Thursday, 2 June 2011

Women's groups fear comments by Corrib gardaí will deter reporting of sex crimes

.Women's groups fear comments by Corrib gardaí will deter reporting of sex crimes

Maura Lane from Rathmines, Dublin, in front of a group of protesters outside the Dáil yesterday at a protest organised by the National Women's Council of Ireland against the trivialisation of rape.Photograph: Brenda Fitzsimons
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MARIE O'HALLORAN

WOMEN’S ORGANISATIONS have expressed major concern that comments by a number of gardaí about rape are a “real setback” to advances made in the reporting of sexual crime.

They were commenting as about 100 people demonstrated outside Leinster House yesterday in protest at the comments made between officers after the arrest of two women at the Corrib gas project in Co Mayo.

The gardaí joked about raping and deporting a woman arrested at a protest against Shell’s Corrib gas pipeline last month. The comments became public after they were recorded on a confiscated video camera that was being transported in a squad car.

Chief executive of the Dublin Rape Crisis Centre Ellen O’Malley Dunlop said that “in the last number of years because of the hard work we’ve been doing, with the gardaí, the reporting of rape has gone up. But this kind of behaviour of the gardaí will put people off reporting. And there are really good gardaí.”

About one in 10 women who are raped report the crime but just 7 per cent of the reported cases go to court.

The Rape Crisis Centre wants to encourage gardaí with their policy to “have specialised police who will be dealing with rape in their own district so it’s not just a garda on the beat”.

Ms O’Malley Dunlop said “rape is the second most serious crime on our statute books and it is important that the attitude that you can rape a woman, or speak about raping a woman, is okay is once and for all challenged. It’s not okay to even talk about raping a man or a woman.”

Ms O’Malley Dunlop welcomed the action of Garda Commissioner Martin Callinan. On Thursday, Mr Callinan apologised to the community of north Mayo for the remarks. Of the five Garda members at the centre of the case, four have now been transferred from Belmullet Garda station to Castlebar where they will perform administrative duties. The fifth garda was already based in Castlebar but has now also been confined to administrative duties.

“I think that the commissioner is dealing with it in the only way he can and we welcome that,” Ms O’Malley Dunlop said.

The National Women’s Council also welcomed the commissioner’s apology and actions to deal with the case, and that the Garda Ombudsman Commission was investigating the incident. In a statement the council’s chief executive Susan McKay said “all women who come into contact with the Garda must be treated with respect. The commissioner must immediately fund training to ensure all gardaí are fully aware of the gravity of sexual violence. All gardaí must be warned that behaviour such as that displayed in Mayo will not be tolerated.”

Cuts in funding for Garda training and education should be reversed to educate gardaí “to have decent attitudes”, she said.

“An Garda Síochána are responsible for upholding the law and for protecting the public. Their behaviour must be exemplary and they must respect the people they serve. That includes women. We are half the population and we are the majority of the population at risk when it comes to crimes of sexual violence.”

Gráinne Griffin of the Dublin Shell to Sea campaign sharply criticised the behaviour of gardaí towards protesters at the Ballinaboy site. “Violence and the threat of violence have long been used in Erris to try and suppress protest,” she said and gardaí were at the site “essentially as soldiers, as private mercenaries for a private company, paid for by us – and they claim to represent us”.

The controversy and the protests have been raised in the Dáil, where it emerged that policing of the protests has cost more than €14 million to date. Some 111 complaints alleging Garda misconduct have been made by protesters, but none have been upheld

Wednesday, 18 May 2011

Westport developer sues sister for defamation

Westport developer sues sister for defamation
TUESDAY, 17 MAY 2011 07:33
Westport developer sues sister for defamation


