Time to bear witness once again

Letter in today’s Irish Times.

Madam,

I returned home to Ireland over the weekend and had the unhappy experience of thinking that I had been time-warped back to the 1980s when Charlie Haughey’s stranglehold on the Irish media went almost unchecked (with, of course, notable exceptions).

RTÉ was once again apologising for simply covering a newsworthy story and the Garda Síochána had been dragged in to investigate the hanging of a satirical painting of the Taoiseach. What a fool I was to think that a free and untrammelled media, one of the hallmarks of a consolidated democracy, was now a given in Ireland.

On reading the story of RTÉ’s climb-down and the call from Government press secretary Eoghan Ó Neachtain complaining about news coverage of Conor Casby’s paintings, I shuddered, remembering the atmosphere in the 1980s when similar calls were made to newsrooms including the one I worked in.

I was reminded of my naive incredulity when I was advised by RTÉ management that I should not make a formal complaint to the then taoiseach, Charlie Haughey, who had sent me cascading backwards down the steps of Government Buildings for the temerity of putting a microphone under his nose and asking him what he thought of Stephen Roche’s victory in the Tour de France.

My NUJ colleagues in the RTÉ newsroom had courage and supported my complaint.

They and the rest of us should have our pens and mice at the ready, as it may be time to bear witness once again.

Yours, etc,

Dr JACQUELINE HAYDEN,

Lecturer in Political Science,

Trinity College,

Dublin.

Picturegate: An analysis

Fintan O’Toole does a good analysis of the ongoing picturegate affair in yesterday’s Irish Times.

I agree with his conclusion that the whole affair is nothing less than an abuse of power. If true, he says, “we are back in the day of Sean Doherty and political pressure on the Garda.”

Personally, I don’t believe we ever left those days.

Here’s my analysis/opinion of the reaction of some of the principal characters in the affair.

Brian Cowen: Taoiseach (The Great Leader).

In my opinion it was Mr. Cowen who initiated the police action and demanded the apology from RTE. It’s just not believable that RTE would issue such a craven apology so soon over a report that most normal people would see as a harmless piece of satire.

For RTE to jump so high and so quickly could only be in reaction to the anger of ‘somebody from on high’. I believe the policeman who said he was acting on orders from on high was telling the truth and I believe he got his orders from the Government Press Officer.

Brian Cowen has always viewed those outside the Fianna Fail tribe with suspicion and contempt, including the electorate but in particular the non FF media.

He has clearly taken to heart the fantastic claims made by the FF media regarding his ‘super intelligence and amazing political acumen’. When a political leader begins to believe his own propaganda then satirists and democrats better watch out.

Michael Kennedy: Fianna Fail TD.

Kennedy had no problem if the pictures were shown on any comedy show. He had no problem if they had been published in any newspaper so long as they were in black and white. According to Kennedy, colour has an impact that was unacceptable.

He had no problem if RTE had broadcast the story on any other news programme except the main evening news. According to Kennedy this news should be strictly reserved for serious items.

Mr. Kennedy is one of those Fianna Fail backwoodsmen who believe that RTE should follow guidelines as set out by his party; he believes RTE is a government department.

Mary O’Rourke: Fianna Fail TD.

For this politician freedom of privacy in the loo is supreme, nobody should infringe on that right. So if Cowen had been portrayed fully naked leaving, let’s say, a house of ill repute, O’Rourke would have no problem with that.

O’Rourke joined a discussion on the matter on the Late Late Show on the strict condition that the pictures would not make an appearance in her presence, predictably, RTE agreed.

In common with almost all Fianna Fail politicians O’Rourke possesses a warped sense of morality. For example, she never had any problem with the massive damage done to the people of Ireland by the corrupt Haughey. When Haughey died she referred to his long career of corruption as ‘a few bumps on the road’.

Neither had she any problem with Bertie Ahern’s long series of fairy tales at the tribunal and she obviously sees nothing wrong with a former Taoiseach swearing under oath that he won the money on the horses.

Rónán Mullen: Senator.

Mullen tells us that he would have had no problem with the pictures if they had remained as a private joke with the artist. Like all ultra conservatives Mullen attacked the media for exploiting the situation saying that the stunt wasn’t satire but just a tasteless prank.

He added, bizarrely, that if something is funny it has to be in the eye of the lampooned person??

Senator Mullen is a catholic fundamentalist who was the principal mover behind the law that has made it a criminal offence to sell a Mass card without the permission of a Catholic bishop.

