Wednesday, April 30, 2008

Lesbians of Lesbos arise

Sappho by Gustav KlimtImage via Wikipedia
The Island of Lesbos located in the Agean Sea, is apart of a Series of Islands which makes up the Greek Islands. Lesbos is also the eight largest in the Mediterranean Sea and it exists as a part of the Lesbos Prefecture. It has a population of some 90,000 people and a total livable area of some 1,630km2. Those who are natives of the Island are known as Lesbians.

Some of you may be wondering why this little Geography lesson is of any great importance. Well it would appear that the Lesbians (thats the people of Lesbos, male and female rather than the female homosexual) are a little tired of being associated with Homosexual Couture. As you may have guessed or known, the Island of Lesbos is the former home of the Greek Poet, Sappho. Sappho's works are few and far between now and many have been lost to antiquity. Despite this, her reprutation has endured to the modern day. According to that wonderful source of Wikipedia

Sappho's poetry centers on passion and love for various personages and genders. The word "lesbian" derives from the name of the island of her birth, Lesbos; her name is also the origin of its less common synonym sapphic. The narrators of many of her poems speak of infatuations and love (sometimes requited, sometimes not) for various women, but descriptions of physical acts between women are few and subject to debate. Whether these poems are meant to be autobiographical is not known, although elements of other parts of Sappho's life do make appearances in her work, and it would be compatible with her style to have these intimate encounters expressed poetically, as well. Her homoerotica should be placed in the seventh century (BC) context. The poems of Alcaeus and later Pindar record similar romantic bonds between the members of a given circle.[22]


Soucre: Wikipedia.com
So what have the Lesbians of Lesbos taken exception too exactly? Well According to the Telegraph and CNN, the islanders have taken exception to the Greek LGBT Group OLKE using the phrase Lesbian in their title. According to CNN:

"This is not an aggressive act against gay women," Lambrou said. "Let them visit Lesbos and get married and whatever they like. We just want (the group) to remove the word lesbian from their title."

He said the plaintiffs targeted the group because it is the only officially registered gay group in Greece to use the word lesbian in its name. The case will be heard in an Athens court on June 10.

Source: CNN

Its an interesting Case I guess, but its a load of horse shit to be honest. A National LGBT group should Of course recognise all its members, either within its title or within its mandate. I understand where the Lesbians of Lesbos (ie the natives) may have a problem with having their apparent regional identity associated with the name Lesbians (ie women who love women) but to be honest, even the language above from CNN suggests that it targeted the Group deliberately because it uses Lesbian in its title. Should a Precedent be set, then the possibility for using Lesbian (ie women who love women) could possibly be forbidden for being used.

This comes on foot of an ultimatium issued by OLKE back in March after they uncovered a loophole in Greek Civil Marriage law which only specified persons and not specifically gender. This was tested in March by a Lesbian couple who got married civilly in the Athens suburb Kessairiani. You can read more about that on 365gay.com. Now if only it was as easy as that in Ireland. Oh wait thats right, there is no Constitutional definition of "marriage" by the Supreme Court of Ireland despite what the AG thinks. But sure nothing in life is ever that easy I guess.

Anyway to finish off the post, I find Southpark (surprisingly) somewhat appropriate. :-)





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Cartoons.

Leave it to the Finns.....

OK I was sent this link by a friend. I personally was rather bemused by it so I thought I would share. :-). Who said the Finnish never did anything for anybody obviously has not met Gregorious.





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Monday, April 28, 2008

To X or not to X...

The fine art of planning that first Facebook messageImage by Avery Edison via Flickr
It is quiet the conundrum in modern day life. You are writing an email/text message and you say what you need to say in it. Then you come to the dreaded end greeting and you are unsure how you should end it. Now within a business setting obviously you use the term "Regards, theangryhedgehog.com". However what about with friends. When exactly is it appropriate for to use the phrase "kisses" or the "x" in a message. Well I guess some of you will tell me that it depends on the intimacy you have with that person. I figure you are right to an extent, it does but what if you are unsure as to the status of intimacy or if you are friends or whatever, do you 'x' then? Can the use of the 'x' be a waste of a keystroke or simply a sign of affection. Personally I think having an 'x' at the end of a text/email is quiet a statement to make to that person. It is a sign of affection, of shared experiences and a recognition of all that. Platonic or otherwise.

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The DLR Experience

Treaty establishing a Constitution for EuropeImage via Wikipedia
Well it is coming up to that time of year again. Yes you are right it is Referendum time. *sigh* it seems like only yesterday when we voted in the last referendum on the EU Constitution, then the bleeding Damn Dutch and French rejected it! Bah. Anyway I will not be making my opinions known on Lisbon just yet-It will happen in the near future, I promise.

However back to the story at hand. I will be living in Dublin for this referendum, which means of course that one has to change one's electoral vote to the infamous (for many reasons) Dun Laoire-Rathdown County Council electoral area. So in order to change my address, I called Corporate Services in DLR this morning and they were most pleasant. I shall have to wait for her to send out the supplementary electoral register form, fill it in, get a guard to sign and stamp it and then send it back to DLR. Relatively straight forward I hope.

I do however have a reason for this post, mainly to remind people-ie students or otherwise-who have moved since the Electoral Register was compiled last January to get in contact with their local county council and change their vote to their new area. As the Referendum will be held on the 12th of June 2008, you have up to 14 days prior to that to get registered and get your names on the list, which means that Thursday the 29th May is the last day for it. If you don't have a change of address, You can check the electoral register from the web to ensure you are still on the list at the Dept. of Local Govt's website or alternatively you can view the register at any County Hall or Library.

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Friday, April 25, 2008

Facebook Chat and IE 6

Windows Internet ExplorerImage via Wikipedia
Ok so much fanfare and much ado about the latest little thing to happen with the Facebook development people-Facebook Chat.(See Damien Mulley's post about it here) Well thats just great. Now I have to deal with several chat programes such as MSN, Google Chat and now Facebook IM. Bah! However there is one slight sigh of relief I have about Facebook chat-It will not work on HEA computers who have IE 6 installed on them, which the vast majority of UCD's computers appear to have. Happy Days in one way; Means I might actually get some work done on College computers.

I am curious though, if Facebook chat is only developed for IE7 or Firefox or Safari or Flock, why not for IE6. Perhaps it can be summed up in a neat little sentence about IE6 and how shite it was/is Security Wise.

SO if this is the case then with regards the serious Security flaws etc and it is being used in HEA institutions still; How vulnerable are HEA institutions when it continues to use IE 6? IE 6 was pretty much obsolete the moment IE 7 was released in October 2006. It is now May 2008 and IE6 is still in use in this particular institution. I wonder how many more are the same?

Regardless, I have just recently discovered that I can use Firefox via my USB key, using Portable Apps, I will have solved my problem of not being able to use Facebook Chat in IE6 before it has made any impact on my Addiction for Internet usage! :-). Doesn't solve the problem of Internet security within IE6 though in UCD. Works great though for keeping those pesky students off social networking sites. :-)

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Thursday, April 24, 2008

Here ducky ducky

Whilst having lunch yesterday by the lake, I had some lovely company from a duck. Now I say company but what I really mean is the cheeky bugger was actually there to take the crumbs which had collected by my feet and I would have looked strange talking to a duck whilst reading my Irish Times-even more than usual that is :-).




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IRELAND: DrinkAware's latest campaign

The DrinkAware people have a lovely new Ad Campaign geared towards those festival-lovers who always forget that one thing........Just curious though, within the pack that you apparently get via drinkaware.ie (I Can't find the link to the Festival Pack on their site), is the Toilet roll branded?...More curious than anything else, ya know Festival Goers....ya run out of toilet paper..."oh look, I'll use my drinkaware toiler roll"....*leaves rest to the imagination of others*




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Wednesday, April 23, 2008

Photobucket now does Video

Photobucket now allows for Videos as well as its usual Photos. I have to check it out later but I figured I would let yas all know. :-) . Photobucket is what is used on the Angry Hedgehog to host the images which are used in various posts, and thus save other people's bandwidth. :-)




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Bleeding NORA!


As one does, when one is an unemployed student and in need of desperate distractions when it is exam season, one desperately checks ones email for news tibets and humerous stories etc. So such was the case this morning when going through my email, I came across an email from the Public Jobs Commission advertising a new position within the Clerical Officer section. However, this particular job was for an Accounts i.e. Numbers, which means of course that this Arts Grad won't be going anywhere near it! :-). There is of course a twist, it was for NORA or otherwise known as the National Oil Reserves Agency.

Never heard of it? I'm not necessarily suprised I've not heard of it considering it has been in existence since 1995, when I was more interested in playing Doctors & Nurses in the Playground rather than worrying about National Oil Reserves. I am suprised though that considering all that has been ongoing within the Energy Industry over the last couple of years, that this particular QUANGO has not been more vocal about securing more Oil reserves etc.

I however have another question to ask though, according to NORA's own website,




"NORA receives no Exchequer funding..."



It Continues,




...its ongoing activities are 100% funded by a levy imposed on certain oil products
while it borrows from commercial banks in order to purchase NORA wholly owned
oil stocks. The levy (0.476 Euro cent per litre) has remained unchanged since
1995.



According to the Department of Communications, Marine and Natural Resources' website on NORA, the oil products which this levy applies to is as follows:




The oil products involved are petrol, kerosene, gas oil, DERV and fuel oils.
Details are also provided of the quantities imported and exported, wholesale
sales and purchases, and retail sales and own consumption, together with details
of any quantities used for marine or aviation purposes. The monthly levy due to
NORA by each company/consumer is calculated by the Department on the basis of a
company's retail sales plus own consumption, less sales to other oil companies,
less disposals of fuel for marine or aviation purposes.





So I guess my own inquisitive mind has a question? If NORA is only funded by a level of some 47 cent per litre and this funding is only acquired by the montly levy on the literage of "certain oil products", which includes petrol, keresane and fuel oils, Is this then contributing towards part of the reason why fuel costs in the Republic are quiet high? If roughly 47cent per litre is taken in a levy, it has to be passed on somewhere in order for Oil companies to make money. Invariably somebody has to take the hit for the levy and I would wager that this is possibly part of the reason for high fuel costs.




