UncategorizedOctober 26, 2006 2:19 am
Irish Republican Information Service (no. 84)
Teach Dáithí Ó Conaill, 223 Parnell Street, Dublin 1, Ireland
Phone: +353-1-872 9747; FAX: +353-1-872 9757; e-mail: saoirse@iol.ie
Date: 25 Deireadh Fómhair / October 2006
 
Internet resources maintained by SAOIRSE-Irish Freedom
 
 
In this issue:
1. Ó Brádaigh refused Visa for launch of biography in New York
2. RUC careers stall decision a political act
3. Council of Europe Anti-Torture Committee visits Ireland
4. Corrib protesters want ‘all options’ discussed
5. Special Branch members found not guilty of perjury
6. Anti-social elements ordered to leave Ardoyne
 
1. Ó BRÁDAIGH REFUSED VISA FOR LAUNCH OF BIOGRAPHY IN NEW YORK
 
ON October 20 the US Department of State in Washington was refused a Visa to the President of Republican Sinn Féin, Ruairí Ó Brádaigh, to visit New York this weekend for the launch there of a biography of which he is the subject on October 21.
 
A letter from the US Embassy in Dublin stated that this action was taken under Section 212 (a) (3) (B) of the Immigration and Nationality Act. This section is described in a similar letter dated June 9, 1994 as prohibiting "the issuance of a visa to any person who has engaged, or who is likely to engage, after entry into the United States, in terrorist activity".
 
The biography is a 350-page hard-back book by Dr Robert W White, Professor of Sociology at Indiana University and is the result of 22 years research. It has already been launched this year in Dublin, Belfast and several other centres in Ireland and is available in bookshops.
 
The proposed weekend visit to New York was intended solely for the book launch, surely a political act which has now been suppressed by the US State Department. The book launch which took place in New York was very successful.
 
2. RUC CAREERS STALL DECISION A POLITICAL ACT
 
IN A statement on October 19 Richard Walsh, Derry, Assistant PRO Republican Sinn Féin said that the contemptible decision to invite the British Colonial Police to attend a careers fair at St. Columb’s College in Derry City was clearly a political act. Despite claims by the RUC that the stall "was not for the purposes of recruiting," the intention was clear.
The statement went on: "Indeed the RUC statement acknowledged that their presence was for the purpose of ‘providing information to those who wanted it about careers in the [force]’.
 
"The primary role of any police force is to provide the first line of defence for the state - which in this case amounts to the subversion of the democratically expressed wishes of the Irish people, acting as a unit. Recruits will be expected to take up arms in support of English rule in Ireland.
 
"Regardless of the outcome of any Extraordinary Provo Ard-Fheis on the matter, there are those who will continue to resist the foreign military occupation of our country. Anyone considering joining the British Colonial Police under whatever guise should realise that they are declaring themselves an enemy of the Irish people."
 
3. COUNCIL OF EUROPE ANTI-TORTURE COMMITTEE VISITS IRELAND
 
IT was reported on October 18 that a delegation of the Council of Europe’s Committee for the Prevention of Torture and Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (CPT) recently carried out a twelve-day visit to the 26 Counties. It was the CPT’s fourth periodic visit.
 
During the visit, which began on October 2, the delegation reviewed the measures taken by the 26-County authorities following the recommendations made by the Committee after its previous visits.
 
Particular attention was paid to the treatment of persons detained by the 26-County police and the operation of the various safeguards in place. The delegation also examined in detail a number of issues relating to prisons, including the conditions of detention of inmates in segregation or subject to measures of protection, the phenomenon of inter-prisoner violence, the provision of health care and issues pertaining to complaints and discipline. Another area of examination related to mental health care of prisoners and the care provided to forensic psychiatric patients.
 
In the course of the visit, the CPT’s delegation held consultations with the Minister of Justice, Equality and Law Reform, Michael McDowell, Minister of Health, Mary Harney as well as other senior 26-County government officials, Gardaí and prison officials as well as representatives of the Irish Human Rights Commission.
 
Discussions were held with members of non-governmental organisations active in areas of concern to the CPT and with members of the Royal College of Psychiatrists.
At the end of the visit, the delegation presented its preliminary observations to the 26-County authorities.
 
The visit was carried out by the following members of the CPT:
    -     Mario FELICE, Head of delegation (Maltese)
    -     Ale� BUTALA (Slovenian)
    -     Latif HUSEYNOV (Azerbaijani)
    -     Ann-Marie ORLER (Swedish).
They were supported by Hugh CHETWYND, Head of Division, and Marco LEIDEKKER of the CPT’s Secretariat, and assisted by three experts: Tatjana SIMMINS, psychiatrist, Geneva (Switzerland), Eric DURAND, former Head of the Medical Services at Fleury-M�rogis Prison (France) and Alan MITCHELL, former Head of Health Care, Scottish Prison Service (United Kingdom).
 
The delegation visited the following places:
 
Establishments under the Ministry of Justice, Equality and Law Reform
An Garda Síochána:
    -     Detention facilities at Athlone Garda station
    -     Detention facilities at Castlerea Garda station
    -     Detention facilities at Galway Garda station
    -     Detention facilities at Henry Street Garda station, Limerick
    -     Detention facilities at Kevin Street Garda station,Dublin
    -     Detention facilities at Mountjoy Garda station, Dublin
    -     Detention facilities at Mullingar Garda station
    -     Detention facilities at Roxborough Road Garda station, Limerick
    -     Detention facilities at Sligo Garda station
    -     Detention facilities at Store Street Garda station, Dublin
Prison Service:
    -     Castlerea Prison
    -     Cloverhill Prison
    -     Limerick Prison
    -     Mountjoy Prison
    -     Saint Patrick’s Institution for Youth Offenders
Targetted visits were also paid to Cork and Wheatfield Prisons to examine persons held in the segregation areas and those subject to measures of protection.
Establishments under the Ministry of Health and Children - Central Mental Hospital, Dundrum
 
4. CORRIB PROTESTERS WANT ‘ALL OPTIONS’ DISCUSSED
 
The Shell to Sea campaign has said it has always been willing to enter into discussions with Shell E&P Ireland on the Corrib gas project if such discussions include all options for the project.
 
Campaign spokesman Dr Mark Garavan was responding to the appeal early in October by Shell E&P Ireland’s deputy managing director Terry Nolan for dialogue, after three weeks of protests near the Corrib gas terminal site in Bellanaboy, Co Mayo.
 
Up to 100 people continued early morning demonstrations at Bellanaboy bridge on October 23 as Shell staff arrived for work at the terminal site. Some of the protesters sat on the road and were forcibly removed by the gardaí.
 
Dr Mark Garavan said Shell had so far been willing to engage in "explanation", rather than "meaningful discussion", and there was "no real evidence" that it wanted any change to its plan for the Corrib terminal.
 
On May 4 last, Shell E&P Ireland managing director Andy Pyle had apologised for the jailing last year of five Rossport men and said the company was looking at alternative routes for the onshore pipeline.
 
"Mr Pyle also said that everything was on the table for discussion, speaking to the media in Dublin," Mark Garavan said. "At the time we said that there was a possibility of a real breakthrough, but said it would be unforgivable if Shell was playing with people’s emotions and engaging in a PR exercise.
 
Dr Mark Garavan said: "Within 48 hours, Mr Pyle effectively binned his offer, when he ruled out the off shore option for the terminal in comments to journalists in Castlebar."
 
Also, the company had offered to modify the pipeline route after Peter Cassells’ report, but recently informed the Dublin High Court that it did not wish to vacate compulsory acquisition orders for the existing route, Mark Garavan said.
 
"Ultimately, dialogue has to resolve this, but the conditions of trust are not there, as there is no real evidence that Shell wants change," he said. "We want the government (sic) to take responsibility, and to direct Shell to reconfigure the project," Mark Garavan said.
 
5. SPECIAL BRANCH MEMBERS FOUND NOT GUILTY OF PERJURY
 
ON October 23 two 26-County Special Branch members accused of forging notes of an interview and of committing perjury during the trial of Colm Murphy were found not guilty by direction of the trial judge.
 
Judge Desmond Hogan at Dublin Circuit Criminal Court directed the jury to acquit the Special Branch members following his ruling that the allegedly forged interview notes and technical analysis of them were inadmissible.
 