According to Mullen, John waters penned the most accurate and impressive analysis of the affair in the Irish Times.

John Waters: Author/Columnist.

In his intolerant article Waters is extremely insulting to the artist, Conor Casby. He also, predictably, used the affair to attack the media, bloggers and anyone else who he sees as a threat to the State, the Catholic Church or his own sense of public morality.

“The only amusing thing here is Casby’s deluded belief that he has something to say. His response is typical of a public discourse almost fatally degraded by internet auto-eroticism and an obsession with what is called “comedy”. His works are crude, unfunny, and vindictive; without intrinsic content and wholly lacking in artistic merit.”

On those who write on the internet:

“The internet has reduced public debate to the level of a drunken argument, in which no holds are barred, in which deeply unpleasant people get to voice their ignorant opinions in the ugliest terms, in the name of “free speech.”

Fortunately, his views can be dismissed with pity. Until recently I had seen him as an adequate writer with some bizarre views but having just recently read his latest book, Lapsed Agnostic, I sincerely believe the man is in need of some serious guidance.

In the book he sees George Best as a god.

“There was something superhuman in the way he played, something unworldly and yet transcendent in both the worldly and theological senses…He has walked in the skin of a god.”

As I say, a man not to be taken seriously.

Fionn Sheehan: Political editor, Irish Independent. (This reaction threw me a bit).

“The man has a family, the man holds the office of Taoiseach and he’s entitled to have some respect shown towards him in that regard.

In this case, this caricature was in no way commenting on any action that he had undertaken as Taoiseach if it was showing him, you know, running the wrong way on a football pitch or looking behind him and seeing there’s no team behind him or anything like that. But picking on a physical characteristic, I think that’s what would have upset an awful lot of people.

I think the specific reason was the nine o’clock news holds a particular place in Irish society; it’s not the six o’clock news where things are very fast moving and it’s breaking news and people being interviewed to and fro. It’s not News 2 where they take a lighter and more neutral approach. It’s nine o’clock news when the ordinary plain people of Ireland have settled down for the night and the day’s work is done”

Feck, what is this man on, I mean the news is the news is the news. I never realised the Nine O’clock News played such a central role in the life and culture of the Irish people.

Clearly, Mr. Sheehan would agree with Michael Kennedy that RTEs flagship news programmes are a thing apart, on a par with the god ‘George Best’ perhaps.

And what’s this about the ‘ordinary plain people of Ireland settling down after the day’s work is done? Has this man been looking into Dev’s heart lately?

Until now I had always seen Sheehan as a well balanced professional political analyst but, clearly, he’s taken a sharp turn towards the Fianna Fail camp.

Could it have anything to do with the fact his wife is standing as a Fianna Fail candidate in the upcoming local elections? Have we lost yet another potentially great journalist to the moral wilderness that is Fianna Fail?

Noel Whelan: Fianna Fail journalist.

Whelan wrote an article in which he blamed Fine Gael and the media, including RTE, for over reacting. He went on to outline the ‘facts’ of the matter as stated by government officials.

Whelan is one of those journalists who believe everything they’re told by Fianna Fail and attack all those who disagree. He lives a simple but happy life.

The banking crisis is over – or is it?

In the most dramatic development since the present financial crisis began, accountant Des Peelo, announced on Questions and Answers (Q2) last night that the banking crisis was over.

“I believe the banking crisis is over. I believe it’s been handled correctly and fair credit to Brian Lenihan and the people in the Dept. of Finance. There was this huge fog of uncertainty out there created by the banking crisis. I don’t think AIB or BOI will be nationalised.”

Mr. Peelo conceded that there was still a lot of ‘debris’ out there like the countless millions lost to shareholders but such personal loss and devastation didn’t seem to matter much to this man. The main thing was that Brian Lenihan had solved the problem and it was time for everybody to move on.

But when we remember that Mr. Peelo was Haughey’s personal accountant and also helped the chancer Bertie Ahern prepare his financial records for the Mahon Tribunal we realise that his announcement is not so dramatic after all.

Anybody who can work closely with the finances of the corrupt Haughey or the dodgy finances of Bertie Ahern and still feel that they are men of the highest calibre would have no problem in deluding themselves that the banking crisis is over.

"I have absolutely no faith in the HSE or in Mary Harney" Bernadette Cooney, recently deceased. RIP

Early last year there was a major controversy, which began on Liveline, over the very poor facilities available to Cystic Fibrosis sufferers in Ireland.