I don't dispute the necessity of requiring an Agency/Department to acquire oil stocks & Oil reserves in order to secure our own position etc but I am however more curious about is, the 47 cent per litre levy comes out of the above Oil products, is this all recycled back into NORA's own accounts for future purchases of Oil Reserves? According to its 2006 figures (Opens as a PDF), within it's Profit and Loss accounts it had some €37m in a turnover, with operating costs of some €29m in the same year?! This left it with some €7m of a surplus in that year. However the year previous, its P&L accounts has a recorded turnover of some €35m with operating costs of some €28m and coming out with a surplus of €24m? Like I said I am not an accountant but even I have queries about that. Perhaps it can be explained away with rising oil prices, rising risks and a worry about the longevity of current Oil reserves. Maybe then fair enough but still like, doesn't make it any less questionable as a Public Body under the Dept of Communications, Marine and Natural Resources, regardless of whether it recieves Exchequer funding or not.




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Tuesday, April 22, 2008

That New Cadbury Advert

Some of you may or may not have seen that new Cadbury Dairy Milk Chocolate. It is fabulous. However seriously WTF do airport vehicles have to do with a Chocolate bar? Guess the Marketing is working well, if the product is being discussed eh?



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Saturday, April 19, 2008

Birthday Greetings

Happy Birthday to You is often sung when a birthday cake is brought to a party table before the person with the birthday blows out the candles.Image via Wikipedia
It's my birthday today. I am 24 and unlike other years where I have ran a mile from dealing with Birthday celebrations, this year I have not really cared too much. I was greeted this morning with a Voicemail from my mom, my brother, my sister and I assume my Cousin with a rendition of Happy Birthday. This is among a couple of various greetings I have received up to this point.

So in the words of Edith Piaf, ' Non, je ne regrette rien'.





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Friday, April 18, 2008

Reminder: Equality Public Lecture Series: Doing Business Differently

Just a reminder about the Public Lecture series next week in UCD with Mick Wallace. Full details of the event are mentioned here.

Public Dialogue with Mick Wallace:Thursday, 24th

April at 8pm.

Venue: Lecture Theatre Q015, Quinn School of Business, UCD

Doing Business Differently

How do ethical, political or moral obligations combine with business? Can we do business ‘differently’?

Mick Wallace, builder, developer, and philanthropist will be joined by Sara Burke, journalist, for a discussion on the subject of engaging in socially responsible projects and actions in business. This is a public dialogue, and there will be opportunity for audience members to take part in the discussion. The evening will end with a wine reception, to which you are all invited to attend.

This event is jointly run by the Equality Studies Centre within UCD’s School of Social Justice, and the Quinn School of Business.

All are welcome!

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Irish Penal Reform Trust Legal Seminars on Prison Law

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Via Equal-L
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Dear members and friends,

The Irish Penal Reform Trust is happy to announce the first of a series of Legal Seminars on themes
relating to Prison Law. This seminar is aimed at legal practitioners and is
organised in conjunction with the Irish Criminal Bar Association and the
Dublin Solicitors Bar Association. The hope of the three partner
organisations is that the series can help to raise awareness among
practitioners about developments in this rapidly changing area of law.

The first seminar will be on the theme of "Prisoners, Adjudication and Legal
Representation" and will take place in Distillery Building, 145-151 Church
St, D7 on Tuesday 29th April at 5.30pm.

The two main speakers will be Chris Callender of the London-based Howard
League for Penal Reform and Dr. Paul Anthony McDermott BL. Chris is a
solicitor and Assistant Director at the Howard League responsible for its
legal team. Paul is a leading member of the criminal bar with twelve years
practice experience. Paul also lectures at the School of Law in UCD and is
author of the seminal text Prison Law (2000).

Further details are available at www.iprt.ie or by calling IPRT at
01-8741400.

Kind regards,
Liam


Liam Herrick
______________________________
______________
Executive Director
Irish Penal Reform Trust
53 Parnell Square West
Dublin 1
IRELAND

tel: +353 (0) 1874 1400
fax: +353 (0) 1873 3174

info@iprt.ie
www.iprt.ie

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Beyond the Pale: National Photographic Archive

Modern plaque near Ballymore Eustace marks the southern extreme of the PaleImage via Wikipedia
A couple of weeks ago, I mentioned I was going to go to the Beyond the Pale exhibition in the National Photographic in Templebar. So Jeff and I had some time last week, so we popped in before Lunchtime to see what the was all about. For those of you who don't know where the Archive exhibition space is, it is located opposite the Information Centre in Templebar, behind the IFI.

So the exhibition. Well as the title itself suggests Beyond the Pale is to do with displaying images from the Lawerence Collection in the National Library of Ireland. The Lawerence Collection has been with the National Library since the mid 1940s and is one of the foremost photographic collections of Irish Social life at the turn of the 20th Century. This exbo however deliberates uses images from around the country from the late 19th and early 20th Century and hence the name "Beyond the Pale".

The cities featured in the exbo are Limerick, Derry, Belfast Cork, Galway and Waterford. It also features the town of Kilkenny (Yes I know I know but Kilkenny is not really a city and I'm writing this and I don't really care what the 2006 census says, it is not a City!). Overall Exbo is pretty well laid out and really easy to follow. Highly reccommended Viewing. Even if it is only placing streets in a modern context and trying to work out where everything goes now. Also alot of the images are crystal clear and save for the obvious dress differences with the subjects in the pictures, they could be quiet easily be confused for a picture which was only taken two weeks ago.

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Wednesday, April 16, 2008

One Nation Under CCTV

Banksy Strikes AgainImage by Thomas Hawk viaOk I like some of Banksy's work and he did it again over the weekend, whilst being watched by CCTV... One Nation Under CCTV...I likes it alot!

The Daily Mail (ick) has the story...

Banksy pulled off an audacious stunt to produce what is believed to be his biggest work yet in central London.

The secretive graffiti artist managed to erect three storeys of scaffolding behind a security fence despite being watched by a CCTV camera.

Then, during darkness and hidden behind a sheet of polythene, he painted this comment on 'Big Brother' society.

Source: Dailymail.co.uk

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Details of President Hillery's State Funeral

half mastImage by 1541 via FlickrRTE will be showing the Funeral of President Patrick Hillery from 12pm today. Flags have been flying at half mast since Saturday in all of the State Institutions. The Funeral will take place at St Mary's Pro-Cathedral in Dublin today.

President Mary McAleese, Taoiseach Bertie Ahern and representatives of the Oireachtas, Judiciary and Diplomatic Corps will be attending.

You can view the proceedings online through the RTE website. www.rte.ie/live, listen to it on RTE Radio 1 and watch it on TV.

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Free lecture on Swift and Gulliver’s Travels, Thursday 17 April

Free lecture on Swift and Gulliver’s Travels, Thursday 17 April at 1pm in the National Library’s seminar room.

Professor Andrew Carpenter of the School of English, Drama & Film, UCD will give a lecture on Gulliver’s Travels in celebration of the Dublin: One City One Book festival 2008. Admission is free and all are welcome to attend.


After the lecture, visitors can view rare Swift material from the National Library’s collections, translations of the novel and beautifully illustrated editions of Gulliver’s Travels.

For more details on this event, view this link to our website:

http://www.nli.ie/en/list/current-events.aspx?article=78702e1e-1882-4642-b6ae-2f8410c4bfd4

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WERRC Research Seminars: PIRA women between 1969 and 1984.

Notice of next Research Seminar, Resource Room (A201), WERRC, Hannah
Sheehy-Skeffington Building


Thursday 17th April; 3.00pm-4.15pm

Eoin Clarke, School of History, Queen’s University, Belfast.
"A quantitative analysis of the social profile of (Provisional IRA)
PIRA women between 1969 and 1984"

ALL WELCOME

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Sunday, April 13, 2008

For Seoirse,

For Seoirse,


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Saturday, April 12, 2008

President Dr. Patrick Hillery has died at the age of 84


President Dr. Patrick Hillery,
(1923-2008)

It is with deep saddness and regret that I read that a former President of Ireland, Dr. Patrick Hillery has died at the age of 84. According to breakingnews.ie, President Hillery's family have accepted the Government's offer of a State Funeral and further details will be announced soon.

The Official Biography of Hillery from the Office of the President's website lists the following:

Patrick J Hillery

He was born on 2 May, 1923, in Miltown Malbay, Co. Clare and qualified as a medical doctor. He married Mary Beatrice Finnegan in 1955.

In 1951 Dr. Hillery was elected to Dáil Éireann for the constituency of Clare and he received his first Government appointment as Minister for Education in 1959.

He subsequently served in a number of ministerial posts (Industry and Commerce, Labour and Foreign Affairs) prior to his appointment in 1973 as Vice President of the then Commission of the European Communities, with special responsibility for Social Affairs. He served as Commissioner until 1976, when he was inaugurated as President of Ireland on 3 December, 1976.

Via: President.ie




May he Rest in Peace.

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TV Documentary: BBC; Meet the Immigrants, Monday 14th April.

For those of you who have BBC, you may want to set your SKY+ boxes/VCR's for the following (Yes, they still exist and until a more affordable DVD Recorder comes onto the screen, the VCR will remain!!!) . Even though it will be from a British immigrant standpoint, it will be interesting to see if any similarities in the Experiences of Immigrants can be mirrored here. This is of interest given the current debate regarding the Immigration, Residency and Protection Bill 2008, whose contents is currently being hotly challenged by many NGOs and community groups, as well as some statutory agencies such as the Law Society.

Meet the Immigrants

Beginning Monday 14th April at 10.35pm on BBC ONE, running each Monday for six weeks.

Meet the Immigrants is a new, six-part observational documentary series, co-produced by The Open University, which looks at the lives of several members of the new wave of inward migration into the UK.

Narrated by David Morrissey, of Sense and Sensibility and Viva Blackpool, the series shows all sides of the real experiences of migrants in 21st century Britain; the daily challenges they face in arriving and surviving here, and providing welfare and economic security for their families, be they in the UK or overseas.