Detective Gardaí John Fahy (aged 53), of Glaslough, Co Monaghan and Liam Donnelly (aged 50), of Cavan Town gave evidence in the 2001 trial of Colm Murphy and had pleaded not guilty to charges of perjury, forgery and using a forged document.
 
The Special Branch members were found not guilty of two counts of perjury in that they knowingly and falsely swore under oath that the purported notes of their interview with Colm Murphy on February 22, 1999 had not been rewritten and were an accurate account, on dates between October 18 and November 15, 2001 at the Special Criminal Court in Dublin.
 
They were also been acquitted of two counts of forging notes of interview with Colm Murphy on a date between February 21 and 22, 1999 and using a forged document at the 2001 trial with the intention to deceive.
 
Judge Hogan’s ruling came on day six of the trial following three days of legal argument in the jury’s absence. He found that the prosecution were unable to establish a chain of custody in relation to the original notes of interview or of the later "electrostatic document analysis".
 
 Paul O’Higgins SC, prosecuting, told the jury in opening the case on day two of the trial that Colm Murphy was arrested in February 1999 in connection with the Omagh bombing and was systematically interviewed by teams of gardaí.
 
Paul O’Higgins said Colm Murphy was interviewed by the two accused men between 3.45 pm and 5.45 pm. Donnelly made notes and Fahy primarily asked questions. He said Colm Murphy was meant to have given answers which were compromising to him and that evidence of where his mobile phone was at any given time was of significance to the charge of conspiracy to cause an explosion.
 
The prosecution’s case was to have been that "electrostatic document analysis" would show that the third page of interview was not the only third page of notes made.
 
Paul O’Higgins told Judge Hogan that in light of the court’s ruling no further evidence could go before the jury which could have led to a conviction and asked that a direction be given to the jury to return not guilty verdicts on all charges.
 
6. ANTI-SOCIAL ELEMENTS ORDERED TO LEAVE ARDOYNE
 
IT was reported on October 19 that more than a dozen men had been ordered out of Belfast by the Continuity IRA.
 
Warnings were stated to have been sent to men from the Ardoyne, Cliftonville, Markets, Poleglass and Twinbrook areas of the city that if they didn’t leave they will be shot.
 
On October 17 the Irish News (Belfast) carried a statement (received by phone using a recognised codeword) from the Continuity IRA in which it claimed responsibility for the shooting of three men in the Ardoyne area of north Belfast in the past month (on two men in north Belfast and on Conor Weldon in September who lost his leg as a result of the shooting), warning that further attacks would follow.
 
The statement continued: "We are reacting to demands from the nationalist people. The death threats to the people on the list that was shown to Fr Troy still stands. These people have been warned and they now know what the consequences will be if they do not either leave the country or come forward and present themselves for mediation to our organisation. We are not putting ourselves forward to police nationalist districts but if contacted by the people we will take action against known drug dealers, burglars and rapists. These people have been warned. We have made our position clear. The onus is now on them."
 
ENDS
UncategorizedOctober 25, 2006 4:48 am

Segment One of the Free-Form Video Discussion Series

 


The NIFC has recently completed segment one of the new Free-form Video Discussion Series. The first segment hosted by Pat Williams and Brian Wardlow includes Richard Walsh, public relations officer for the Irish Republican Prisoners Action Group in Ireland. The segment opened up with a recap of the introduction of the series, and a brief synopsis of the ongoing struggle for political status by Pat Williams. Richard Walsh of the IRPAG joined the show live, via telephone from Ireland to address questions posed by Pat Williams, and provide a clear understanding of the struggle at ground level. Brian Wardlow concluded this very informative segment with a brief description of the Eire Nua Federal Peace Program. You can view the segment online at www.irishfreedom.net, or by clicking the link below. The topic of the next segment will be posted shortly on the website. Please forward all question to be addressed to freeforum@irishfreedom.net.


The video can be viewed here:

http://www.irishfreedom.net/Videos/FF%20SEG.%20ONE%2010-20-06.wmv

Uncategorized 4:42 am

Ó Brádaigh refused Visa for launch of biography in New York

The US Department of State in Washington has refused a Visa to the President of Republican Sinn Féin, Ruairí Ó Brádaigh, to visit New York this weekend for the launch there of a biography of which he is the subject.

A letter from the US Embassy in Dublin states that this action was taken under Section 212 (a) (3) (B) of the Immigration and Nationality Act. This section is described in a similar letter dates June 9, 1994 as prohibiting "the issuance of a visa to any person who has engaged, or who is likely to engage, after entry into the United States, in terrorist activity".

The biography is a 350-page hard-back book by Dr Robert W White, Professor of Sociology at Indiana University and is the result of 22 years research. It has already been launch this year in Dublin, Belfast and several other centres in Ireland and is available in bookshops.

The proposed weekend visit to New York was intended solely for the book launch, surely a political act which has now been suppressed by the US Department of State.

ENDS

Uncategorized 4:40 am
Irish Republican Information Service (no. 83)
Teach Dáithí Ó Conaill, 223 Parnell Street, Dublin 1, Ireland
Phone: +353-1-872 9747; FAX: +353-1-872 9757; e-mail: saoirse@iol.ie
Date: 18 Deireadh Fómhair / October 18,  2006
 
Internet resources maintained by SAOIRSE-Irish Freedom
 
 
Irish Republican Information Service
THE body styling itself ‘Limerick Republican Information Service’ is not connected with the Irish Republican Information Service (IRIS), 223 Parnell Street, Dublin 1, email saoirse@iol.ie and has not been authorised either by IRIS or by the body that sponsors IRIS, Republican Sinn Fein. Therefore it is totally unauthorised and should be regarded as such.
 

In this issue:
1. Blair-Ahern ‘final settlement’ not facing vital issue
2. Provos to take oath committing them to upholding British rule in Ireland
3. POW Day of Action held
4. Engineers call on Shell to halt work at Bellanaboy
5. Shell to Sea protester victim of Garda assault
6. Shell officials alleged to have offered €15,000
7. Sellafield fined by British court
8. Derry company exposed as arms manufacturer
9. Shortt family agrees settlement with 26-County State
10. Garda detectives ‘lied at Omagh bomb conspiracy trial’
11. DNA date held on over 1,000 innocent children
12. Basque prisoners on hunger strike
 
2. BLAIR-AHERN ‘FINAL SETTLEMENT’ NOT FACING VITAL ISSUE
 
IN A statement on October 13 Ruairí Ó Brádaigh, President, Republican Sinn Féin said the "formula to restore Stormont" and "the basis for an agreement" which was being sought at St Andrews, Scotland would not be a final settlement between Ireland and England because it did not address the historic Irish Question, ie the issue of the presence of the British government in Ireland.
 
The statement continued: "If control of ‘policing’ is to be ceded to Stormont it will merely cover ordinary offences and traffic, etc. The British government will retain control of security through the MI5, for which a huge headquarters is at present being built in the greater Belfast area.
 
"As Republican Sinn Féin has reiterated since 1986, the Provos are being dragged into the British net gradually. Their total immersion into the English system in Ireland is now almost complete and they may soon return to Stormont to administer British rule here.
 
"The result of today’s talks may well be Mr Blair’s and Mr Ahern’s "final settlement" but Irish history teaches us that there will be no permanent peace here short of total British government disengagement from this country."
 
2. PROVOS TO TAKE OATH COMMITTING THEM TO UPHOLDING BRITISH RULE IN IRELAND
 
FOLLOWING three days of talks at St Andrew’s in Scotland on October 13 the British government and the 26-County administration published their proposals for the reconvening of the Stormont Assembly as well as securing a commitment from the Provisionals that they will fully accept and support British colonial policing in Ireland doing so under oath.
 
Both the Provisionals and the DUP have until November 11 to indicate if they accept the document, which says endorsement of the RUC\PSNI is an "essential element" of support for so-called "law and order". If they both give their backing to the document both parties could then nominate the First and Deputy First Ministers on November 24.
 
Following a report by the so-called Independent Monitoring Commission the proposed deal would be subject to "endorsement by the electorate" in either election or referendum form in March, possibly on both sides of the British-imposed border. All the parties would nominate Stormont ministers on November 14. The Stormont Assembly and executive would be formally reconvened on March 26.
 
The Provos are required to hold a national conference to endorse their support for the British Colonial police before any election or referendum.
 