CF patients are extremely vulnerable to infection and therefore need isolation units and other special care. In some countries, where the facilities/care is provided, patients can live until they are 40 or even 50. In Northern Ireland the average is about 35, in the Republic it’s early to mid 20s.

Because of the controversy and subsequent embarrassment the Government promised to take action on the matter but last Friday the HSE announced that the promised facilities were being deferred and would not now be available until 2011, at the earliest, because of lack of funds (Irish Times).

The scandal came to light after a CF sufferer, Bernadette Cooney, wrote a passionate and desperate letter to Liveline last year, begging the Government to provide even the most basic of facilities to give her and her fellow sufferers some hope, she died three weeks ago aged just 25 (Liveline, Friday).

At the time I wrote about the lack of anger displayed by Irish Independent journalist, Sam Smyth, whose daughter suffers from CF.

“The odd thing about Smyth’s interview was his complete lack of anger. He even praised Harney and Ahern for their ‘efforts’ and spoke as if he really believed the promise made by Prof. Drumm that proper facilities would be provided sometime next year. This promise has been made and broken for the last 14 years.”

It is this lack of anger, common to most Irish citizens, that allows chancers like Ahern and Harney to survive and prosper at the expense and suffering of ordinary citizens.

Thankfully, Smyth has finally realised the reality of how the vulnerable are treated in this country. He (angrily) introduced the subject on his show this morning.

“Let’s get stuck into something that’s really disgusting that this government has done and it’s something I’ve got a personal interest in and that is Cystic Fibrosis.

An absolute disgrace, this administration was shamed last year into providing €34 million that would undoubtedly save lives and clearly they’re gambling on those people who are campaigning now that they will be dead soon and therefore it’s a waste of money.

What we should do is find out the names of those people in the department, in the HSE and the hospitals who engineered this between them to get that cut done.

If you live in Newry you will live for ten to fifteen years longer than you would if you lived in Dundalk. Who are these people, who had the authority to do that?”

A panelist provided the answer.

“We know who is responsible, Mary Harney is responsible but she has tried to offload responsibility for years to the HSE.”

I’ve reproduced the email that Bernadette Cooney wrote to Liveline last year, the letter speaks for itself.

Dear Joe,

First and foremost I want to thank you so much for the coverage you have given CF patients over the last few days. Unfortunately, after years of listening to the same thing over and over again, I have absolutely no faith in the HSE or in Mary Harney and am not holding out any hope that anything will be done.

I am 24 years old and have cystic fibrosis. I am currently an inpatient in St Vincent’s Hospital in Dublin for a severe chest infection. I have been here since the 2 January and there has been no significant improvement in my condition. I have been informed that my disease is progressing and I won’t be able to regain the level of health that I had 6-12 months ago.

Transplant has also been put on the agenda. I can’t put into words how absolutely devastated I am-as a CF patient you make the best of everything and try to ignore the statistics that are staring you in the face, but when it is spelled out for you it is truly awful.

Every day is a massive effort now as I struggle to fight and maintain the exhaustive regime of treatment I must undergo which involves oral, nebulised and intravenous antibiotics, physiotherapy, nutritional supplements (and possibly having a feeding tube inserted) and oxygen.

The constant stream of anger and indignation in the media must start to sound confusing to the everyday person as there is such a massive web of problems for us within the services and facilities we are offered. However I just wanted to add my piece and get it off my chest. Here are a few points that I feel are important.

En-suite rooms are NOT A LUXURY, they are a basic need.

Firstly, as has been pointed out lots of times in the last few days, going into the current mixed and cramped conditions in Vincent’s is extremely dangerous for CF patients. We are at a low with infection and are open to any bugs flying around. These bugs can spiral out of control and could kill us. That is a fact. It is not as if we are looking for some kind of luxury-we are just looking for the basic and necessary treatment for cystic fibrosis which is recognised as international best practice. We NEED isolation units with en-suites and we need them now.

Intensely depressing scenario regarding conditions.

It is hard to describe how truly soul destroying it is to be put in a ward with 5 patients who are elderly and often senile and incontinent. I make a concerted effort each day to be strong and positive and to fight my illness, but just imagine trying to maintain this frame of mind when you are stuck in your bed because of o2xygen dependency while all around people are calling out for people who aren’t there, and are regularly soiling their beds or using a bedpan, making the smell in the ward unbearable.It is so horribly depressing.