Meet the Immigrants also reflects the ongoing national debate on immigration and explores the common themes; industrious newcomers performing unskilled jobs that Britons won’t do, or opportunists in search of an easy life, attracted by the Britain’s flexible laws and systems.

On Open2.net there is an exclusive interactive world map which highlights key migration trends for selected countries across all continents. It displays which countries migrants to the UK come from, along with the issues they face there and the factors that made them decide to leave.


For more information about the series go to http://www.open2.net/immigrants/ or contact Polly Frazer on 01908 652 777 or mailto:OU.viewerandlistenerinfo@bbc.co.uk.

via Equal-L list.

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NGO Concerns about the 'Immigration, Residency and Protection Bill 2008'

I Meant to post this a couple of weeks ago when I received the email but I forgot to! It is a Summary of Concerns regarding the Immigration Residency and Protection Bill 2008, which is currently being discussed within the Dáil. This Bill is very scary and the reliance within it of the Minister's Discretion to resolve the inconsistencies within the Bill, among other things, does not instill any hope about it either.


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Via Equal-L
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SUMMARY OF CONCERNS
NGOs working in the immigration sector believe the Immigration, Residence and Protection Bill 2008 represents an ideal opportunity to comprehensively reform outdated and inadequate immigration legislation. However, we believe the Bill, as it stands, fails to capitalise on this opportunity. If enacted without significant amendment, the legislation will seriously erode migrants’ rights while at the same time failing to address some of the serious flaws in the system, namely, unacceptable delays in the decision-making process, inconsistent decision-making, an over-reliance on the courts to resolve problems and a lack of clarity about the rights, entitlements and obligations of migrants in Ireland.
Key Concerns Immigration
With regards to Immigration, our major concerns about the Immigration, Residence and Protection Bill are:
  1. The Bill does not spell out clear rules regarding the rights and obligations of migrants coming to Ireland but, instead, it promises to ‘fill in the blanks’ later through the introduction of regulations. In fact, in some areas, the Bill fails to say who may come to Ireland and under what conditions, something we believe is fundamentally important in primary immigration legislation.
  1. The Bill does not provide for an independent appeals mechanism for immigration decisions, as promised in the Programme for Government. As a result, we believe the Government’s reliance on the courts as a mechanism for resolving challenges to decisions will continue and probably intensify, at significant cost to taxpayers and great personal cost to migrants.
  1. According to the European Commission, family reunification is one of the most significant types of migration to the EU. Unless the Bill is amended, Ireland will be the only EU Member State which does not have primary legislation covering this very significant type of migration.
  1. Provisions in the Bill for summary deportations may result in vulnerable people, who have become undocumented through no fault of their own, being deported before they can regularise their situation, leaving them with no avenue to make an application for residency even where their case involves very exceptional circumstances. Additionally, if not amended, this provision could result in migrants being unable to avail of programmes which help them return voluntarily to their country of origin, meaning taxpayers will pay for a larger number of people being forcibly removed the State.
  1. Sections of the Bill may be unconstitutional and breach Ireland’s international human rights obligations. One example is new restrictions on people’s right to marry, which bans some migrants from marrying in Ireland – even if they are intending to marry an Irish citizen – unless the Minister exercises his discretion and gives his permission.
  1. The Bill restricts migrants’ access to justice in a number of ways. Two examples are: allowing just 14 days to initiate judicial review proceedings in response to any immigration decision and allowing for the courts to award costs against a migrant’s legal representative personally, something we believe to be intimidatory and unconstitutional.
  1. While the Bill gives ‘long-term residency’ a statutory footing, unlike most other EU countries, Ireland’s version of this status will not be permanent and will be granted at the discretion of the Minister.
  1. We have grave concerns about provisions designed to provide protection to victims of trafficking. Most significantly, people who are trafficked to Ireland from within the EU will not benefit in any way from these provisions as the Immigration, Residence and Protection Bill generally applies only to citizens from outside the EEA.
  1. The Bill denies access to benefits and services to migrants who are ‘unlawfully present’ in Ireland. Unless amended, one example of what this would mean is that a migrant who has become undocumented as a result of workplace exploitation would not be able to seek redress through the Employment Appeals Tribunal.
  1. There is an inherent tension in the Bill in that it combines general immigration and asylum/protection issues in the same piece of legislation. Parts of the legislation are extremely problematical in that people entering Ireland for the purpose of seeking asylum are subject to general immigration obligations and requirements.
Potential Breaches of the Constitution
· Section 4 (8) of the Bill, which introduces summary deportation, may be in breach of fair and just procedures – an unremunerated right recognised under the Irish Constitution. May lead to violations of the right to private and family life as protected by Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights and has the potential to breach Article 6 and 13 of the European Convention on Human Rights.
· Section 123 (2)(b) of the Bill, which prohibits the marriage of certain foreign nationals in the State, even where they wish to marry an Irish or EU national, may be in breach of the constitutionally protected right to marry in Article 41.3.1
· Section 123 (3) of the Bill, which relates to possible exemptions from the prohibition to marry in Ireland, may breach the equality clause in Article 40.1 of the Constitution be in breach of 15.2.1 of the Constitution which provides that the Oireachtas has the sole and exclusive power to make law.
· Section 118 (8) of the Bill, which would introduce the possibility of the High Court awarding costs against migrants’ legal representatives, but not against the State’s legal representatives, may breach Article 40.1 of the Constitution.
· There is a real question whether the restriction of the High Court’s ability to extend time in judicial review proceedings beyond the 14 days migrants have within which to initiate judicial review proceedings against immigration decisions, contained in Section 118 (3) of the Bill, may also be unconstitutional.

Potential Breaches Of International Human Rights Obligations
· Section 118 of the Bill, which would introduce the possibility of the High Court awarding costs against migrants’ legal representatives, but not against the State’s legal representatives, may breach Article 6 of the European Convention on Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms.
· Failure to provide for an independent appeals mechanism for immigration decisions, as promised in the Programme for Government, may deny migrants the opportunity to challenge decisions affecting their, and their families’, human rights, as protected under the European Convention on Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, in particular Articles 3 and 8, may be in breach of Articles 6 and 13.
· Section 4 (8) of the Bill, dealing with summary deportations, may lead to violations of the right to private and family life as protected by Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights and has the potential to breach Article 6 and 13 of the European Convention on Human Rights.
· Provisions in Section 124 of the Bill, relating to protection for victims of trafficking, fall far short of Ireland’s obligations under the Council of Europe Convention on Actions to Combat Human Trafficking:
- Most significantly, the protective measures contained in the legislation would not apply to EEA citizens who have established their free movement rights and with that exclude people who have been trafficked into Ireland from within the EEA from protection.
- Another major concern is the absence of provisions detailing the
types of assistance which would be made available to people who
have been identified as victims.
- Additionally, temporary residence permits for victims would be issued only if linked to the victim assisting a prosecution and does not take into account circumstances where the victim may be too traumatised to take part in prosecutions, or where the State decides not to proceed with prosecutions.

Key Concerns Protection
NGOs working in the protection sector welcome the publication of the Immigration, Residence and Protection Bill 2008 but believe that in its current format it misses the opportunity to address the fundamental flaws in our immigration and protection system. There are concerns that a number of provisions remain inadequate in fulfilling Ireland’s obligations under international human rights law. Unfortunately, the Government has confused immigration policy – of which parts deal with who enters the state, the necessary documentation required and the manner whereby they do so – with the right to seek protection. Asylum seekers arrive with the intention of seeking refugee or other protection status, as laid down under international agreements, and this should not be confused with other immigration issues. It is imperative therefore that the Government recognises that people fleeing persecution have a right under international law to seek protection and a right to have their claim for protection determined in a fair and open way, by ensuring that the appropriate checks and balances are in place to make sure that people’s rights are not violated in any way. In addition, the proposed asylum and protection system continues to lack transparency and remains outside the scope of the Freedom of Information Act, re-enforcing the secrecy under which it is currently clouded and remains outside the scope of the Freedom of Information Act making it hard to see that justice is done. It is also extremely disappointing that in launching this Bill the Minister has adopted a culture of disbelief by choosing to question the fundamental principle of access to justice and the importance of maintaining full judicial oversight of any decision that directly affects Ireland’s compliance with its international legal obligations. Such a culture not only negatively frames the debate surrounding the Bill but also if passed into legislation will have the same negative implications for those tasked in ensuring its application. We sincerely hope that the Government and opposition parties take into account the concerns of the NGOs, the UNHCR and the Irish Human Rights Commission to correct the current shortcomings.
With regards to Immigration, our major concerns about the Immigration, Residence and Protection Bill are:

1. Access to procedure/access to territory

The right to arrive in the country and seek protection is absolutely fundamental in international law, and should not be limited by provisions which are designed to control immigration for work or other purposes. We note with concern that the Bill provides no clarity on the position of protection and does not properly reflect and ensure respect for our obligations under international refugee and human rights law. The Bill should contain specific references to and affirmation of the absolute respect of the right to seek asylum, and reiterate that Ireland’s international obligations are engaged as soon as an asylum applicant arrives at our border or is on the territory of the State. The Bill makes it an offence to try to enter the State without a passport or other identity documents and without a pre-entry permission. This may not be compatible with Article 31(1) of the 1951 Refugee Convention which provides that the State should not impose penalties for unauthorised entry, provided that a refugee presents him/herself without delay to the authorities and shows good cause for his or her illegal entry. It is an important safeguard aimed at allowing persons in need of protection to do so where they cannot obtain travel documentation and States must not punish those asylum seekers who have no choice but to present at the State’s border on an unauthorised basis or improper documentation.
Carrier liability improperly shifts responsibility for protection decisions from the State to carriers. Carrier sanctions will mean that those seeking protection may be prevented from accessing the State, in breach of the State’s obligations under the 1951 Convention. This may well have the effect of forcing persons to rely on traffickers/smugglers. At minimum, the State should allow for an asylum/protection-related defence to carrier liability and exempt carriers where persons make protection applications upon arrival to Ireland and/or where persons are particularly vulnerable (i.e. trafficked persons and separated children).