Many observers believe that the British and 26-County proposals represent a "considerable triumph", according to Frank Millar writing in The Irish Times, for the position of the DUP. It appears that the Provo’s endorsement of the RUC\PSNI would come two weeks before the formal nomination of the First and Deputy First Ministers on November 24. Paragraph six of the document says: "We believe the essential elements of support for law and order include endorsing fully the PSNI and the criminal justice system, actively encouraging everyone in the community to co-operate fully with the PSNI in tackling crime in all areas and actively supporting all the policing and criminal justice institutions, including the Policing Board."
 
The DUP have stated clearly that they regard "all the policing and criminal justice institutions" as including all branches of the British crown forces including MI5 and the RUC/PSNI Special Branch.
 
On top of this all ministers including the First and Deputy First Ministers will be required to swear an oath which includes explicit endorsement of the British colonial police and British courts in the Six Counties. It has also been suggested that the DUP have secured the agreement of the British government to nominate one of its nine Westminster MPs to the Westminster Security and Intelligence Committee, this they believe would mean they were no longer reliant on the IMC for an assessment of the Provisionals commitments to disarm and disband their military organisation.
 
Writing in The Irish Times on October 14 Frank Millar said: "It is not clear yet to what extent Sinn Fein (sic) is a party to any such scenario. However, what is clear beyond doubt is that should this come to pass it would mark a massive reversal of Sinn Fein’s (sic) declared position requiring institutions to be ‘up and running’ and a firm date for the devolution of policing powers to the Stormont Assembly before party president Gerry Adams could consider going to a special conference to finally resolve the policing issue."
 
The DUP pulled out of a meeting in Stormont on October 17 involving the Provos because of a dispute with the British government over the timing of when the proposed oath would be administered. DUP MEP Jim Allister also expressed his doubts about the St Andrews proposals.
 
3. POW DAY OF ACTION HELD
 
ON Friday, October 13 the Republican Prisoners’ Action Group (RPAG) and members of Republican Sinn Féin throughout Ireland and supporters of the protesting Republican prisoners in Maghaberry in Sweden and the USA held a series of events to highlight the plight of the prisoners, as another sell-out of the Republican position was being negotiated at St Andrews in Scotland.
 
A statement from the RPAG on October 13 said that efforts to highlight the conditions faced by Republican POWs in Maghaberry jail - "a regime which the late Msgr Faul described as ‘inhumane’ after visiting Maghaberry, shortly after he had received a delegation from the RPAG".
 
The statement continued: "However we have endured a media blackout. Clearly it is not in the interests of London, Dublin or their hirelings for the people of Ireland to learn of the appalling conditions in which Republican POWs are held in Maghaberry jail or their ongoing resistance to the Brit policy of criminalisation.
 
Republican POWs in Maghaberry jail have been on protest since the June 19. They have issued five demands. These are:
 
* Free association
* Freedom of movement
* The right to full-time education
* Separate visiting facilities
* The right to organise their own landings
 
Supporters of the protesting Republican POWs in Maghaberry jail took part in a number of protest actions in order to increase awareness. Belfast members of the RPAG attempted to take over the offices of UTV but were prevented by the RUC/PSNI. A letter protesting the lack of coverage given to the POWs’ protest was handed in to the UTV offices and read to a camera crew at the gate.
 
The following is the text of the statement read outside UTV in Belfast: "We stand here in solidarity with the Republican POWs in Maghaberry jail, who are on protest against the inhumane conditions in which they are kept. The English government - in conjunction with former Republicans - has sought to criminalise them by revoking political status under the terms of the 1998 Stormont Agreement. The Provos are presently in Scotland discussing ways of reinforcing English rule in Ireland.
 
"Meanwhile those captured resisting the foreign occupation of our country endure 22-hour lockups; no free association; no adequate educational facilities; visits alongside loyalists; misuse of the sniffer dogs and many other injustices.
 
"The Prisoners of War in Maghaberry have been on protest since the June 19. During this time they have refused to eat food in their cells - in which there is a toilet - as well as initiating other forms of protest. They have also undertaken 24-hour, 48-hour and 72-hour fasts. Their health can only suffer as a result, and as such there is an onus on everybody to do all in their power to resolve the situation in Maghaberry.
 
"Twenty-five years ago ten soldiers died on hunger strike to ensure that political status would be returned to those who came after them. Those incarcerated for pursuing the freedom of their country have an absolute right to political status - and this right does not and did not belong to the Provos to sign away.
 
"The Republican Prisoners’ Action Group has sought to increase awareness of the appalling conditions in which Republican POWs are held, and to this end we have held many white-line pickets, public meetings, meetings with concerned bodies and individuals; organised leaflet-drops and other forms of protest.
 
"However there has been a concerted campaign of censorship in the media. Every attempt has been made by those responsible to minimalise our efforts to inform the Irish people of the conditions in Maghaberry Gaol and the ongoing protest within the prison. But the prisoners have made it clear that their resolve is strong, and that their protest will continue until their demands are met.
 
"Republican POWs can never be criminalised. Political status now!
"Victory to the POWs!"
 
An RPAG picket was placed outside the gates St Andrews in Scotland to highlight the plight of the Republican POWs in Maghaberry. Whilst the enemies of Republicanism - including the Provos - were inside negotiating ways of bolstering English rule in the Six Occupied Counties, the Republican POWs continue to suffer inhumane conditions in Maghaberry. Those who signed up to the Stormont Agreement signed away political status for the POWs.
 
Several thousand leaflets were handed out in the centre of Dublin outlining the plight of the prisoners by members of the Dublin Comhairle Ceantair of Republican Sinn Féin.
In Cork members of the MacCurtáin/McSwiney Cumann, RSF Cork and RPAG (Republican Prisoners Action Group) turned out at Daunt Square in Cork for a vigil to highlight the continuing attempts at the criminalisation of Republican Prisoners in Maghaberry.
 
Hundreds of leaflets were handed out, highlighting the present conditions in Maghaberry and the continuing protest for political status, which had been won by the sacrifices of ten brave men in 1981 and was removed by the British government and those who signed the failed 1998 Stormont Agreement. The reaction from passers by was positive.
 
In New York members of the National Irish Freedom Committee (NIFC) staged a very successful demonstration outside the British Consulate in NYC on October 14. The demonstration was part of the world-wide Political Status Awareness/Action Day to support the escalating struggle for political status by Irish republican prisoners.
 
Participants passed out leaflets with information on the escalating struggle inside British jails by the Republican prisoners. Storyboards were carried by  members of the group depicting the ongoing political status struggle beginning with the 1981 struggle in the H-Blocks.
 
The sidewalk in front of the consulate was busy with people; many of whom posed questions about the ongoing struggle for political status. The NIFC made its position clear by asserting that any attempt to criminalise the quest for a united 32-county federal Irish Republic, free of British occupation, will be resisted at every turn.
 
In Sweden the Ireland Information Group held pickets and handed out leaflets about and in support of the protesting Maghaberry prisoners on Saturday, October 14. There was one picket outside the British embassy in Stockholm, and one outside the consulate in Gothenburg. All the local branches of the committee plan to hold pub evenings/raffles in support of the prisoners in the near future.
 
Almost four months on from the start of the protest in Maghaberry it is imperative that anyone with influence exerts this to resolve the situation, which is hurtling towards crisis point.
 
The newly formed Glasgow branch of RPAG will distribute leaflets outside Celtic Park before the game in support of the Republican POWs in Maghaberry jail, on Saturday, October 21.  Show your support for the POWs by meeting at the junction of Janefield Street and Holywell Street at 2pm, to collect and distribute leaflets.
 
Republican POWs will not be criminalised!
 
4. ENGINEERS CALL ON SHELL TO HALT WORK AT BELLANABOY
 
TWO chartered engineers have called on the 26-County Minister for the Marine Noel Dempsey to commission a report on the "optimum location" for the controversial Corrib gas terminal, which might help to break the impasse over the �900 million euro project.
 
Former Bord Gais official Leo Corcoran and Brian Coyle of Coyle Hamilton in Galway have also proposed that Shell should suspend any work at Bellanaboy while such activity is undertaken. Any further activity on the site they state will only "further damage" Shell’s relationship with the community, and will waste resources if the study comes up with an alternative location.
 
The engineer’s proposal was formulated in response to the endorsement of the Advantica safety review of the onshore pipeline by the professional body, Engineers Ireland.
 
