."
"The same families that have to pay college fees are the same families who are struggling to pay mortgages, keep food on the table and keep the lights on," he said.
Mr Redmond said planned cutbacks in education would directly lead to students being forced out of education and into the dole queues.
Mr Quinn has said he is examining the Higher Education Authority report on funding for higher education and will discuss it with Government colleagues as part of the Cabinet's budgetary deliberations.
Mr Quinn, who made a very public pre-election declaration not to increase student registration fees, is thought to favour increasing the student contribution charge by €500 to €2,000, rather than the return of college fees averaging more than €5,000.
However, other options – including a graduate tax – are also under discussion. Cuts in postgraduate research grants and maintenance support are also being considered.

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The CEO of Ryanair Michael O'Leary has said child benefit should be scrapped.

O'Leary said it was ridiculous that he received the entitlement for his four children, given his income.

Speaking to Shannonside News, he said the allowance should be scrapped for everyone, even those on lower incomes.

"I think you scrap it for everybody...You need to channel children's allowance (to those who need it) through income support schemes, where you're trying to channel money to those on very low incomes," he said.

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