2. Single Decision Process/First Instance

We welcome the principle of a single-decision process for all forms of protection, to assess claims for asylum, subsidiary protection, non-refoulement and compelling reasons. We do, however, have concerns about the current processes, including the lack of legislated Rules/Guidelines, and the use of accelerated procedures. We are disappointed that the Bill has not been amended to provide for official records of proceedings (rather than a summary kept by the interviewer), or the publication of decisions, both of which we would consider to be good practice internationally. Further, concerns regarding the lack of clarity around the role of the observer (s. 74 (9)), and disclosure to the applicant regarding the evidence to be relied upon by the State have not been addressed. (Note: We are encouraged, however, by the requirements of s. 75 (2) and 81 (c) (i) and (ii)). We would further welcome if explicit reference was made inter alia to the 1951 Convention in the legislation. This would be in line with the objective as outlined in the preamble of the Qualifications Directive to determine refugee status in line with the 1951 Convention.

3. Qualifications Directive and Procedure Directive and Interpretation in Bill

It is in the State’s best interest in terms of efficiency and also to recognise and uphold obligations to those in need of international protection that all forms of international protection needs are examined in a single procedure, with the same minimum guarantees that are in line with international human rights law and standards. The grounds for protection, including the relevant standard of proof, should be interpreted in the light of existing and evolving jurisprudence of international human rights law and the European Court of Human Rights. With regard to the definition of serious harm, as outlined in the Qualification Directive as transposed by S.I. No. 518 of 2006 European Communities (Eligibility for Protection) Regulations 2006, we would like to highlight concerns raised by UNHCR and others that the notion of an ‘individual threat’ should not lead to the imposition of an additional threshold for those facing a serious threat to their life or person because of indiscriminate violence. If there is a serious threat it is, by definition, a threat to the individual, even if they are not specifically targeted. We also recommend that the Government ensure that this is interpreted broadly so that protection is provided to those who have fled serious threat to their life or person, including indiscriminate violence and gross human rights violations outside the context of ‘internal or international armed conflict’.

4. Safe Third Country/Country of Origin

It is concerning that Section 102 of the Bill allows for the possibility to designate a part of a country of origin as safe. The Bill provides additional criteria to that currently provided for in the Refugee Act 1996 by which a country must be assessed in order to be designated a safe country. The Bill provides that a safe country of origin designation can be made if the Minister is satisfied that, on the basis of the legal situation, the application of the law within a democratic system and the general political circumstances, it can be shown that, in the country or part of the country concerned, there is generally and consistently no persecution, construed in accordance with sections 64 and 65, no torture or inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment and no threat by reason of indiscriminate violence in situations of international or internal armed conflict. There is no such criteria in the Refugee Act 1996. In addition, declaring countries as generally safe, or parts of countries safe without a proper examination of the individual circumstances of a claim is at odds and is inconsistent with the proper focus of international refugee law on individual circumstances and the protection needs of individuals. Therefore the individual circumstances of an applicant must not be ignored in favour of a generalised determination of safety of a country of origin or part of that country. Again the Qualification Directive, as transposed by S.I. No. 518 of 2006 European Communities (Eligibility for Protection) Regulations 2006, underlines the concept that individual circumstances of the applicant must be considered (Article 4(3)). The addition of clearer criteria in the 2008 Bill is to be welcomed.

5. Protection Review Tribunal (“PRT’)

We welcome the Minister’s assurances that the protection appeals process will be more transparent and fairer than that provided by the current Refugee Appeals Tribunal (“RAT”). However, as currently drafted, the proposed PRT is effectively the same body as the Refugee Appeals Tribunal (“RAT”), save in name. Only selected decisions of the PRT will be published, despite internationally recognised best practice (including in the UK) providing for publication of anonomysed decisions. The Chair of RAT is deemed the Chair of PRT. The Chair can delegate key duties to others. The Chair may produce public Rules and may produce internal Guidelines to be relied upon by the Members. We would urge that the legislation be amended to provide for publication of decisions (suitably anonomysed), to require the Chair to publish Rules and Guidelines and to remove s. 95 (7)(a), which undermines the lawyer’s role and duty in representing their client.

6. Protection for Suspected Victims of Trafficking

We welcome the inclusion of a new section on the protection of suspected victims of trafficking. In our view, however, this provision needs to be further developed to facilitate ratification of the Council of Europe Convention on Action against Trafficking in Human Beings and the UN Trafficking Protocol. In particular, specific provisions relating to the protection of suspected trafficked children and the specific entitlements of those who are granted temporary residency should be added. Furthermore, additional good practice measures should be seriously considered, such as a non-punishment clause and the possibility to grant temporary residency on humanitarian grounds, whether or not the victim is in a position to co-operate with the authorities. Trafficked persons should be exempted from the pre-removal powers of detention provided in the Bill. An explicit recognition of the right of trafficked persons to seek international protection and to have access to free legal aid should be included.

7. Protection for Separated Children

We are disappointed that no new provisions have been included to improve protection for separated children, given the concerns about the shortcomings in the current system outlined in our previous submission and in the recent recommendations of the Special Rapporteur on Child Protection. Separated children are entitled to protection, and measures should be put in place to improve identification, age assessment, registration, family tracing, guardianship, best interests determination, treatment and care. In our view, there is a need for a specific new provision, in line with Ireland’s obligations under the Convention on the Rights of the Child (as outlined in General Comment No. 6) to comprehensively address these issues and provide for the granting of long-term residency when that is deemed to be in a separated child’s best interests.

8. Family Reunification

The Bill provides a statutory right for refugees and persons granted subsidiary protection to apply for family reunification (Section 50). However, the definition of ‘family’ is too narrow, Minor refugees are not allowed to apply for their siblings, which can place parents in an unacceptable dilemma of whether to join their child in Ireland or remain in their country of origin with their other child/children. Only spouses are included and not unmarried partners even if they can prove a long term relationship. The Bill fails to address the rights of family reunified persons in the event of death or marriage breakdown. In addition it fails to provide for the right of appeal for those whose applications for family reunification have been unsuccessful.

9. Detention

We were disturbed to see that increased powers of detention have been added to the 2008 Bill, for example, in section 70 (1), (2) and (3). There is now provision in the Bill to detain persons at every stage of the protection process. As the legislation stands, a person seeking protection could be detained from their point of arrival to their point of removal. There is also the possibility of detaining children in violation of the Convention on the Rights of the Child. We would strongly urge consideration of alternatives to detention, noting UNHCR Guidelines, which allow for detention only in exceptional circumstances and for minimal periods.

10. Deemed Withdrawal/No Appeal Rights

There are no appeal rights where a protection application is deemed withdrawn (whether at first-instance or upon appeal). This seems to be inconsistent with the Procedures Directive, Article 39 (1), which states: “Member States shall ensure that applicants for asylum have the right to an effective remedy before a court or tribunal against… (b) the refusal to reopen the examination of an application after its discontinuation (pursuant to Articles 19 and 20 of the Directive).” Further article 20(2) of the Directive requires States to ensure that an applicant is entitled to request that his or her case is reopened following a discontinuation. (Section 89 of the Bill, as currently drafted, is unclear as to its impact on this crucial question, which goes to the heart of protection against refoulement for this issues).

11. Leave to Remain/Humanitarian Considerations

As outlined in the Bill, protection applicants who are not entitled to protection in the State may be granted residence permission as per Sections 79 (2) (c) and 83. However, in those sections, humanitarian considerations are not listed and it is unclear who would meet the ‘compelling reasons’ criterion and whether or not residence criteria (at Section 31) will also be applied. We are concerned that vulnerable persons who are now granted leave to remain status as well as those who cannot be refouled may be denied residence permission under the terms of the Bill, particularly if the residence criteria are applied.

12. Refoulement

The combination of the Dublin Regulation rules and the safe-third-country and safe-country-of-origin concepts, as well as rules on carrier sanctions and transporters' liability, limited access to interpreters and lawyers and the lack of suspensive effect of certain appeal procedures constitute a threat to the principle of non-refoulement. (See European Parliament Resolution A5-0451/2002 of 15 January 2003 Report SWIEBEL (2001)). Also, provisions relating to the breach of conditions leading to revocation and Section 97(11) (c) (obligation to remove oneself and power of removal without notice) increase the risk of refoulement.

13. Procurement and Exchange of Information

There are a variety of provisions in the Bill regarding the procurement and exchange of information. In this regard, we stress the need for consent, confidentiality and data protection. We would like to seek clarity on the necessity, nature and implications of some of these provisions including stated restrictions on the application of the Data Protection Act and Freedom of Information Act. With respect to the acquisition of information, children should not be required to furnish biometric data without their consent and the consent of their guardian. Age assessment measures should be in line with the minimum standards outlined in the Procedures Directive.

14. Judicial Review

Access to Judicial Review, which provides crucial judicial oversight of the asylum process, is severely curtailed by s.118. Given the role that judicial review plays in the Irish legal system, in safeguarding compliance with the Irish Constitution and requirements of due process, we would ask that these be reconsidered. Access to judicial review is an important marker of a State based on rule of law. In particular, s.118(7) should be removed, given its potential to deter lawyers from seeking the remedy of judicial review. Strict time limits and constraints are already in place, given the ‘substantial grounds’ requirement and 14 day time limit introduced in the Illegal Immigrants (Trafficking) Act. The additional restrictions imposed in s.118 (3) could potentially remove an important check on the asylum process. As we have seen to date, such checks and balances are essential to ensuring that the asylum process meets the standards that legislation and policy seeks to achieve. These restrictions may also contravene article 13 of the ECHR, which provides a right to an effective remedy, including where non-refoulement rights in article 3 may be threatened. We would hope that improved procedures and greater transparency in the process would reduce the numbers of applications for judicial review proceedings.

15. Training of Immigration and Refugee and Protection Status Determination Officers

We are concerned that there is no explicit reference underlining the importance and need for rigorous, comprehensive and ongoing training for any officer undertaking immigration duties and protection assessments, strict guidelines, and minimum criteria for the recruitment and training of officials and effective safeguards setting out the requirements of human rights law and standards, as required by the EU Procedures Directive. Guidelines and specific provisions that address the special needs of vulnerable persons, including survivors of violence, in particular sexual violence and torture, and traumatized asylum-seekers should be introduced. Failure to adequately train all officers could potentially represent a serious risk of flawed decisions and non-compliance with the requirements in EU asylum provisions, especially in relation to the Qualification Directive as transposed.