Leo Corcoran is critical of Engineers Ireland’s analysis, and says Advantica’s terms of reference were too limited. A former senior engineer on the Cork-Dublin gas pipeline, he has already prepared a complaint lodged by An Taisce with the European Commission over the consents issued for the pipeline by former 26-County Marine Minister Frank Fahey.
 
In their new report, Leo Corcoran and Brian Coyle identify the key issue as the location of the gas processing terminal 9km inland at Bellanaboy, which involves running a pipeline through Special Areas of Conservation and Special Protection Areas.
 
The report claims that modifying the pipeline route away from Rossport, as proposed by Shell, is not the answer, they find, given Bellanaboy’s inherent unsuitability as a terminal site and its proximity to the catchment for a major water supply for Erris. "In order to end this conflict, we would strongly recommend that a new site be found that is outside the catchment of the major water supply and that both the terminal and any pipeline carrying unprocessed gas is kept well away from established communities," they state.
 
In a reply to the Independent Mayo TD, Dr Jerry Cowley, the 26-County Justice Minister said that to date the cost of policing for Shell at Bellanaboy is �675,639, for which Shell would not be charged.
 
5. SHELL TO SEA PROTESTER VICTIM OF GARDA ASSAULT
 
WELL-known Shell to Sea protester Máire Harrington was taken to hospital with suspected concussion on October 13 having been pushed to the ground by a garda.
Máire Harrington was treated at the scene by Independent Mayo TD Dr Jerry Cowley and was taken by ambulance to Mayo General Hospital in Castlebar. She chose to be transported to a Health Service Executive (HSE) ambulance rather than in an Irish Red Cross ambulance which Shell is required to have on the site.
 
Máire Harrington, who was released from hospital on the afternoon of October 13, said she had been knocked to the ground by a garda and had sustained injuries to her head and neck. She had been in front of a group of protesters and was carrying a cross in memory of Nigerian activist Ken Saro-Wiwa when she felt herself "flying through the air" and then lying on the ground. Máire Harrington said she weighed six-and-a half stone and represented no physical threat. She said the Gardai stationed in Bellanaboy over the past two weeks were "out of control".
 
On the same day two people were arrested in Bellmulet Co Mayo in relation to a complaint about alleged "intimidation", they were released that night without charge. A file was sent to the 26-County DPP.
 
The two, a man in his 60s and a woman in her 30s were detained under Section 4 of the 26-County Criminal Justice Act. To date six people have been arrested arising from the protest. On October 16 Independent TDs Tony Gregory, Séamus Healy and Joe Higgins attended a press conference hosted by Dr Jerry Cowley at the Bellanaboy site.
 
6. SHELL OFFICIALS ALLEGED TO HAVE OFFERED €15,000
 
A NORTH Mayo businessman who runs an adventure centre claims that Shell E&P Ireland tried to buy his support for the Corrib gas project with an offer of €15,000 euro last year.
 
Ciarán Ó Murchú of Coláiste Uisce in Elly Bay says that company officials assured him that no one would know that the money came from Shell if he accepted it.
 
He rejected the offer, but believes other businesses have had similar approaches by the company in a bid to "divide the community" and undermine those objecting to the onshore pipeline. Shell E&P Ireland deny the claim.
 
Ciarán Ó Murchú made the claim at a press conference attended by the four Independent TDs, Dr Jerry Cowley Mayo, Tony Gregory, Dublin Central, Seamus Healy, Tipperary North and the Socialist Party’s Joe Higgins, Dublin West, on October 16.
 
Addressing the protesters, flanked by gardai, the four TDs called for the terminal work to be stopped, expressed support for processing at sea and said they would complain to the Garda Commissioner about being filmed by gardai during the event.
 
It was "incredible that an Irish (sic) government" could transform part of Mayo into an "occupied territory" by sending in police, Joe Higgins said.
 
Ciarán Ó Murchú described how three or four approaches and a number of phone calls were made to him by two Shell officials.
 
"I was asked if I was doing some work at the centre, and I said I was building a climbing wall," he said. "I was asked how much it would cost and I said it would cost 15,000 euro. I was told the company would pay for it and that materials could even be delivered in the middle of the night if it was a problem.
 
"I depend on local families to house students coming to the college", Ciarán Ó Murchú added, "so I was aware of the implications of accepting any such money and was also aware that the company wanted to win over both me and my staff". Coláiste Uisce employs nine full-time staff and up to 30 seasonal staff in the summer.                                                                                                                                                                     
 
7. SELLAFIELD FINED BY BRITISH COURT
 
A BRITISH court fined the Sellafield nuclear fuel plant £500,000 (743,000 euro) plus £68,000 in costs, totalling in euro 850,000.
 
The British Nuclear Group was fined by Carlisle Crown Court for failing to spot and stop an eight month long leak of 83,400 litres of radioactive liquid within the plant’s grounds.
 
The liquid contained 20 tonnes of uranium and 160kg of plutonium escaped from a broken pipe into a sealed concrete holding site. No-one was injured and no radiation escaped from the plant.
 
The company’s own internal report found that staff believed the new Thorp reprocessing plant would not leak and that "nothing could go wrong since the plant was relatively new". It also showed that staff had failed to carry out safety tests that would have revealed the 2005 leak earlier and a camera examination because it would have curbed production. The 26-County administration described the fine as too little too late.
 

Meanwhile it was revealed that British Energy has said it will have to shut down two nuclear reactors after finding cracked pipes at two power stations. Britain’s biggest power producer also said it was examining "a significant leak" in an underground cast iron pipe in the cooling water systems at Hartlepool, northeast England.
 
Asked about any risks to public safety, a company spokesman said that boiler tubes at Hinkley in western England and Hunterston in Scotland were cracked but not leaking and that water leaking from the pipes in Hartlepool were "non-nuclear".
 
Finance director Stephen Billingham, speaking to analysts on a conference call, said that British Energy would now have to buy electricity in the whole sale market to fill its contracts.
 
8. DERRY COMPANY EXPOSED AS ARMS MANUFACTURER
 
ARMS manufacturer Raytheon has confirmed to Derry City Council that their Derry base is involved in developing military software for the British Ministry of Defence (MOD). The council is set to reconsider its position at the next council meeting.
 
Without the support of the council Raytheon may have to pull out of Derry. In an internal document Raytheon says that if the council fails to back their project "the future of NISCC (Raytheon’s Derry division) is uncertain."
 
The Belfast Telegraph published British Freedom of Information documents showing that the Raytheon Derry plant was involved in the British MoD’s JETTS system, since 2005. The JETTS system, according to a Raytheon press release, "improves operational capability in battle by enchaining surprise, tactical agility, lethality and survivability."
 
Raytheon was awarded the lucrative contract just six months after it gave assurances to Derry City Council (DCC) that they would not be involved in military projects. Raytheon are an international arms manufacturing company specialising in defence and are the single largest manufacturer of guided missiles in the world.
 
There has been wide scale public opposition to Raytheon in Derry and in August the Derry Anti-War Coalition occupied their offices in Derry. Nine of the protesters have now been charged with unlawful assembly and aggravated burglary and are accused of causing 300,000 euro worth of damage at the plant.
 
In January 2004 DCC passed a motion declaring their opposition to the "development or production of weapons or any software whose end use is a military application… and if that is shown to be the case at Raytheon in Derry then the council’s position will change."
 
On October 9 Raytheon confirmed to DCC that they were engaged in developing such programmes.
 
9. SHORTT FAMILY AGREES SETTLEMENT WITH 26-COUNTY STATE
 
ON October 17 the wife and children of Frank Shortt, the Donegal publican falsely jailed for drugs offences, agreed a large compensation settlement with the 26-County State.
 
Frank Shortt was set up by rogue gardaí and framed for allowing ecstasy to be sold in his Inishowen nightclub, the Point Inn, in the mid-1990s. The 71-year-old was in jail for over two years before being freed in 1998 but his name was not fully cleared until 2002.
 
His wife Sally and five children, aged between 24 and 34, were compensated for the distress and suffering caused by their father’s wrongful imprisonment. The settlement is believed to be a six-figure sum and comes after €1.9m was awarded to Frank Shortt last year.
 
Two members of the 26-County police, former superintendent Kevin Lennon and his accomplice ex-detective garda Noel McMahon concocted the frame-up. They were later branded corrupt by the Morris Tribunal for setting hoax Provo arms dumps in Donegal in the mid-1990s as they tried to further their careers.
 