A Westport developer is suing his sister for defamation, claiming his reputation is ‘in tatters’ after she sent an objection to a development to An Bord Pleanala (ABP).
Roger McGreal claims a submission written by his sister, Ann Lynn, objecting to a proposed development in Carrabaun, Westport, was done in malice. He says it suggested he was deceitful, unprofessional and guilty of abuse of process.
In the letter to ABP, Mrs Lynn stated that documentation issued by Mr McGreal was inaccurate and misleading. Her defence said this did not mean he was corrupt or dishonest.
The case was heard in part at last week’s sitting of Castlebar Circuit Court, where details of the siblings’ family difficulties were outlined. Mr McGreal admitted that he has not spoken to his sister for 16 years and has never spoken to her husband, Kieran Lynn, a senior engineer with Mayo County Council – who Mr McGreal claims used his influence to block him from getting planning permission.
Last March, Mr and Mrs Lynn sued Mr McGreal for defamation over claims by Mr McGreal that Mr Lynn abused his power in the Council, and they were awarded €38,000 each.
The development at the centre of the case is located at Carrabaun on land owned by Mr McGreal, adjacent to his parents’ former family home. He applied for planning permission to Westport Town Council in 2008 to develop 23 units on the land but was denied. His appeal to ABP was also refused in 2009. Mrs Lynn objected to both.
The court was also told that Mr McGreal had purchased land for €1.8 million in order to develop the property. It was claimed by Mr Eoin Garavan, BL for Mrs Lynn that the action was taken against his client because Mr McGreal was furious with his sister.
The application was refused in part because the road was substandard and the access to the road was not in compliance with planning regulations. The court heard that Mr MrGreal tried to buy his parents’ property, which would allow him to gain access to the road.
Mr McGreal admitted in court that he ‘did not get on’ with his father, the late John ‘Porkie’ McGreal; that he had not spoken with him for two years before his death earlier this year; and that he did not attend his funeral.
Mr Peter Tuohy, the auctioneer who was handling the sale, said that Mr McGreal’s bid of €326,000 was the highest bid by €1,000, but he was informed by Mrs Lynn that they would accept the lower bid. The sale eventually fell through and Mrs Lynn ended up buying the property.
In his evidence, Mr McGreal said that he had instructed HDS Consultancy Services from Galway to carry out a plan of the development to submit to Westport Town Council. He admitted that some documents forwarded to ABP were incorrect but denied he was trying to mislead them and said it was a human error.
He said he acted professionally at all times and felt some of the adjectives in the submission by Mrs Lynn were not flattering and were prompted by anger and malice after he raised concern about her husband’s influence on the application.
He claimed every builder in Westport had read the submission and claimed he was “sure people thought a hell of a lot less of me than before.”
The case was adjourned until tomorrow (Wednesday) to allocate a date to conclude the proceeding

Tuesday, 17 May 2011

Queen Elizabeth defies threats to visit Ireland

Queen Elizabeth defies threats to visit Ireland

From: AP
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Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip, the Duke of Edinburgh, arrive in Ireland for the first visit by a monarch since 1911. Source: Getty Images




Second bomb found ahead of Queens visit







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Second bomb found ahead of Queen's visit

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Police secure the area in O'Connell Street in central Dublin ready for the arrival of Queen Elizabeth II. Source: AP


THE Queen, undeterred by real and fake bombs, last night began the first visit by a British monarch to the Republic of Ireland, a four-day trip to highlight strong Anglo-Irish relations and peace in Northern Ireland.

The Queen, accompanied by the Duke of Edinburgh, touched down at the Casement Aerodrome southwest of Dublin at 11.55am (8.55pm AEST).

She was greeted by an Irish army honour guard and eight-year-old Rachel Fox presented her with flowers.

The Queen then boarded a bomb-proof, bullet-proof Range Rover to have lunch with Irish President Mary McAleese, who lobbied for 14 years for the visit - the first by a British monarch since Irish independence in 1922.

A 33-motorcycle police escort led the way through the unusually empty streets of Dublin - cleared to ensure no anti-British extremists could launch an attack.

Hours beforehand, republican dissidents tried to undermine the visit with real and hoax bombs.



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Related Coverage

Second bomb found ahead of Queens visit
Queen arrives in Ireland The Australian, 3 hours ago
Queen heads to Ireland as bomb defused The Australian, 4 hours ago
Explosive device on Dublin bus sparks alert The Australian, 8 hours ago
Lockdown for Queen's Ireland visit Herald Sun, 11 hours ago
London on alert after bomb threat The Australian, 16 hours ago
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Irish army experts defused one pipe-bomb on a Dublin-bound bus overnight. A second device in west Dublin was deemed a hoax late yesterday.

Irish and British officials were keen to stress that the Queen's visit to Dublin, Kildare, Tipperary and Cork would proceed as planned - accompanied by the biggest security operation in the republic's history.