16. Monitoring

In order to ensure compliance to our international obligations, it is imperative that independent monitoring and quality assessment mechanisms, such as that of the UK Quality Initiative Project developed by UNHCR, should be established and given access to randomly selected samples of files in order to assess the quality of decision-making, identify gaps in existing decision-making procedures and address the appropriate training and resources needed to fill these gaps. In this way issues and weaknesses could be identified and corrective advice provided and the publication of these reports would ensure transparency and accountability
Contact Details for Further Information:
Integrating Ireland
17 Lower Camden Street, Dublin 2
Tel: +353-1-4759473
Refugee Information Service
18 Dame Street, Dublin 2
Tel +353-1- 645 3070
Website: www.ris.ie
Immigrant Council of Ireland
2 Saint Andrew Street, Dublin 2
Tel: +353-1-6740202
Migrant Rights Centre Ireland
55 Parnell Square West, Dublin 1 Tel: +353-1-8897570
Website: www.mrci.ie


Irish Refugee Council
88 Capel Street, Dublin 1
Tel: +353-1-8730042


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Thursday, April 10, 2008

Ireland: The Importance of Union Membership.

Ok so kind of an important one. Who here is a member of a Trade Union? When was the last time you were approached about joining a Trade Union? And of course the other question, Why should you join a Trade Union?

Well what has prompted this post? Well RTE reports this afternoon that figures just released from the CSO for 2007, show a continued drop in Union membership to just under 30% of employees. This reflects a trend which started in 2003. Now regardless of the ins and outs of the economy and to what extent employers allow unions to flourish within their organisations, I honestly cannot remember when the last time was a Trade union approached me about signing up. This then begs the question, Why should I bother or even worry about the dwindling membership of the trade union movement in this country.

Quiet simply put, Why will I be joining SIPTU or another union properly when I leave college? Because I recognise the importance of being in a Trade Union when I am in the "Real World" for the defence of Worker's rights. Things may have changed alot in the last number of years with the advancement of Employment Equality Legislation, the Equal Status Acts, the Equality Tribunal or the Labour Court or even the Social Partnership process. All well and good but alot of these advances have come partly from ourselves and also from Europe: When we brought in the ESA in 1997, it was the most progressive list of Equality statues, 9, in Europe, which has provided the basis for the most extensive list which now exists in Slovenia.

However, just to refer to something I mentioned above Is it time for Unions to become a little bit more proactive in acquiring new members? Yes fair enough I am sure there are resource issues etc. but surely resources well spent on acquiring new workers dues will help the Union movement in the long run. Actually as I think of it, I can remember the last time I had a Union interaction, however I was not approached personally even though I was available for discussion. That particular interaction left a little bit of a polarised workplace for a couple of weeks which kind of created a definite Manager/Worker role which was quiet sad because a Union in that particular situation would have been quiet handy.

A weak Trade Union movement is bad for all of us. The powers that be, may not necessarily like to have a unionised workforce and it may be that you never need to use your Trade Union for anything in your workplace But in building up a solid Trade Union movement again, we can prevent the slip back and the encroachments of people's employment rights by the powers that be. So the moral of the Story: JOIN A UNION!


Links:

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South Carolina: Snuffing out smoking -City of Columbia to enforce new smoking ban

Its cool to see my old city in the States going renegade with a Smoking ban enforcement. Bless Michael Martin, the Cork man who never knew he could change the attitude of the world......

Snuffing out smoking -City of Columbia to enforce new smoking ban after court's OK

Haley Dreis, Staff Writer- Issue date: 4/9/08 Section: News


Columbia will enforce a ban on smoking in public restaurants and bars on July 1 in light of a recent State Supreme Court ruling.

The city council of Columbia created the ordinance based on its findings that "secondhand smoke is the third leading cause of preventable death in the U.S., killing 53,000 Americans prematurely each year."

The new ban is a revamped version of the original ordinance, which had been put on hold from November 2006. Violators of the newly enforced ban will face a civil penalty instead of a criminal penalty.

The current ordinance states that bar owners are subject to a $500 fine and imprisonment for no more than 30 days. But when the new ban is passed in July, bar owners will no longer risk facing imprisonment.

According to a news release, exceptions to the smoking ban include:

- Bars where at least 85 percent of gross revenue is derived from alcohol sales.

- Private clubs with tax-exempt status.

- Theatrical performances requiring actors to smoke as part of the performance.

- Smoking designated motel or hotel rooms.

- Retail tobacco stores.

- Religious ceremonies with smoking as part of a ritual.

- Medical facilities where smoking cessation classes are held.

Kevin Varner, owner of Hunter-Gatherer Brewery & Ale, said he is pleased the ban has been created and will be enforced.

"In general, I'm glad it [was ruled constitutional] and I'm looking forward to being [a non-smoking business]," Varner said. "But I wish it was being done at the state level instead of the municipal level. [Then] people in the city and county are going to be playing by the same rules. This would change the dynamic of their business."

Via The Daily GameCock


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Glória: Annual Table Quiz: Break for the Border 10th April

Somehow I missed this but its on tonight! I won't be able to go but Best of luck to Gloria with their table quiz...dam and I could do with a holiday right about now.


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Australia: Admit your sins to God, priest tells gay judge

Glad to see as ever that somethings remain static. In New Zealand, a priest has advised one of the High Court judges, who happens to be gay, that he needs to repent his sins or face the wrath of God. Well, ya know he is a judge, so far I would imagine he is doing quiet well without the wrath of God but anyway, here's the story.



Australia: Admit your sins to God, priest tells gay judge

A senior minister of a Sydney Anglican parish has made an extraordinary attack on Australian High Court judge Michael Kirby, warning he would face the wrath of God if he remained unrepentant as a gay man.

The rector of St Stephen's Church in Bellevue Hill, the Reverend Richard Lane, denounced the judge for calling himself a Christian Anglican while living in an openly gay relationship and warned as a "messenger, watchman and steward of the Lord in the Anglican Church of Australia", he faced God's judgment.

To call himself a Christian Anglican was a "perversion of truth" and to continue to do so without changing his lifestyle would brand him, like Herod, a "coward, a liar, a deceiver" and a "lawless one".

"I appeal to you to cast yourself on the mercy of Jesus … That is admit your sin, confess your wrongdoing and turn in humble repentance to the Lord Jesus, who alone can forgive you," Mr Lane said.

Via Stuff.co.nz

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Wednesday, April 9, 2008

One O'Clock, Two o'clock, Three o'clock rock...

Some Genius decided this would be funny.......I tend to agree-a lil dated but funny nonetheless...





and I know I said no youtube this week but erm I figured this would be appropriate here....


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UCD: Please Talk: Balloon Launch

The Please Talk campaign, which went national in the last couple of weeks let 1000 white Balloons fly into the sky this afternoon at 1pm. Please talk is a suicide-awareness campaign, which encourages people to talk to their friends about things which are troubling them. Some of the pictures from the Event are below.....I do hope however there was no Helicopters flying by at the time......




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Tuesday, April 8, 2008

"Assult by Hedgehog" New Zealand style

We like Hedgehogs here at the Angry Hedgehog so we deplore the use of the little mites as weapons. A world of Epic Fail's notes a CNN story about a case in New Zealand. The Gentleman in question was soo irate at a 15year old kid that he picked up a hedgehog and threw it at him! That has gotta hurt, both the kid and the hedgehog. Dam funny tho.....but the poor hedgehog and kid.... :-) .

WELLINGTON, New Zealand (AP) -- A New Zealand man has been accused of assault with a prickly weapon -- a hedgehog.

Police allege that William Singalargh, 27, picked up the hedgehog and threw it at a 15-year-old boy in the North Island east coast town of Whakatane on February 9.

"It hit the victim in the leg, causing a large, red welt and several puncture marks," police Senior Sgt. Bruce Jenkins said Monday. The teen did not need medical treatment, he added.

Police arrested Singalargh shortly after the incident, and charged him with assault with a weapon -- "namely the hedgehog," Jenkins said.

Via: CNN.com

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Gay Clare Disco: Sat 26th April, Ennis

Gay Clare just wish to remind you about our next disco. It will take place on Saturday 26th April next in the Inisheer Suite in the West County Hotel,Clare Road, Ennis. Time 10.00 till late. Admission €10.

As this is our biggest venue to date all support would be appreciated, so please spread the word and let anyone you know about the night who might be interested in coming along.

We have accommodation details on our website for anyone who might require that option.

This promises to be really enjoyable night and a great opportunity to meet and socialise with people from throughout the county and beyond.
The night can only be a success with everyone’s support.

Hope you can make it on April 26th.

Regards & thanks

Gay Clare Group
www.gayclare.com
www.bebo.com/gayclare

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Limerick, 'QueerDo'

Sunday, April 6, 2008

Whining you say? You ain't seen nothing yet.

Eilis O Hanlon can go and disappear nicely off the face of this earth and she can take her Rag of a paper with her. Today in the Sindo her article entitled "Gays, stop whining, take what's on offer", she expects us gays to just back down yet again and not look for full equality before the law, which I am sure Ms. O'Hanlon affords and benefits from herself.

She writes:

Listening to some gay groups, however, you'd think we were still living in an age when being gay was punishable by death and the merest hint of anything untoward in a chap's private life was enough to bring the world crashing down around his oppressed ears.

Thus it is that, with publication of the long-awaited Civil Partnership Bill due any day now, and the Cabinet set to discuss the issue this week (assuming, that is, that they're not too busy jostling for position in the new world created by Bertie's departure), some gay groups are still eager to find fault with the proposed changes.