10. GARDA DETECTIVES ‘LIED AT OMAGH BOMB CONSPIRACY TRIAL’
 
A DUBLIN court was told on October 17 that 26-County two detectives lied under oath while giving evidence at the trial of a man accused of being involved in the Omagh bombings. The senior gardaí are accused of falsifying statements from Colm Murphy, who is alleged to have conspired with the bombers in August 1998.
 
Detective Garda Liam Donnelly and Detective Garda John Fahy appeared at Dublin Circuit Criminal Court on October 17 charged with two counts of perjury. The pair also face two counts of forging notes and a single count each of using a forged document at the 2001 trial. The men deny the charges.
 
Both men were part of teams of Special Branch detectives based at Carrickmacross, Co Monaghan, who systemically interviewed Colm Murphy during his 48-hour detention in February 1999, senior counsel for the state Paul O’Higgins said.
 
He told the jury that the gardaí had been investigating the Co Tyrone bombing atrocity when they arrested Colm Murphy for conspiracy.
 
Paul O’Higgins said the prosecution would prove a third and final page of interview notes taken by the pair had been replaced with a new sheet before it was submitted as evidence in court. He said a forensic test known as electrostatic document analysis (ESDA) would prove the case.
 
"The foundation for this application is in relation to these three pages of notes and the prosecution will call evidence in relation to a process known a ESDA," said Paul O’Higgins.
 
"The process enables evidence to be found in relation to indentations which have been left on paper after other sheets of paper have been written on and the top of the sheets on which the indentations have left."
 
The prosecution claims the gardaí knowingly and falsely swore under oath that notes of their interview with Colm Murphy, on February 22, 1999, had not been rewritten and were an accurate account at his trial in 2001.
 
It is also alleged they forged notes of an interview with Colm Murphy on a date between February 21 and 22, 1999 and used a forged document at the trial with the intention to deceive. The prosecutor told the jury that if they came to the conclusion that one person had forged the notes, but in the course of a scheme both people misrepresented what took place, each person is guilty of everything that happened.
 
Colm Murphy, 53, was accused of lending his mobile phone and another phone to the people who planted the Omagh device, knowing it would be used for moving bombs.
 
He denied conspiring to cause an explosion between August 13 and 16, 1998. The court heard the unsigned and hotly disputed statements formed a significant part of the prosecution’s case.
 
Colm Murphy from Ravensdale, Dundalk, Co Louth, was convicted at the non-jury Special Criminal Court in 2002 of conspiring to cause the explosion and jailed for 14 years. During the trial, Donnelly lied 13 times claiming that he had not rewritten an interview statement. The claims were backed up by Fahy.
 
In January last year, the Court of Criminal Appeal quashed Colm Murphy’s conviction and ordered a retrial.
 
11. DNA DATE HELD ON OVER 1,000  INNOCENT CHILDREN
 
On October 16 the Derry-based Pat Finucane Centre has called for the destruction of all DNA records held by the RUC/PSNI on children who have never been convicted or formally cautioned.
 
The call came following a recent case in Derry where an 11-year-old girl had a DNA sample taken after she had written her name in inch high letters on Derry’s Walls. On October 13 the PFC accompanied the father of the girl to a meeting with the RUC/PSNI District Commander at which the fingerprints and police photograph were destroyed and the father was given a written assurance that the DNA had been destroyed. A letter to that effect from the Forensic Science laboratory was shown.
 
A Freedom of Information request lodged with the RUC/PSNI by the PFC, has revealed dramatic evidence of the widespread retention of DNA by the RUC/PSNI in cases where no conviction or cautioning has followed, where the child is entirely innocent in other words. In total DNA is held on at least 3,065 young people under the age of 18. The figure may be higher since a second database has yet to be checked. Of this number 1,119 have no convictions or cautions.
 
A spokesperson for the PFC described the statistics as "a serious infringement of the rights of these children. We do not question the need to retain the DNA of serious violent and/or sexual offenders but to maintain records on children who have not been convicted of any offence is bizarre.’
 
"When asked for their position on this the [British] Policing Board told the PFC that the Board has no position as yet. Why not?
 
"We would urge all parents in a similar position who believe that the DNA of their children has been retained to assert their right to oversee the destruction of such records. We welcome the fact that records were destroyed in the case involving an 11-year-old girl. Equally this case highlights the need to destroy the DNA samples held on 1,119 other children. To put them on a DNA database for the rest of their lives is a disgrace and must be challenged."
 
12. BASQUE PRISONERS ON HUNGER STRIKE
 
IN A statement on October 16 the Basque Political Prisoners Association confirmed that a number of Basque prisoners were now on hunger strike in Spanish jails.
 
The statement said: "As the fight for political status gathers momentum in the Basque Country, political prisoners belonging to the EPPK (Basque Political Prisoners Association) have now confirmed a prison hunger strike protest by those involved in the prisoners’ association.
 
"EPPK stated in a recent interview which was given to the Basque Newspaper ‘Berria’ that they met with several Penitentiary Institutions throughout 2005 to state their case as political prisoners and to demand recognition for political status as ‘political prisoners’. Such requests have to date not been taken seriously.
 
"The EPPK is made up of political prisoners from across the Basque Country whose aim it is to assist and as well as to deliver many protest actions within the Spanish Prison system.
 
"Many protest actions to date have been against ‘Strip Searches’, ‘Isolation & Confinement’, ‘punishment beatings and torture’ which is common practice.
 
"As well as protests for ‘political status’, ‘education and free association’ and ‘to be regrouped closer to home’ an act which is enshrined within ‘Spanish Law’ but isn’t on offer to any political activists. Political prisoners are dispersed far from their homes, their family, friends and loved ones."
 
A spokesperson for EPPK stated that although the present political climate has improved (slightly on the outside) they believed that the general process was in crisis and warned the Spanish Government that political prisoners must not be used as exchange elements, claiming that political prisoners are a consequence of years of political conflict.
 
However, to date their requests have been ignored by the Spanish authorities. Instead it is said that it was followed by "the wave of repression", not to mention further "political isolation".
 
The EPPK have said that they intend to carry out a hunger strike on October 19 and 20 to direct and to focus urgent attention to the demands for political status, self-determination and an amnesty for all political prisoners.
 
ENDS

UncategorizedOctober 5, 2006 4:41 pm
No final settlement short of British disengagement
 
Statement by Ruairí Ó Brádaigh, President, Republican Sinn Féin
 
Contrary to what today’s British government statement says an agreement between the DUP and the Provos as to how to reconstitute Stormont will not be "a final settlement" of the historic "Irish Question".
History teaches us that nothing short of total British government disengagement from Ireland will provide the basis for such a settlement.
 
Already in the eight-and-a-half years of its existence, the Stormont Agreement of April 1998 has failed miserably, precisely because it did not address the basic question of the English government’s presence here.
 
That Agreement was concerned merely with restructuring British rule in Ireland and nothing beyond that. The conflict here from 1969 on was not simply about civil rights and a civil rights solution will not resolve the situation.
 
Those who ignore such realities have blinded themselves as to the way forward. The best hope in the wake of British disengagement lies in a nine-county Ulster as part of a new four-province federation with power and decision-making shared naturally - not artificially - according to local majorities.
 
All sections would feel comfortable in such a New Ireland.
 
ENDS
 
UncategorizedOctober 1, 2006 12:41 am
Irish Republican Information Service (no. 81)
Teach Dáithí Ó Conaill, 223 Parnell Street, Dublin 1, Ireland
Phone: +353-1-872 9747; FAX: +353-1-872 9757; e-mail: saoirse@iol.ie
Date: 27 Meán Fómhair / September  2006
 
Internet resources maintained by SAOIRSE-Irish Freedom
 
 
Irish Republican Information Service
THE body styling itself ‘Limerick Republican Information Service’ is not connected with the Irish Republican Information Service (IRIS), 223 Parnell Street, Dublin 1, email saoirse@iol.ie and has not been authorised either by IRIS or by the body that sponsors IRIS, Republican Sinn Fein. Therefore it is totally unauthorised and should be regarded as such.
 