"This is the start of an entirely new beginning for Ireland and Britain," said Irish Prime Minister Enda Kenny. "I hope the welcome she gets will be genuine and memorable for her and her party."

On her first day in Dublin, the Queen was visiting Trinity College - founded in 1592 by Elizabeth I - and laying a wreath at the Garden of Remembrance, a central Dublin memorial that honours two centuries of Ireland's rebel dead.

More than 8000 police, two-thirds of the country's police force, shut down key roads in central Dublin and erected pedestrian barricades for several kilometres. About 1000 Irish troops were being kept in reserve as potential reinforcements.

Ms McAleese said Britain and Ireland were "determined to make the future a much, much better place".

The Queen arrived a century after her grandfather, George V, visited an Ireland that was still part of the British Empire.

The royal visit will be a minefield of painful memories. The base southwest of the capital where the couple's plane landed is named after Roger Casement, an Irish nationalist executed for treason by the British in 1916.

The royals' first port of call, Aras an Uachtarain, Ms McAleese's official residence, dates back to 1751 and was used to house the viceroys who oversaw British rule in Ireland.

The Queen's arrival coincides with the 37th anniversary of the Dublin and Monaghan bombings by the loyalist Ulster Volunteer Force, with 34 people killed, making May 17, 1974, the deadliest day of three decades of the Troubles.

However, co-operation between London and Dublin provided the essential bedrock for the Anglo-Irish Good Friday peace accord in 1998.

IRA disarmament and a Northern Ireland coalition government of the British Protestant majority and Irish Catholic minority eventually followed.

British Prime Minister David Cameron, who arrives tonight in Dublin, said the success of Northern Ireland peacemaking has allowed "the natural friendship, comradeship, shared experiences and warmth that we have for each other to really come out."

He said the Queen's tour of Ireland would "be a huge step forward for that process".

Ireland's European struggle to prevent national bankruptcy - the Irish have spent three years raising taxes and cutting spending, and six months ago received a potential E67.5 billion credit from international lenders - has found its greatest champion in Britain.

Mr Cameron's government offered a particularly low-interest loan, declared Ireland's revival a strategic British interest, and pressed other EU members to cut the Irish more slack for managing their debts.

Sunday, 15 May 2011

Jedward welcomed home

Jedward welcomed home
Sunday 15 May 2011

Jedward were welcomed back home this afternoon by hundreds of screaming fans at Dublin Airport's Terminal 2.
1 of 1 Jedward welcomed home to Dublin They may not have won the Eurovision - but John and Edward gave Ireland back some pride by finishing eighth, the highest position for an Irish entry since 2000.


Although one of the pre-final favourites, Jedward failed to gain enough votes to mount a serious challenge as first-time winners Azerbaijan took the crown.

Check out our gallery of the boys returning home here: http://www.rte.ie/ten/2011/0515/jedward.html

Other favourites France and the UK also failed to make a telling impression during the vote, finishing way down the final table in 14th and 11th place.


The Grimes twins arrived back in Dublin slightly later than expected, just after midday, and seemed delighted to be greeted by around 500 screaming teenage girls.


Jedward immediately staged a spontaneous press conference at the airport, and seemed genuinely pleased with the experience of performing in front of a massive TV audience.


"We're Jedward not victims," they said in response when asked if they felt they were victims of the block voting system, a common occurrence in the contest's recent history.


The twins added that they "loved taking part in the Eurovision" and were delighted with the news that 'Lipstick' went to Number one this morning in Sweden.

UK woman named as Jennifer Mills-Westley Ms Mills-

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854ShareFacebookTwitter.Beheaded UK woman named as Jennifer Mills-Westley Ms Mills-Westley had retired some years ago, her family said
The British woman stabbed and beheaded in a shop on the Spanish island of Tenerife has been named by her family as 60-year-old Jennifer Mills-Westley.

Her daughter Sarah said she was "full of life, generous of heart and would do anything for anyone".

She said her mother was enjoying her retirement, travelling between Tenerife and France and visiting her other daughter in Norfolk.

Spanish media said a Bulgarian man, 28, was arrested in Los Cristianos.

Witnesses said a man entered a Chinese supermarket in a shopping centre and stabbed then beheaded her, before dropping the head outside.