May I also point out that the ward is where the meals are served. Would you eat your dinner in a public toilet? Because that is basically what I am expected to do EVERY DAY.

Sometimes all I want is a bit of peace and quiet and maybe to curl up in a comfortable place on my own. Even this simple desire is not possible in here. Each time someone dies in your room you are forcibly confronted with the reality that someday this could be you. What did I do to deserve this? Do I not have the right to be protected from this?

Mary Harney’s private hospital “solution” and staffing levels.

Although all the coverage has been about the lack of facilities, it is important to note that the staffing levels are also dangerously inadequate. If you refer to the report on CF services in Ireland conducted by Dr. Ron Pollock this is stated quite clearly.

However whenever the issue of cystic fibrosis is raised with Mary Harney, she tells of how funding has been allocated for new staff. While some funding has been allocated and there are now two consultants in St Vincent’s, all the consultants in the world won’t be able to get me a bed when I need it if it is not available, and they can’t magic isolation units out of thin air. If the problem is to be tackled extra staff alone will not alleviate our situation.

Also Mary Harney’s idea of freeing up public beds by building private hospitals does not help CF patients at all. While it MAY mean a shorter stay in A&E, which, I might add, is a ridiculously dangerous situation, it does not address the issue of single isolated room with en-suite, which are VITAL.

I want some answers. Why is this allowed to continue? Would Mary Harney like to step into my shoes for a day? I don’t think so.

As I write this, my 6 bed room has finally quietened down, but I’m sure that I can look forward to some noise later on. Here’s hoping for a good nights sleep.

I also want to say that despite all of this mess, the CF team and the staff of St Vincent’s hospital are nothing short of amazing, and I feel so lucky to have them looking after me. I couldn’t ask for any better, each and every one of them is just fantastic.

Yours Sincerely,
Bernadette

Dermot Desmond's chicken comes home to roost

Apparently, billionaire businessman Dermot Desmond has lost a substantial amount of money because of the collapse in Bank of Ireland shares. He is not, at they say, a happy man and expressed his unhappiness (through a representative of course, Mr. Desmond doesn’t like to mix with the peasants) at the recent EGM in Dublin.

“Failures at all levels in the Irish financial system have resulted in the destruction in international and domestic confidence in Ireland. The global situation did not create the Irish property boom or subsequent bust.

There are far too many apologists from within the financial services sector who all too quick to that excuse – ‘We’re caught up in a global crisis not of our making’ – Such analysis is deeply erroneous.

In advance of any initiatives such as is proposed here today fundamental decisions on other matters must be taken, not least, how the bank is to be managed into the future.

It is difficult to understand the justification for allowing those who have caused the bank to be in this current mess to remain in situ and be trusted with getting it out of the mess.”

Not in my wildest dreams did I imagine that Mr. Desmond would become one of the victims of how things are done in our banana republic.

He was a very strong ‘financial supporter’ and friend of the corrupt Haughey making substantial payments to him when he was Taoiseach. At the Moriarty Tribunal Mr. Desmond was strongly critical of those who questioned his ‘generosity’ to Haughey.

And of course the destruction of international and domestic confidence in Ireland that Mr. Desmond speaks of is almost entirely down to the corrupt actions of Haughey and his cronies. He was one of the principal architects of the corruption that has infected every level of Irish society but in particular the financial sector.

Ah yes, here’s one chicken I’m only too delighted to see coming home to roost.

Bankers on the run…

Bank of Ireland shareholders got an opportunity to vent their anger at management over the almost complete destruction of their investments. But like Anglo Irish shareholders that’s all they’ll get as Irish bankers don’t do accountability.

The shareholders did however break into howls of laughter when the governor of BOI said

“The continuity offered by appointing a new chief executive with a deep knowledge of Bank of Ireland and an ability to hit the ground running….

Cowen-Gate affair rolls on

There’s a good selection of letters in today’s Irish Times on the Cowen paintings affair. Here’s two, one very funny and the other very accurate.

Madam,

If I find there is an intruder sneaking around my home in the middle of the night, should I dial 999 and tell the operator that someone is attempting to nail a painting to my wall without permission? Because that seems to be a very effective way of getting the gardaí to respond quickly. I certainly won’t tell them that there’s a gang of bankers in the kitchen rummaging through my wallet.

Yours, etc,

SHANE Ó MEARÁIN,
Sandymount Road,
Sandymount,
Dublin 4.

Madam

The unfolding story of Cowen-Gate is an almost perfect parable of the life and abilities of this Government and Fianna Fáil.