In this issue:
1. Fermanagh protest held in support of Republican POWS
2. Support for Tara solidarity vigil light increases
3. Basque hunger striker force-fed
4. ETA ‘committed to armed struggle’
5. Pipe bomb found at RUC/PSNI barracks
6. Teenager shot in back in attack
7. Anti-collusion group stage protests
8. MI5 to be represented at Nelson inquiry
9. Club withdraws from Derry soccer league after sectarian incident
10. Gaeilgeoir’s legal ordeal continues
11. ‘Peace’ cash handed to missile company
12. Racial motive for house attacks
13. US invasion responsible deaths of over 250,000 civilians in Iraq
14. UK activists get into French new "mini-nukes" site
15. Throwing good money after bad
16. A message from the Miami Five, Gerardo Hernandez, Antonio Guerrero, Ramon Labanino, Fernando Gonzalez, Rene Gonzalez, 25 September 2006.
 
1. FERMANAGH PROTEST HELD IN SUPPORT OF REPUBLICAN POWS
 
A WHITE-line picket was held in Newtownbutler, Co. Fermanagh, on Saturday, September 23. The picket was organised by the Republican Prisoners’ Action Group (RPAG), and was in support of the demands of the POWs currently on protest in Maghaberry jail. In spite of adverse weather conditions a large crowd turned out to demonstrate their support for the prisoners’ demands.
 
Following the white-line picket a rally took place. The proceedings were chaired by Ruairí White from Newry - a member of the Ard-Chomhairle of Republican Sinn Féin - who introduced the national spokesperson of the RPAG and former Independent Republican councillor for Fermanagh, Tony McPhillips who highlighted the conditions faced by the POWs in Maghaberry, adding that the situation in the jail was hurtling towards a crisis point. The Republican POWs had just finished a 72-hour fast. He called on anyone with influence to use that influence in order to resolve the dispute.
 
The Cathaoirleach then introduced Fergal Moore - an Ard-Chomhairle member of Republican Sinn Féin from Co. Monaghan - who gave the main address. Fergal Moore emphasised the need for everyone to support the prisoners in their demand for political status, stating that the best way to prevent the abuse of prisoners was to restore the All-Ireland Republic. He asked those not involved in the Republican Movement to consider taking up an active role within the Movement, helping the Movement to expel the British forces of occupation from Ireland.
 
The proceedings concluded with the singing of Amhrán na bhFiann.
 
There was once again an overt RUC presence on the day. Approximately ten minutes before the demonstration was due to begin, an RUC jeep was observed departing Lisnaskea Barracks. After driving through Newtownbutler several times, the jeep took up a position to monitor the demonstration. The British colonial police remained until the conclusion of the event.
 
2. SUPPORT FOR TARA SOLIDARITY VIGIL LIGHT INCREASES
 
IT was reported on September 19 that despite repeated attempts by the 26-County Office of Public Works (OPW) to move them on, the Tara Solidarity Vigil remain camped out on the Hill of Tara. They have become a focus of opposition to plans to build a new motorway (M3) through the Tara valley. As opposition grows they have received increasing messages of support not just from Ireland but around the world also. Norwegians, in particular, have taken a keen interest in developments on the Hill due to a sense of shared history they have with Ireland.
 
3. BASQUE HUNGER STRIKER FORCE-FED
 
THE Irish Basque Committees reported on September 21 that Inaki De Juana, Basque political prisoner, has been force fed after 45 days on hunger strike.
 
Inaki De Juana expressed his will to continue on hunger strike after he was force-fed last night following orders coming from the Spanish Special Court.
 
Askatasuna, organisation of solidarity with the Basque political prisoners, denounced the situation of Inaki and said that "It’s is very hypocritical for the Spanish state that they are feeding him because his life is on danger when they are trying to keep him in prison for life. We have to remember that Inaki started the hunger strike as it was the last weapon he had to fight against the dirty tricks used by the Spanish authorities when despite doing his time to the full, 18 years, they made up new charges requesting for him — 96 years for two articles he wrote in the newspaper Gara".
 
Protests are increasing all around the Basque Country. Thousands of people demonstrated in favour of prisoners’ rights on September 17. Five rallies under the slogan "We need them alive and home" went by without incidents in the five capitals.
 
Rallies to denounce the prison policies of the Spanish and French Governments
and to claim respect for prisoners´ rights were held after demonstrations were banned twice recently.
 
EPPK, the Basque Political Prisoners Group, demanded pressure increase against
prisoner policies and those responsible. It also wants the prisoners to be brought to prisons in the Basque Country, according to a press release published in Gara on September 21.
 
"Basque conflict will not be solved neither through prison politics nor
through release from prison," the association asserted.
 
EPPK called on Basque society in order to "strengthen pressure against penitentiary politics and to be persistent to get self-determination, territoriality and recognition of the Basque Country".
 
The press release, addressed to French and Spanish States, said that EPPK will reject "any political project that is based in the denial of the Basque Country" and it criticised France and Spain because "they once again make use of prisoners to condition the freedom". Slogans such as, "Prisoners in exchange for peace" or "Prisoners in return for legalisation", are just "the _expression of political fraud".
 
4. ETA ‘COMMITTED TO ARMED STRUGGLE’
 
ON September 24 the Basque separatist group ETA said it will not relinquish weapons until the region gets independence from Spain.
 
Three hooded gunmen told an ETA rally in northern Spain their fight was not a thing of the past, despite a ceasefire announced six months ago. Speaking after the statement, Spain’s prime minister said he would work towards ending 40 years of violence.
 
His government has indicated that it is ready to talk to ETA, but has ruled out Basque independence.
 
The BBC’s Danny Wood, in the Spanish capital Madrid, says this is the sixth communication by the armed separatist group since it declared a permanent ceasefire in March.
 
He says it could be the strongest sign yet that ETA is not prepared to give up the violent struggle for independence - or just a strategy before starting talks with the national government.
 
The Saturday 24 rally was held in the town of Aritxulegi, near San Sebastian.
 
In their statement, reported by Basque media, the hooded gunmen said: "Until we achieve independence and socialism in the Basque country, we reaffirm our commitment to keep taking up arms firmly.
 
"The fight is not a thing of the past. It is the present and the future."
 
After the announcement, the militants fired shots into the air and disappeared into the forest.
 
5. PIPE BOMB FOUND AT RUC/PSNI BARRACKS
 
IT was reported on September 24 that a pipe bomb was found on September 23 in the grounds of Castlederg, County Tyrone RUC/PSNI barracks. The device was made safe by British Army bomb experts.
 
Earlier, three suspicious objects found in County Derry were declared to be hoaxes. Residents were evacuated after an object was discovered at Mussenden Road in Articlave and Temple Bar in Castlerock. A security alert at Freehall Park in Castlerock was also later declared a hoax. The railway line between Coleraine and Derry was closed for a time.
 
6. TEENAGER SHOT IN BACK IN ATTACK
 
A 17-year-old youth was shot in the back in north Belfast on September 23. He was walking along Ardoyne Avenue with some friends when a man appeared from a nearby alley and fired a shotgun at them. The youth - who was hit in the arms, leg and back - was taken to hospital for treatment. His injuries are not believed to be life threatening. Two other youths were hit with pellets, but did not require hospital treatment.
 
7. ANTI-COLLUSION GROUP STAGE PROTESTS
 
Members of anti-collusion campaign An Fhirinne held a protest outside the Culloden Hotel early in September where a PR event organised by the British Army Presentation Team and billed as a way of allowing the public to find out more about the British army’s activities was taking place.
 
The protesters included several north Belfast members whose relatives were murdered during the conflict.
 
An Fhírinne spokesperson Robert McClenaghan said the protest was held because families of those murdered as a result of collusion between the British state and loyalist death squads were angry about the event.
 
"These events are meant to put the British army in a positive light. As families of those murdered as a result of collusion or state murder we are deeply angered at this PR stunt," he said.
 
"We in Ireland already know of the British army’s activities - invasion, oppression, partition, discrimination, internment, imprisonment, criminalisation, torture, Bloody Sunday, shoot-to-kill and collusion to name but a few.
 
"For decades the British government has denied the role of its army in the murder of Irish citizens and to this day they deny involvement in collusion with unionist death squads."
 
An Fhírinne said they would stage more protests at British army public relations events organised to attract recruits.
 
8. MI5 TO BE REPRESENTED AT NELSON INQUIRY
 
ON September 20 it was reported that the British Intelligence service MI5 is to be legally represented at the public inquiry into the murder of solicitor Rosemary Nelson, the solicitor who died after a booby-trap bomb attack on her car.
.
She died after loyalists planted a booby-trap bomb underneath her car outside her Lurgan home in March 1999.
 