I might remind Ms. O'Hanlon that the "long awaited Civil Partnership Bill" will not appear "any day now", but rather what will emerge is the Heads of a Bill. Even then, when asked about when this will be put before the Dáil in Question time last week, the following was the response from Government circles:

Deputy Eamon Gilmore: The second matter I wish to raise concerns the civil unions Bill, on which a report is being prepared by the Government. I recall that when the Labour Party's Civil Unions Bill was before the House it was promised that the heads of the Government's legislation would be published at the end of February or in March - I will not quibble about the month. Is it still intended to publish the heads of the legislation and when will we have sight of them?
The Tánaiste: On the civil partnership Bill, it was stated in the Dáil that the Minister would bring his proposals to the Government by the end of March. He has met that deadline. The proposed scheme draws on the options identified by the working group on domestic partnership, under the chairmanship of Ms Anne Colley, and the recommendations of the Law Reform Commission in its report on the rights and duties of cohabitants. The scheme will propose a statutory civil registration scheme for same sex partners and a redress scheme to provide certain legal protections for them and other cohabitants. I understand the heads of the Bill are being drafted but I cannot give an exact date for publication.
Deputy Eamon Gilmore: When will we see the Bill?
Deputy Brendan Howlin: What is the reason for the delay?
The Tánaiste: We will deal with the Bill this year.
Deputy Brendan Howlin: Were the heads of the Bill brought to the Government?
The Tánaiste: No, they are being drafted. The Minister said in the Dáil that he would bring his proposals on how to address this issue to the Government. That was done.
Via: Dail Transcript Records



Ms. O'Hanlon continues her tirrade by stating that there is little or no difference between Civil Partnerships and Civil Marriage and the Gay Lobby is merely looking for anything to complain about.
Debating the distinction between the two is, for most observers, about as satisfying as listening to a couple of theologians arguing about the number of angels that can dance on the head of a pin, but if you're spending your days campaigning for gay marriage then I suppose you have to find something, anything, to complain about or your life of single-issue advocacy might start to look startlingly empty

Well Ms. O'Hanlon there is a bit of a difference between the two.
  1. Civil Marriage is not a religious event. It is a state sanctioned event. You cannot get married in this country without State Santion. Thankfully that little "thorny Jesuitical difference[s]" has always been the case.
  2. Marriage is constitutionally protected and as such affords more protections to relationships than Civil Partnership ever will.
  3. Civil Partnership legislation will mean the changing of every piece of legislation across the spectrum in order to include it. Why would you put yourself through that, when instead all you have to do is introduce a single piece of legislation to lift the ban on Same-Sex Marriage?
Ms. O' Hanlon also lauds/dismisses MarriagEquality's recent Lansdowne Survey (See here for Press Release) which she claims adds "to support their professional indignation, they even commissioned a poll showing that 58 per cent of Irish people support gay marriage as opposed to only 26 per cent who want civil partnerships". I am curious to know why she is so bemused by the fact that a poll was commissioned. Surely this is common practice elsewhere in Civil Society.

This was a Lansdowne Survey, who are responsible for alot of polls within the Irish context on all manners of issues from elections, building regulations, government satisfaction ratings. It is independently done. Indenpendently Verififed and on foot of other polls done in recent years.
  • Feb 06: Irish Examiner RedC poll: 51% of the national population in favour of gay unions/marriages .
  • Oct 06: Sunday Tribune Milward Brown IMS: 64% believe that same-sex couples should have the same legal and financial rights as married couples.
  • Nov 06: Lansdowne Market Research for GLEN:
    • 84% in favour of civil marriage or civil partnership
    • 51% believe that same-sex couples should be allowed to marry.
    • 33% believe that same-sex couples should be allowed to form civil partnerships.
  • Mar 08: Lansdowne Market Research for MarriagEquality:
    • 84% in favour of civil marriage or civil partnership.
    • 58% believe that gay and lesbian couples should be allowed to marry in a registry office.
    • 26% believe that gay and lesbian couples should be allowed to form civil partnerships
    • 61% agree that is unfair that gay men and women are excluded from getting married in a registry office.
The "average Irish citizen" expects an Organisation to back up its claims and it is a testament to the Irish people that they are able to see the distinctions between the Civil Marriage and Civil Partnerships.

I have said it here before and I will say it again. I nor anybody else involved in LGBT politics are looking for nothing except that which has been denied heretofore. Partial Equality is not Equality. Equality is not qualified and if it has to be qualified, then it is not equality and neither is it Ms' O'Hanlon a stepping stone to Equality but rather a method by which the crumbs are fed out from the Masters' table.

Whilst I accept her comments that we are not " living in an age when being gay was punishable by death and the merest hint of anything untoward in a chap's private life was enough to bring the world crashing down around his oppressed ears", this is the case here in Ireland; It most assuredly not the case across the world where identifying as LGBT is punishable by death in some parts of the world. One only has to look at the recent press coverage of the Iranian Youth who faced deportation from the UK and probable execution upon his return.

I would ask Ms. O'Hanlon if all her rights were taken in the morning and she was offered only half of them back, would she accept just that half and forget about the others in the hope that she would eventually get the others back? Apparently she would. Personally I do not have the same level of faith within the current Irish Democratic sphere as Ms. O'Hanlon appears to have.

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Goth does Folk

OK I Promise this is the last Youtube Video for this week! I'll find actual time to do a post sometime during the week, when I have got on top of my college work. However I could not resist this. A meld of the old and the recent old....


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Dublin Zoo & Fianna Fail

I wonder if the nominations will be reopened on foot of this letter?

Madam, - Why would Maggie, Dublin Zoo's orang-utan, choose this week, of all weeks, to attempt an "escape" - after 26 years in residence?

I suspect it is a gesture of gratitude to the nation that has given her a home all these years. I think she knows there's a vacancy to be filled. After all, didn't another Maggie once lead the British Tories? Clearly, Maggie has shambled forward to serve the nation in its hour of need. I urge Fianna Fáil to reopen nominations. - Yours, etc

DUNCAN J MARTIN, Cloughjordan, Co Tipperary.


Via Ireland.com's Letters Page

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Saturday, April 5, 2008

Biannncaaa

What a fantastic advert

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For the Sciencey Mathewatshey Ones

Found this today and I was most amused. What makes it better is the guy is only 14years old!



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Friday, April 4, 2008

Eddie Izzard

No Title required

Bosco Meets Bertie

BoscoImage via WikipediaBertie meets Bosco & Grainné




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A Season of Change.

Damien Mulley has a loverly new site dedicated to the Fine Gael leader, Dep. Enda Kenny T.D. Anybody smell a Fine Gael leadership contest? It certainly appears to be the season for it. After all since the General Election last year, Labour has changed from Pat Rabbittee to Eamon Gilmore, the Progressive Democrats have gone from Michael McDowell to having no seat, back to Mary Harney to whoever wants the job in 3wks time. Fianna Fail will loose Bertie on the 6th May with the probable replacement with Brian Cowen. The Greens lost Trevor Seargant and gained John Gormley. Yes it has been quiet the year for leadership changes within the Irish political sphere, perhaps it is definitely time for a Fine Gael leadership race.

  • http://www.takeendawithyou.com/

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Thursday, April 3, 2008

Wanted: New Leader

Somebody is seriously taking the piss but I can't resist laughing at this. Great timing. :-)



via RecruitmentIreland.com

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Wednesday, April 2, 2008

EU: Same-sex couples score victory on pension rights

Same-sex couples score victory on pension rights

02.04.2008 - 08:57 CET | By Renata Goldirova
The EU's top court has boosted the rights of same-sex couples, after ruling that a person is entitled to their dead partner's pension in all EU states that treat homosexual partnerships similarly to marriages.

The ruling by the European Court of Justice, announced on Tuesday (1 April), comes in response to a case triggered by a German citizen, Tadao Maruko, in 2005.

After Mr Maruko's partner died, a German pension fund refused to pay him any survivor's benefits, claiming that only married couples have a right to a widower's pension.

But the Luxembourg-based court found that this violated EU law, outlining a general framework for equal treatment in employment and occupation.

In practice, a person should after the death of their life partner receive a survivor's benefit equivalent to that granted to a surviving spouse, but only if national law treats same-sex partnerships in a comparable way to marriages as far as the survivor's benefit is concerned.

The court therefore underlined that it is up to national courts to determine whether a surviving life partner is in a situation comparable to that of a spouse who is entitled to the survivor's benefit provided for under the occupational pension scheme.

Via EUobserver.com

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Margaret Gill and the Late Late Show

With Regards to this post and Margaret Gill's interview on the Late Late show last friday,
Video footage is now available online via the RTE website.

Real Player is required yet again-I will be long dead and gone waiting for RTE to use WMP as an alternative to Real Player which I love but it does not work behind a HEA server! At least with WMP you don't need proxies!

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April Events in the National Library of Ireland.

NLI NEWS

In celebration of the 20th anniversary of Newsplan Ireland, the cooperative preservation project of newspapers in Ireland, the spring issue of NLI NEWS is dedicated to newspapers, the most heavily used Library collection. It will look at the Newsplan project itself and include articles on changing trends in print and online Irish newspapers, 18th century Irish papers and the value of newspapers as a research source. A digital copy of the NLI NEWS is available online at

http://www.nli.ie/en/national-library-of-ireland-newsletter.aspx


‘WB Yeats at the National Library of Ireland’ evening course starts next Tuesday, 8 April: Book now to reserve your place!

The popular adult education course, run in conjunction with UCD, begins again at the Library next Tuesday 8 April at 6.15pm. Limited places remain – to book please contact UCD Adult Education at (01) 7167823. Further information is available on our website: http://www.nli.ie/en/list/current-events.aspx?article=b1612e1e-2417-4324-98e3-11681f968788

One City, One Book: Month-long exhibition and lecture to celebrate Gulliver’s Travels

One City One Book is organised by Dublin City Libraries to encourage everyone in the city to read the same book during the month of April. The project promotes reading in a city which boasts one of the world’s greatest literary heritages including four Nobel Laureates. The book which has been selected for this year’s festival is Gulliver’s Travels by Jonathan Swift.

During the month of April rare Swift material, translations and illustrated publications of Gulliver’s Travels will be on display in the Library’s main building on Kildare Street. On 17 April at 1pm, Professor Andrew Carpenter of the School of English, University College Dublin will give a lecture on Jonathan Swift and Gulliver’s Travels. All are welcome and no booking is required.