With our economy in tatters, our education and health care systems decimated, more people unemployed than ever before, and cronyism and corruption rife in Irish life, it takes two satirical portraits of Brian Cowen in the nip and the ridiculous attempts to censor the coverage of them, for people to finally realise that the emperor has no clothes.

Sad to say, it seems that we are living in a banana republic without either the good weather or the bi-annual excitement of a change of government.

Yours etc,
HARRY LEECH,
Leinster Place,
Rathmines,
Dublin 6.

It's not just the economy stupid

“I AM shocked, truly shocked,” says Katey Walter, an ecologist at the University of Alaska in Fairbanks. “I was in Siberia a few weeks ago, and I am now just back in from the field in Alaska. The permafrost is melting fast all over the Arctic, lakes are forming everywhere and methane is bubbling up out of them.”

(New Scientist).

It’s not just our economy that’s going down the tube.

Happy Thursday everybody.

Update on Mass card law

I received the following email from Aras an Uachtarain today in response to my email to the President regarding the Charities Act, 2009 which makes it a criminal offence to sell a Mass card without the permission of a Catholic bishop.

Dear Mr. Sheridan,

I refer to your e-mail to the President of 19th March, 2009.

As you are aware the Charities Act 2009 has become law. The President has therefore no further function in relation to this legislation. You may wish to bring your concerns regarding the provisions of this Act to the attention of the Government.

With kind regards,

Yours sincerely,

I also made a formal complaint regarding this Act to the EU through the three Munster MEPs, Kathy Sinnott (Independent), Brian Crowley (Fianna Fail) and Colm Burke (Fine Gael).

19th March 2009

Dear Ms. Sinnott,

I wish to lodge a formal complaint with you regarding the recent enactment of the Charities Act, 2009.

According to former Attorney General John Rodgers SC, Section 99 of the Act, which was recently signed into law by President Mary McAleese, may be unconstitutional because it makes it a criminal offence to sell a Mass card without the permission of a Catholic bishop.

Mr. Rodgers has stated:

The narrow categories of persons is arbitrary and unfair and represents a serious interference with the religious practice of some priests and others who are members of non-Catholic churches and religious communities in this State. (Irish Times, February 26th).

The most worrying aspect of the Act, however, concerns the reversal of the widely accepted legal principal of innocent until proven guilty. Part 7, Section 99 (2) of the Act states:

In proceedings for an offence under this section it shall be presumed, until the contrary is proved on the balance of probabilities, that the sale of the Mass card to which the alleged offence relates was not done pursuant to an arrangement with a recognised person.

Clearly, this section is in direct contradiction of Article 48 of the EUs Charter of Fundamental Rights which states: Everyone who has been charged shall be presumed innocent until proved guilty according to law.
The principle of innocent until proven guilty is, I believe, one of the fundamental legal pillars of most modern democratic states.

Mr. Rodgers believes that this section goes further than is reasonably required to deal with the problem. I believe that it is an unacceptable attack on the principle of innocent until proven guilty and therefore request that you investigate the matter with the aim of having the repugnant section struck out.
Yours sincerely

Anthony Sheridan

Kathy Sinnott replied.

Dear Anthony,

Thank you very much for alerting me to this. I will certainly do what I can and get back to you.

Kathy

I received no reply from Mr. Crowley or Mr. Burke. I have resubmitted my formal complaint to both MEPs today.

Niall O'Loughlin: A comfortable but worried artist

The artist Niall O’Loughlin has an interesting take on the Brian Cowen picturegate controversy. He says:

“I personally think what the artist did was a step too far, the painting itself IMO was very poorly executed which I know is irrelevant, however I worry about the long term repercussions of what he did.

Artists are very well treated in this country, lets just hope the government doesn’t form the opinion that we’ve nothing better to do than sit around all day drawing silly pictures of our political leaders and then sneaking into art galleries to hang them up. Enjoy your 15 minutes of fame whoever you are.”

I’ve always assumed that artists were freethinkers, that they pushed boundaries to the limit, acted outside the box, acted and worked with the intention of shocking, enlightening, educating, leading and encouraging the general population to see reality from as many perspectives as possible.

I suspect that Mr. O’Loughlin’s stated fear of possible government reprisals against artists indicates that he’s a comfortable artist, very well established, enjoying considerable monetary favours from the State and is very worried that his less well established and more radical artist colleagues may make things uncomfortable for him.

Copy to:
Niall O’Loughlin