Retired judge Sir Michael Morland is to chair an inquiry into allegations of British state collusion in the murder.
 
MI5 argued that it would have assumed a lead role in the Six Counties by the time of the inquiry next year and should be represented.
 
Rosemary Nelson’s brother, Eunan McGee, said the decision had taken the family by surprise. Their concern is that MI5 might consequently be able to apply to remove sensitive or classified information in the papers.
 
There have been allegations of British state collusion in the killing of the 40-year-old solicitor because of her role as the legal representative for the nationalist Garvaghy Road Residents’ Coalition and other high profile cases.
 
9. CLUB WITHDRAWS FROM DERRY SOCCER LEAGUE AFTER SECTARIAN INCIDENT
 
IT was reported on September 22 that a Protestant football club had withdrawn four of its teams from a youth league in Derry due to fears of a sectarian attack.
 
The move follows an incident last week in which an U14 game between one of the teams and a local Catholic side had to be abandoned due to sectarian abuse.
 
Both teams had to take shelter in their dressing rooms after around 80 loyalists shouted abuse at the Catholic players.
 
The coach of the Protestant club said members of his teams had since been subjected to further sectarian abuse while on their way to school in the predominantly nationalist West Bank area.
 
He said he hated the idea of caving in to intimidation, but the safety of the players had to be paramount.
 
10. GAEILGEOIR’S LEGAL ORDEAL CONTINUES
 
AN Irish language protest took place at Laganside Court on September 25 to highlight the case of Máire Nic an Bhaird, a West Belfast woman who claims she was arrested for speaking Irish and is pleading not guilty to a charge of disorderly behaviour. The local schoolteacher was arrested outside a nightclub on the Malone Road on May 25.
 
The British Public Prosecution Service for Northern Ireland (PPSNI) were pressing for the case to be heard as soon as possible, regardless of the language.
 
Máire Nic an Bhaird’s solicitors refused, saying their client wanted the case to be heard in Irish and they are now calling for a judicial review of the status of languages in the courts in the Six Counties.
 
The request for a judicial review will be put before the Crown Court by barristers Niall Fox and Frank O’Donoghue on October 2. The case cannot now be heard until a decision is taken on the review request. If successful, Máire will have the green light to defend herself in Irish.
 
11. ‘PEACE’ CASH HANDED TO MISSILE COMPANY
 
ANTI-arms trade campaigners attacked the British government on September 20 for handing millions of pounds of taxpayers’ money - including European ‘peace’ funds - to a Belfast missiles company.
 
The Belfast Telegraph newspaper uncovered the extent of payments from the public purse to Thales Air Defence in recent years. Details of countries the company exports its products have been kept secret by officials.
 
The multinational firm was offered £899,060 in EU Peace II and Government funds through development agency Invest NI. Invest NI’s appraisal of the project claimed it would "address the legacy of conflict" and identified "some benefit in paving the way to reconciliation".
 
Rob Fairmichael, coordinator of Belfast peace group Innate, said: "The question is what do Belfast and Northern Ireland want to become known for - high precision killing or high precision useful manufacture?
 
"Is Northern Ireland going to export death and destruction after 30 years of enduring internal death and destruction?"
 
Emails between Invest NI and the Special EU Programmes Body (SEUPB) reveal payments to the arms company led to a diplomatic query from the Dublin Administration.
Its Department of Foreign Affairs contacted SEUPB in 2005 asking for "clarification" on the allocation of ‘peace’ cash.
 
Documents from the Dublin Department of Enterprise, Trade and Investment (DETI) also show Thales and its predecessor Shorts Missile Systems received more than £1m in EU money between 1996 and 2001 under the Northern Ireland Single Programme Document (NISPD) programme.
 
The stated objectives of that programme were to target social need in the province.
A payment of £3.46m was also approved by then-Stormont Minister Barry Gardiner in 2004, channelled through Invest NI, in relation to a research project with Queen’s Ulster universities.
 
In a statement, Thales Air Defence Limited said: "In 2004 TADL was awarded a grant up to a maximum of £3.46m for a research project from Invest NI. TADL has only claimed a small fraction of this grant to date.
 
"The markets in which we operate are extremely competitive and in many cases are declining. This has been reflected in a decrease in our profits and unfortunately in our headcount."
 
The firm said it was a key Ulster employer, attracting a cross-community workforce.
Thales also said that it only sells to countries the British government permits arms exports to, with exports accounting for only 10% of its business.
 
Earlier this year, Thales Group announced improved profits of €334m (£220m) for 2005.
Eddie McVeigh, head of the European Commission in Belfast, defended the payments to Thales from European funds.
 
He told the Belfast Telegraph: "Projects for successful selection under the EU Peace programme must fulfill rigorous selection criteria. Thales Air Defence was assisted under the Peace II through Invest Northern Ireland to the amount of £899,060 for research and development to support jobs. Thales employs 550 people and the total investment by the company, Invest NI and the EU Peace programme was £4.5m."
 
A Freedom of Information request that Invest NI reveal the countries to which Thales exports Belfast-made missiles was refused - a decision this newspaper is appealing to the Information Commissioner. Invoking exemptions under Freedom of Information, Invest NI argued disclosure "would prejudice relations between the UK and any other state". It also stated that Crown Forces could be endangered and commercial confidentiality breached.
 
12. RACIAL MOTIVE FOR HOUSE ATTACKS
 
SEVEN homes have been attacked in County Tyrone in what the RUC/PSNI believe were racist incidents. The houses in Dungannon were targeted in the early hours of September 24. There have been several attacks on foreign nationals in the town. Bricks with notes attached were thrown through the living room of each house at Blechfield in Moygashel, a loyalist area near Dungannon. No one was injured in the attacks.
 
13. US INVASION RESPONSIBLE DEATHS OF OVER 250,000 CIVILIANS IN IRAQ
 
NEW studies make the Bush administration’s "liberation" argument for a "pre-emptive" war against Iraq seem questionable.
 
The invasion of Iraq in March 2003 by US-led coalition forces has been responsible for the death of at least 150,000 civilians (not including certain areas of Iraq), reveals a compilation of scientific studies and corroborated eyewitness testimonies.
 
The majority of these deaths, which are in addition those normally expected from natural causes, illness and accidents, have been among women and children, documents a well-researched study, that had been released by The Lancet Medical Journal.
 
The report in the British journal is based on the work of teams from the Johns Hopkins University and Columbia University in the US, and the Al-Mustansiriya University in Baghdad.
 
A similar methodology was used in the late 1990’s to calculate the number of deaths from the war in Kosovo, put at 10,000.
 
The information was obtained as Iraqi interviewers surveyed 808 families, consisting of 7,868 people, in 33 different "clusters" or neighbourhoods spread across the country.
 
In each case, they asked how many births and deaths there had been in the home since January 2002.
 
That information was then compared with the death rates in each neighbourhood in the 15 months before the invasion that toppled president Saddam Hussein, adjusted for the different time frames, and extrapolated to cover the entire 24.4 million population of Iraq.
 
The most common cause of death is as a direct result of a worsening "culture of violence", mostly caused by indiscriminate US coordinated air strikes, and related military interventions, reveals the study of almost 1000 households scattered across Iraq. And the risk of violent death just after the invasion was 58 times greater than before the war. The overall risk of death was 1.5 times more after the invasion than before.
 
The on-going Anglo/US Occupation has also created worsened civil strife as well as mass environmental destructions and related public health problems that is associated with American bomb-related released radioactive and other life-threatening pollutions. The American Occupation has also prevailed over the neglect to the repairing of vital public services-related infrastructure, which include U.S.-led destructions of water systems.
 
The figure of 100,000 had been based on somewhat "conservative assumptions", notes Les Roberts at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, US, who led the study.
 
That estimate excludes Falluja, a hotspot for violence. If the data from this town is included, the compiled studies point to about 250,000 excess deaths since the outbreak of the US-led war.
 
Many Americans have complained that more than $200 billion US tax dollars have been diverted from vitally needed public services in the United States, into apparently reckless activities. These activities are resulting in inflicted mass-casualties against totally innocent civilians, which have worsened conditions for political extremism, and ensuing "terrorism".
 