More information is available online at http://www.nli.ie/en/list/current-events.aspx?article=78702e1e-1882-4642-b6ae-2f8410c4bfd4


Library Late: Are foreign correspondents becoming an endangered species?

Join Myles Dungan and a panel of well-known journalists on Monday 21 April for the last of this season’s Library Late series, where the future of the foreign correspondent will be discussed. For more information on what promises to be a lively debate, see our website: http://www.nli.ie/en/list/current-events.aspx?article=64e24373-3962-403f-8772-9bbfe74fe787


The Hollywood Librarian: a look at librarians through film

To mark UNESCO’s World Book and Copyright Day on Wednesday 23 April, the Library will host a free public screening of The Hollywood Librarian at 7pm in its Seminar Room. More information is available at:

http://www.nli.ie/en/list/current-events.aspx?article=55028cd4-85cb-432a-9ece-76215004c045

Sources for Irish Family History

A free series of genealogy lectures will be held at the Library at the end of this month. The lectures, sponsored by TIARA (The Irish Ancestral Research Association), will focus on lesser-used nineteenth-century records. Admission is free and all are welcome to attend. For more information, please see:

http://www.nli.ie/en/list/current-events.aspx?article=317ccacd-b4b2-4b27-bb02-8d7871338dd4

Current exhibitions at the Library

Yeats continues at the Library’s main building on Kildare Street while Strangers to Citizens runs in 2/3 Kildare Street. The National Photographic Archive’s current exhibition, Beyond the Pale, will run at the Library’s Temple Bar premises until the end of May.


The National Photographic Archive’s acclaimed travelling exhibition Island Life will be on display shortly at the James Hardiman Library, NUI Galway. It will run there from 14 April – 18 July 2008.


For more information about these exhibitions, including how to visit, please see our website

http://www.nli.ie/en/udlist/current-exhibitions.aspx

Bealtaine: Celebrating creativity in older age…events in May

To mark Bealtaine, the annual festival celebrating creativity in older age, the Library will host a number of creative storytelling and reminiscence workshops during May. Further information will be available closer to the time on our website: www.nli.ie and from the Library’s Education and Outreach Department.

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An Taoiseach Bertie Ahern's Resignation speech.

Via Ireland.com
"I have been privileged to serve my community, my party and our country for
many years in public life. In that period, I am proud to have made a
contribution to an unrivalled era of peace, prosperity and progress on this
island.
Any achievements I have accomplished I share with the many people
who have stood with me and behind me. I am grateful to so many people who
have over the years given generously of their time and effort and shared my
commitment to public service and building a fairer, stronger Ireland.

At the outset today, I want to thank my family who from the earliest stages
supported me and always encouraged me throughout my journey in public life. My
motivation for entering politics in 1977 was to represent the people of my
constituency; throughout my political life my greatest honour has been to
represent them in Dáil Eireann. I have been elected ten times in those 31 years
by the people of Dublin Central I want to give special thanks to my constituency
organisation. Their unprecedented commitment and friendship has never wavered.
They have come with me, through good times and bad times, and for that I am very
grateful.
Today, I thank all of those who have canvassed for me in election
after election. I particularly recall those friends no longer with us but whose
memories will always stay with me. Today I also want to say that I am humbled to
have been entrusted for over a decade with the great responsibility of leading
our nation. The Irish people are innately decent and I have been privileged to
serve them and to enjoy tremendous support. I especially wish to acknowledge all
those people who took the time to pray for me, to send me mass-cards and letters
of goodwill.
As a political leader, I always took great encouragement and
solace from such support. In November 1994, I was elected leader of Fianna Fáil,
the Republican Party. This was for me and my family an extraordinary honour. To
follow in the footsteps of DeValera, Lemass and those other giants of this
nation’s history was both a daunting prospect and an historic opportunity.
Almost fourteen years on, I am today Ireland’s second longest serving Taoiseach
and the second longest serving leader of Fianna Fáil.
I believe the secret
of Fianna Fáil's enduring success is rooted in the quality of people that
we have as public representatives. I have been privileged to work with patriotic
and decent colleagues and I will always be grateful for the faith they placed in
me.
I want to thank all of my Fianna Fáil ministerial colleagues, our
parliamentary party and all our councillors for their incredible support,
overwhelming loyalty, and most of all their friendship which has sustained me
throughout my period as Uachtaran Fhianna Fáil. Beyond our elected
representatives I also want to pay tribute to the members of the
Fianna Fáil National Executive and our party members in every cumann
across the length and breadth of this country for whom I have a lasting respect.
These ordinary patriotic men and women have been an inspiration to me. Their
commitment and loyalty to our party is unmatched and I believe was a decisive
factor in last year’s General Election.
Election 2007 demonstrated
Fianna Fáil’s continuing strength and vitality as a national movement. I
want to thank the tens of thousands of members and activists up and down the
country for delivering that historic success. I am proud to be the first
Taoiseach since 1944 to be elected on three successive occasions. On the day, I
took over as leader of Fianna Fáil, I pledged to lead our party back into
government and keep us there. I said then that I would strive to build up our
economy.
Today Ireland is more prosperous than at any time in our entire
history. All levels of Irish society have seen their well-being dramatically
improved in the period I have served as Taoiseach. Above all else, I promised
that day, that the priority I would put above all others would be to work for
peace on this island. I kept my word and I have given my all to that cause.
Through painstaking negotiations, colossal work has been done in laying the
foundations of reconciliation and justice between the communities in Northern
Ireland. The cycle of hatred and violence which many people thought might never
end has been well and truly broken.
The Good Friday Agreement now provides
the political framework for an island that can at last achieve its full
potential. This week and next week, many of those who a decade ago played a role
in negotiating that historic accord will gather to reflect on the work which was
done and the progress which has since been made.
In preparing for the events
to mark this anniversary of the Good Friday Agreement, I’ve obviously reflected
back on the road we have travelled from discord to peace, from distrust to
partnership and from despair to a new prosperity, north and south.
I have also taken this opportunity to take stock of my own position. At
the end of this month, I will visit Washington to address the Joint Houses of
Congress. It will be a great privilege to become only the fourth ever visiting
statesman to have addressed both Congress and Westminster. For me, this will be
one of the proudest moments of my political career.
In looking back on all
the things I wanted to achieve in politics, I am proud that as Taoiseach I have:
delivered on my objective to bring the peace process to fruition; delivered on
my objective to see a stable administration based on the power-sharing model
take root in Northern Ireland; delivered successive social partnership
agreements which underpin our social and economic progress; delivered a modern
economy with sustainable growth in employment and brought an end to the days of
forced emigration; delivered on my objective to improve and to secure Ireland’s
position as a modern, dynamic and integral part of the European Union.
As
leader of Fianna Fáil, I am proud too that I have ended the myth that Fianna
Fáil is incapable of sustaining a coalition government. I have led the two
longest serving coalitions in the history of this State. I have also laid the
foundations for another long running and successful coalition government which
has the capacity to run a full term.
I have the utmost respect for John
Gormley, Mary Harney and their respective parties who continue to work hard to
deliver a strong and stable government and implement our Agreed Programme for
Government. I also wish to acknowledge the steadfast support from Independent
Deputies who have supported me in government. Just as stability is important in
a coalition government, it is even more vital within a political organisation.
I always said that there would be no room for factions in Fianna Fáil under
my leadership and I am proud today to lead a strong and united party. A strong,
united party working within a cohesive government underpins stability and means
the primary focus of government is on performance, not on any other external
distractions.
It is a matter of real concern to me that the important work
of government and party is now being over shadowed by issues relating to me at
the Tribunal of Inquiry into Certain Planning Matters and Payments. The constant
barrage of commentary on Tribunal related matters has and I believe will
continue to dominate the political agenda at an important point for our country.
We face uncertain economic times and challenges and we are soon to cast our
vote on the Lisbon Treaty. The vital interests of Ireland demand that the
national dialogue of our political system address these fundamental issues and
not be constantly deflected by the minutiae of my life, my lifestyle, and my
finances.
The decision I am announcing today — like all other decisions that
I have taken in a lifetime in politics - is solely motivated by what is
best for the people.
I have been reflecting on pursuing this course of
action for some time. This is solely a personal decision. I have no doubt that a
simplistic analysis will suggest that my decision has been influenced by most
recent events at the Tribunal. What I announce today is completely inspired by
the desire to refocus the political dynamic in Ireland. Recent developments have
not motivated my decision.
For the record I state today that nothing could
be further from the truth. I look forward to comprehensively dealing with these
matters at the Tribunal and robustly refuting any imputation against me. I first
sought election to the office of Taoiseach on the pledge that I would put people
before politics. I have kept that promise. I have always placed the interests of
the Irish people above my own.
Therefore I will not allow issues relating to
my own person to dominate the body politic as this would be contrary to the long
term interests of the Irish people. I want everyone to understand one truth
above all else. Never, in all the time I have served in public life, have I put
my personal interest ahead of the public good. I have served this country and
the people I have the honour to represent in Dáil Éireann honestly. I have
provided more details about my personal finances than any person in public life
who has ever held office.
While I will be the first to admit that I have
made mistakes in my life and in my career, one mistake I have never made is to
enrich myself by misusing the trust of the people. I have never received a
corrupt payment and I have never done anything to dishonour any office I have
held. I know that some people will feel that some aspects of my finances are
unusual. I truly regret if this has caused any confusion or worry in people’s
minds.
All of these issues arose in a period when my family, personal and
professional situations were rapidly changing and I made the best decisions I
could in the circumstances in which I found myself. I know in my heart of hearts
that I have done no wrong and wronged no-one. I look forward to the completion
of the Tribunal’s work and I am confident that when it reports, the Tribunal
will find that I have not acted improperly in anyway.
Equally I will not
allow issues concerning myself or my finances to divert attention from the
important job of government at hand. I believe it is in the best interests of
the Government, my Party and most importantly the people of Ireland that I set
out the time-frame for my departure from office.
It had always been my
intention to review my position as Taoiseach and leader of Fianna Fáil in the
aftermath of next summer’s Local and European Elections. But having reflected on
the need to ensure that the work of my ministerial colleagues is not distracted
from by incessant publicity about the Tribunal, I have decided of my own
volition to bring forward the date.
I will complete my duties over the
course of the next month and following on from my return from the United States
and the State Visit to Ireland by the Prime Minister of Japan; it is my
intention to tender my resignation to President McAleese on Tuesday 6th May. On
that date, I will also tender my resignation as Úachtarán Fhianna Fáil.
In
meantime, I will continue to discharge my duties as Taoiseach to the best of my
ability, and to work as hard as I have always done, to secure the continued
peace and prosperity of the island of Ireland. "

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Ahern resigns

Ahern will resign on the 6th May 2008 after the address to the House of Congress in US

Is Ahern about to resign?