He appeared to choose his victim at random, according to a local official.

Ms Mills-Westley's daughter Sarah said: "Mum retired a number of years ago and was fully enjoying her retirement travelling between Tenerife and France where she spent time visiting her daughter and grandchildren, and her other daughter in Norfolk.

"She was full of life, generous of heart, would do anything for anyone.

"We now have to find a way of living without her love and light and we would ask at this difficult time for some privacy as we try to come to terms with our loss."

'Incredibly well-respected'
Ms Mills-Westley, a grandmother of five from Norwich, retired to Tenerife after working as a road safety officer at Norfolk County Council.

Leader of the council Derrick Murphy said the news was "absolutely devastating" for those who used to work with her.

"We offer our sincere and deepest sympathies to Jenny's friends and family, in particularly her two daughters and five grandchildren," he said.

"As you can imagine, the terrible news obviously has come as a great shock to us... she was an incredibly well-respected member of the staff."

Ms Mills-Westley's former neighbour, Stella Watts, said she was a "kind, lovely lady" who used to take her to hospital to visit her sick partner.

Local officials have been analysing CCTV footage of the attack which shows a man walking into the supermarket - which sells Chinese food and tourist souvenirs.

Witnesses said the man attacked the woman without saying a word.

"Apparently this gentleman without any motive or any reason... entered the shop and then cut this woman's neck and took the head in his hand outside," said local councillor Manuel Reveron.

A security guard then managed to wrestle the man to the ground, he said.

"I parked my car and saw a man running out with something bloody in his hands and a security guard chasing him," one witness was quoted as telling local radio.

Click to play

AdvertisementEyewitness Colin Kirby describes the aftermath of the attack in Tenerife
"He threw it to the ground, it almost hit me and what he had been carrying was a woman's head."

In a video posted on YouTube, Colin Kirby of Tenerifemagazine.com said security guards held down the suspect until the police arrived.

"The security and the police had to hold people off - they were queuing up - they were trying basically to kick the hell out of the guy," he said.

Christina Perez, a legal representative at a nearby court, said she and her colleagues ran indoors for safety.

Psychiatric unit

"Everybody is shocked. It's a very safe area. You can usually go anywhere you want in the day or at night. This is really not normal."

Police sources told Spanish media the suspect had a police record.

Dominica Fernandez, of the Regional Interior Ministry, said the attack appeared to be random and that the suspect was well known in the area.

Regional newspaper La Opinion said the suspect had received treatment at the psychiatric unit of a local hospital in February after being involved in previous violent incidents.

The BBC's Maddy Savage said this kind of violence was extremely rare in the Canary Islands which attract more than 10 million tourists each year.

A Foreign Office spokesman said: "We are in touch with the next of kin and are providing consular assistance.

"Consular officials in Tenerife are in contact with local authorities about this tragic incident and our condolences go out to the family at this difficult time."

Friday, 22 April 2011

House of Prayer makes a €1.7m profit in 2010

House of Prayer makes a €1.7m profit in 2010
Monday, 24 January 2011 20:19

House of Prayer makes a €1.7m profit in 2010


Anton McNulty

THE controversial House of Prayer in Achill made a €1.7 million profit at the end of last year despite falling numbers visiting the centre and allegations of financial irregularities in recent years.
The House of Prayer was founded by religious visionary Christina Gallagher in 1993 who claimed to have the stigmata and receives regular messages direct from the Virgin Mary. Accounts filed with the Companies Registration Office show that the House of Prayer had profits of €1.72m at the end of last year.
In 2006, the Revenue Commissioners stripped the House of Prayer of its charitable status and since then it has had to treat its donations as income. Accounts show that the House of Prayer increased its income in 2010 by 18.7 per cent to €626,282. Donations made up €297,000 of that figure but the mainstay of its income came from the sale of goods and merchandise such as religious snow globes and plastic religious figurines.
The company made €285,000 from the sale of such items, up from €186,000, while café sales and accommodation accounted for another €30,000 of the centre’s income. The wage bill for the House of Prayer was reduced from €273,241 to €267,783 following the cut in employee numbers from 12 to eight in 2010.
Since it opened has attracted thousands of pilgrims from across the world but it has been highly controversial with reports that donations to the centre were funding a ‘lavish’ lifestyle for Christina Gallagher and her family.
A number of former followers claimed that their live savings were taken from them and in 2008, the Archbishop of Tuam, Dr Michael Neary distanced the Catholic Church from its operation.
The House of Prayer has been a huge boost to hotels and B&B’s especially in the Achill Sound region where it is based. However, in recent years there has been a significant fall in the number of pilgrims travelling to the House of Prayer in the large numbers it once enjoyed