It is well documented that such activities are being viewed by many Iraqis, and other peoples internationally, to undermine a popular feeling of international security in general. Indeed, polls suggest that Americans felt much more secure under the former political leadership of US President Bill Clinton, as compared to the militaristic strategies which are being pursued by the George W Bush administration. (source: http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article11674.htm)
 
A recent poll in the 26 Counties found that Irish people also believe that the presidency of George W Bush has made the world a much more dangerous place to live in.
 
Trident Ploughshares
Press Release: 23rd September 2006
 
14. UK ACTIVISTS GET INTO FRENCH NEW "MINI-NUKES" SITE
 
PEACE activists from Britain have penetrated the French nuclear installation at the testing centre of Les Landes in Biscarosse near Bordeaux, which is involved in the development of a new generation of nuclear weapons.
 
The ten activists joined a mass citizens inspection organised by the a coalition of NGOs, including ATTAC, Réseau Sortir du Nucléaire, Mouvement de la Paix , Greenpeace, the Quakers. The focus of the inspection is the development of the new M51 nuclear missile which will be a submarine launched high precision weapon with a range of 10,000 kilometres. There is especial concern that the relatively low yield of the warheads it is designed to carry will make its use more likely.
 
Angie Zelter (55), from Norfolk, Lesley Anderson (23), from Clackmannanshire, Mell Harrison (35), from Norwich, Peter Lux (44), also from Norwich and Ludd Appeltans (35), a Belgian currently living in Scotland, have already crossed a " forbidden zone " and entered the site and Lesley Rogers (42) from Beith in Ayrshire, Matt Bury (51), from Faslane Peace Camp and Sam Maher (29), from Norwich, are hot on their heels.
 
The British activists have been determined to show their solidarity with the French anti-nuclear movement as both Britain and France are threatening to continue their dependence on WMDs, to develop new ones, and so to breach their legal commitments under the Non-Proliferation Treaty.
 
The action comes just one week before the start of the Faslane 365 continuous blockades at the British WMD base on the Clyde.
 
Contacts at the site :  Angie Zelter 07835354652 or Petter Joelson on ++4670867424;.
Trident Ploughshares : David on 07876593016; www.tridentploughshares.org.
 
14. THROWING GOOD MONEY AFTER BAD
 
THE [26-County] Prison Service Annual Report of September 25, 2006, shows need for alternatives to custody, not superprisons, according to the Irish Penal Reform Trust (IPRT)
 
Commenting on the 2005 Annual Report of the 26-County Prison Service, the Irish Penal Reform Trust (IPRT) stated that the Report provides further evidence that the 26-County administration’s superprison plans are both unnecessary and unjustifiable.  The group is calling upon the administration to abandon superprisons in favour of more cost effective non-custodial supervision programmes to deal with the non-violent, short term offenders that comprise the overwhelming majority of prison committals.
 
The report demonstrates the high cost of prisons and data provided in the Prison Service’s Annual Report shows:
* The annual cost of keeping a prisoner in custody is €90,900, nearly a 10% increase over last year’s average of €83,800.
* 85% of all committals in 2005 were for non-violent offences.
* 90% of women committed to prison in 2005 were for non-violent offences.
* 78% of all committals under sentence in 2005 were for 12 months or less.
* 89% of women committed to prison in 2005 were for sentences of 12 months or less.
* 39% of all committals under sentence in 2005 were for 3 months or less.
* 55% of women committed to prison in 2005 were for sentences of 3 months or less.
"Incarceration is the most expensive response available to offending," said Rick Lines, Executive Director of the IPRT. "While Minister McDowell often points to his success at addressing the issue of prison officer overtime, it is clear from today’s figures that this has done nothing to halt the spiralling costs of prisons. Given this tremendous cost, and the poor record of Irish prisons at reducing re-offending, there is a clear basis for the Government to divert significant numbers of non-violent offenders sentenced to one year or less away from prisons as a first option."
 
The Penal Reform Trust has also rubbished attempts by the Prison Service to spin the Annual Report’s findings into an excuse to justify the building of the Mountjoy superprison in north Co. Dublin. A press statement from the 26-County Prison Service claims that the new Mountjoy complex would reduce the annual cost per prisoner by €20,000 through the "economies of scale which can be achieved by locating 30% of Ireland’s prison population on a single site.
 
"Given that the existing Mountjoy complex already houses 30% of the total prison population, one wonders what ‘economies of scale’ the Prison Service is referring to," Rick Lines said.  "Moreover, it is only within the unscrutinised spending regimes found in the Department of Justice that €70,000 per year to incarcerate someone would be seen as a bargain. Indeed, the construction of the two proposed superprisons will increase the overall prisoner population by 800-1,000 persons, which means total spending on prisons will go up even if these claimed savings are realised."
 
"The Prison Service Report illustrates that the Government’s rush to build superprisons is driven by politics rather than need, and is an utterly avoidable example of throwing good money after bad," he said.
 
14. A MESSAGE FROM THE MIAMI FIVE, GERARDO HERNANDEZ, ANTONIO GUERRERO, RAMON LABANINO, FERNANDO GONZALEZ, RENE GONZALEZ, 25 SEPTEMBER 2006
 
"WHEN I remember back on what happened that September 12, 1998 the first thing that comes to my mind are the words of the FBI agent, who in the middle of his efforts to try to turn us into traitors, said: "Cuba will do nothing for you. Nobody will do anything for you.
 
"How far off were he and his fellow officials to imagine what has developed over these years in the struggle to free the Five (to be honest, not even we, the Five, could have imagined!) I really wish that now I could see his face again and show him the message that Fidel sent us recently, or mention to him the words from Alarcón about us in every event that he participates, or about the denunciation of our imprisonment by Cuban officials at all levels and the pleas from members of our own families in the most important international forums raising our case.
 
"I would not have enough time to tell him about all the examples of support and affection that comes to us from the Cuban people, and from all our compañeros from all over the world. Perhaps he knows about the great number of letters that we receive every day, but I would tell him about Andy Daniel, a Cuban child that was born with his little hands deformed and that at six years of age, writes and makes drawings for the Five. Or of the woman in that remote place in the mountains of France, that for years now sends letters to the Five every week. (She even received a response from the Pope’s office, but not from Alberto Gonzales’ office…) Or from the very old couple from London who sell
flowers from their garden to raise funds for our cause, just as many other friends around the world have done, with similar sacrifice. These are just a tiny few examples of the love and solidarity that we receive from around the world.
 
"I am certain that that FBI agent has heard about the people in Miami who, despite the challenge of overcoming the terror imposed by the Cuban American Mafia in that city, have not stopped demonstrating in favor of our liberation. I would tell him about the hundreds of solidarity committees created around the whole world, about the protests in front of U.S. consulates and embassies, or about the compañero from Philadelphia, that despite his health problems has been able, due to his insistence, to publish his letters about the Five in several newspapers. I am sure that I would still have many things to mention to him, but I would for certain tell him about the thousands of friends in the United States that, despite the pressure and intimidation of this administration against the progressive movements and those sectors that struggle for civil rights, that they are not afraid. I would point to those who will take their voices of protest for our freedom to the front door of the White House. I will tell him about all of you that are participating in the solidarity events on our behalf that has gave us so much encouragement.
 
"Without any doubt, on September 12th 1998 that FBI agent was wrong. He was wrong just like the prosecutors in our trial and all the others who lied about our mission and that underestimated you and us. Sisters and brothers: some people may say that our struggle has not been effective because the Five are still in prison, or that we are in a very bad moment because we lost an important point in our appeals. Nothing could be further from the truth. We never thought that this battle for justice was going to be easy, or short. We believe-on the contrary-that the current moment is good, and because of that we should re double our efforts. A year ago we were complaining about the strong wall of silence imposed over our case by the corporate media. In recent months that wall has been opened little by little and nobody should think that it is due to some spontaneous interest coming from the media about the Five. We owe this shift to the work that all of you have been doing and to the solidarity efforts of each one of you from all over the world.
 
On a recent occasion a dear compañera made an observation to us that in all the messages from the Five we always repeat the words "gratitude","appreciation", "thanks". and suggested that it wasn’t necessary. Because I knew she was right about that I borrowed a dictionary with synonyms to find other words, but it was in vain. We do not have any
other way to express how we feel about your support. We are immensely honored and proud for the solidarity of all of you, and we express our most profound THANKS for everything you do for us.
Hasta la Victoria Siempre!
With the revolutionary embrace of the Five, Gerardo Hernandez Nordelo, USP, Victorville, California, September 2006
 
ENDS