Ireland.com are now reporting the folowing as well as the story breaking on Radio 1

Last Updated: 02/04/2008 10:09

Ahern set to name departure date

ireland.com reporters

Taoiseach Bertie Ahern is this morning expected to name a date for his departure from office amid mounting pressure over his personal finances.

A Government spokeswoman said Mr Ahern would hold a press conference on the steps of Government Buildings in Dublin at 10.15am.

At the press conference he will deliver a statement that is expected to name a date on which Mr Ahern will step down as Taoiseach, making way for Brian Cowen, who is favourite to take over.

Mr Ahern was set to come under pressure in Dáil this afternoon as the Opposition parties seek an explanation for evidence given to the Mahon tribunal by his former secretary.

The Opposition will press Mr Ahern on the sterling payments lodged to his Irish Permanent building society account by Gráinne Carruth. Fine Gael and the Labour Party earlier called on Mr Ahern make a statement about his financial affairs.

The tribunal is investigating claims that Mr Ahern received money from property developer Owen O'Callaghan. The claim by Tom Gilmartin has been repeatedly denied by Mr O'Callaghan and by Mr Ahern himself. However the tribunal invetigations have thrown up questions on lodgements to Mr Ahern's personal accounts in the early 1990s

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Why Sally Kern's Comments are problametic

Some of you may be aware of the horrendous comments which Oklahoma Senator Sally Kern made a couple of weeks back. She faced an outcry from a number of sources within the Gay Community, including Ellen deGeneres calling her live from her show. Aside from those comments, Sally Kern was of course within her freedom of speech abilities to make such a statement.

The problem with such a statement/opinion however, is that it is incredibly dangerous for younger members of the Gay community who are subjected to abuse, either emotional or physical because Sen. Sally Kern has given yet another justification to homophobes across the world, not just in the States. Speaking as someone who was a receiver of such abuse in my teens, I can honestly say that for a 14 year old to have to endure a series and torrent of abuse from immature little f*cks, is not the nicest of things to have to endure and from time to time it still affects me. Thankfully I have not let such a negative experience rule my life, but rather it has become something which I acknowledged as having happened in my life but wished that it never happened. For those of you who believe homophobia has all died away in this 'modern' Ireland, that little anecdote is from the period 1998-2000 when I was in secondary school, and conversations with the Baby Gays, Lesbians, bis, & Trans tell me that nothing has changed much in that time period.

Even as recently as 2006 Johnny's Hate Crime in Ireland report, claimed that some 41% of their respondents had been a victim of hate crime and of that group, some 80% did not bother reporting it to the Guards because it was seen as not worth the trouble. Stonewall in London yesterday released their latest report 'Serves You Right' on homophobia in British Society and how latent it has become in the last number of years.

This is the problem with Sally Kern and many others casual homophobic remarks. By making them, they normalize the whole institution of homophobia and make it acceptable to demean, degrade and potential harm our children in Society who identify as Lesbian, Gay, bisexual or transgendered. They also do a dis-service to those of us who are LGBT in an adult capacity because we cannot walk down the street expressing our feelings showing emotions to the ones we love.

Matthew Sheppard's mother Judy commenting on the storm which arose from Sally Kern's comments on gaypolitics.com said:

I don’t know why Sally Kern is proud of comparing gay people to cancer or terrorism, but count me as someone who’s listening now to people like her. She may be free to say people like my son are a threat to America, but when she does she puts other mothers’ sons in danger. I pray she doesn’t say it anymore.

I think that sums up what I have been trying to say. It is all our responsibilities to challenge our own internal homophobia and external homophobic remarks and make this a better world for me, you, them, us and all of our childrens.


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Tuesday, April 1, 2008

UCD LGBT Alternative Debs April 8th 2008

Heads Up: Diary of a Beauty Queen

On TV3 tonight, the current Alternative Miss Ireland, and Alternative Miss Limerick 2008, Ms. Shelia Fits patrick will be partaking in 'Diary of a Beauty Queen'. Show goes out at 9pm on TV3.

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Growing Support for Marriage for Gay and Lesbian People

MARRIAGEQUALITY

Civil Marriage for Gay and Lesbian People

For release: 31 March 2008

Growing Support for Marriage for Gay and Lesbian People

– New National Poll

Over twice as many Irish people favour civil marriage over civil partnership for gay and lesbian people Lansdowne poll shows

A new poll shows an increase in the number of people who believe that gay and lesbian people should be allowed to marry rather than just form civil partnerships, as currently proposed by the Government.

The national poll, which was carried out by Lansdowne Market Research for MarriagEquality, shows that 58% of people are of the view that gay and lesbian couples should be allowed to marry in a registry office, and less than half that number, 26%, are of the view that they should be allowed to form civil partnerships but not marry.

This indicates a swing towards civil marriage since a poll carried out in November 2006, again by Lansdowne for the Gay and Lesbian Equality Network (GLEN). Then, 51% of respondents agreed that gay and lesbian couples should be allowed to marry and 33% agreed that they should be allowed to form civil partnerships only.

The new MarriagEquality poll also shows that six out of 10 people (61%) agree that it is unfair that gay and lesbian people are excluded from getting married in a registry office. In addition, an overwhelming 86% of people agree that children of gay and lesbian parents should have the same family rights as other children.

According to Grainne Healy, co-chair of MarriagEquality, the latest poll is evidence of a consistent emerging demand amongst Irish people for full equality for gay and lesbian people. MarriagEquality is working for civil marriage for gay and lesbian people.

“We have been saying that there is a demand for marriage equality for gay and lesbian people. This national poll, carried out by an independent research company, is data based proof of our own anecdotal evidence,” said Healy.

“Significantly, it underlines a consistent and positive trend over two years. When we compare these results with previous research and polls carried out since February 2006 we see that attitudes have stayed consistent, that they are positive and growing in support.”

…./2

The Government is proposing to introduce draft legislation on civil partnership soon after the Dail resumes this Wednesday. Civil partnership is not civil marriage. It will create a separate but unequal institution for gay and lesbian couples. According to Healy, this latest poll indicates that the people may be ahead of Government thinking on this issue.

“While civil partnership will indeed satisfy the needs of some couples, it will not satisfy the needs of couples who want to get married. The Government has been saying that Irish people are not ready for civil marriage for gay and lesbian couples. This poll and previous polls clearly indicate otherwise.”

The Lansdowne poll for MarriagEquality, which took place between March 4 and16, surveyed a representative sample of 1,000 people throughout the country.

Consistent Public Support – The Story So Far

March 2008

Research by Lansdowne Market Research for MarriagEquality

84% in favour of civil marriage or civil partnership.

58% believe that gay and lesbian couples should be allowed to marry in a registry office.

26% believe that gay and lesbian couples should be allowed to form civil partnerships.

61% agree that it is unfair that gay men and women are excluded from getting married in a registry office.

November 2006

Research by Lansdowne Market Research for GLEN

84% in favour of civil marriage or civil partnership

51% believe that same-sex couples should be allowed to marry.

33% believe that same-sex couples should be allowed to form civil partnerships.

October 2006

Sunday Tribune Opinion Poll carried out by Millward Brown IMS

64% believe that same-sex couples should have the same legal and financial rights as married couples.

February 2006

Irish Examiner Poll carried out by RedC

51% of the national population in favour of gay unions/marriages.

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Human Rights Education For a Sustainable Future: Call for Papers

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Via Equal-L
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Human Rights Education For a Sustainable Future


Celebrating 60 years of the UDHR

St. Patrick’s College, Drumcondra

Host: Centre for Human Rights and Citizenship Education

19th and 20th September 2008

CALL FOR PAPERS

This conference aims to explore how the vision and principles of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights can contribute to education provision. There will be a particular focus on how human rights concerns - local and global - can be addressed in education systems. The main target groups include teachers, teacher educators, and educationalists. The conference will seek to build on the work that has already been done in advancing Human Rights Education (HRE) in Ireland. Keynote speakers for the Conference include:



The World Programme for Human Rights Education was jointly prepared by the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) and the UN Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO) and was adopted by the UN General Assembly in 2004. Focusing on provision for HRE in primary and secondary school systems, this plan identifies five “components” for HRE provision and names specific measures that can be taken in respect of each component. These components are:

  • Education policies
  • Planning for policy implementation
  • The learning environment
  • Teaching and learning
  • Education and professional development for teachers and other educational personnel.

Proposals for papers and workshops relating to any of the above themes are invited from lecturers, teachers, researchers, activists and policy-makers for this event which revisits one of the seminal documents of the 20th Century. Accepted proposals and papers will be considered for inclusion in a special publication after the event.


Participants are invited to submit a 250 word abstract or contact the organiser with paper or workshop proposals.

    1. Concurrent Paper Sessions (Sessions will be 90 minutes in length, with each individual given 30 minutes to present their paper and field questions)

These will be organised around papers on one or another of the conference themes. Each session will allow sufficient time for discussion of a paper of up to 5000 words in length.

2. Workshop (a presentation of minimum 45 minutes)

Ideas can be presented in an alternative format such as performance, audio/visual, facilitated discussion or structured learning activities. We would especially like to encourage teachers, schools and NGOs to present their projects on Citizenship and Human Rights in a variety of ways.

Abstracts of no more than 250 words, giving your name and contact details, title and abstract should be sent, no later than 1 May to Brian Ruane: Brian.Ruane@spd.dcu.ie

Conference Website: www.spd.dcu.ie/chrce
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Via Equal-L
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