Saturday, 9 April 2011

Revealed: secret deals for Lowry and Healy-Rae

Revealed: secret deals for Lowry and Healy-Rae
.New TD won't give up seat dad got him on state board
Michael Lowry's appointments
Transparency in public appointments
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By Fiach Kelly Political Correspondent


Saturday April 09 2011

CONTROVERSIAL TD Michael Lowry and former Independent deputy Jackie Healy-Rae were each given three positions on state boards to hand out to supporters as part of a secret deal struck with Bertie Ahern and Brian Cowen.

The Irish Independent has learned the six posts -- worth tens of thousands of euro a year in payments and expenses -- were a key part of the deals reached with Mr Lowry and Mr Healy-Rae to ensure their support for the Fianna Fail-Green Party coalition.

The full details were not known to other members of the Cabinet outside of Mr Ahern and Mr Cowen.

The revelations come in the wake of the publication of the Moriarty Tribunal report, which led Fianna Fail leader Micheal Martin to furiously try and distance his party from the dealings it had with Mr Lowry.

Mr Healy-Rae's son Michael -- who has assumed his father's Dail seat -- was appointed to the Citizens Information Board (CIB) during the last Government, a position he still holds. He denies his appointment was part of a deal and said he sought the job himself.

There are no rules barring TDs from sitting on state boards; and his position on the board, which the new TD said he would not give up, is worth an annual fee of €5,985 plus expenses.

The deal, the contents of which were always closely guarded, was made after the 2007 General Election and was reaffirmed by Mr Cowen when he became Taoiseach in 2008.

It also contained projects for Mr Lowry and Mr Healy-Rae's constituencies of Tipperary North and Kerry South.

Mr Lowry last night said he filled three positions during the lifetime of the Government, all with people from Tipperary.

Mr Healy-Rae claimed he could not remember the contents of his deal or if he got state positions.

However, sources said he was consistently "hassling" to get his appointment passed, particularly that of his son Michael.

His daughter, Rosemary Healy-Rae, was also given a post during the last Government.

Mary Hanafin, then Social and Family Affairs Minister, said she put Michael Healy-Rae on the CIB board on the orders of Mr Cowen, but was unaware if it was part of a deal.

"The Taoiseach asked me at the time to do it," Ms Hanafin told the Irish Independent. "I'm not aware if it was part of any deal."

Mr Lowry's appointments were:


Sean Fogarty, who was given a position with the Equality Authority, which is based in Roscrea in Mr Lowry's constituency.
Thurles-based Billy O'Dwyer, who was given a place on the Irish Greyhound Board.
Valerie O'Reilly, who does PR work for Mr Lowry, was given a post with the National Transport Authority.
Mr Lowry defended the appointments and said all were doing a good job.

"The feedback on the appointments that I have made has been exceptionally good," he said. "All of them are very competent and able people. As part of my agreement with the Government, I had three appointments to state boards. It was part of the deal and that was it."

Sources also said Mr Healy-Rae got Killarney-based engineer Colm Lonergan on the board of the National Roads Authority. Mr Lonergan refused to comment last night.

Barrister Rosemary Healy-Rae was appointed to the Criminal Injuries Compensation Tribunal by then-Justice Minister Brian Lenihan in 2007, and was reappointed for another three years by Dermot Ahern last December.

She is considered well-qualified for the post and there is some confusion over her appointment, with numerous people saying she would have been given the position anyway.

Well-placed sources from the FF-Green coalition said Mr Healy-Rae wanted "his daughter plus two" other state board positions.

Mr Lenihan said he had high regard for Ms Healy-Rae and said it wasn't conveyed to him that it was part of a deal.

"I was doing it anyway," Mr Lenihan said last night.

"I've known her for a long number of years and she is a very able person."

Another source said: "Jackie was the one who was always giving grief about the board appointments, not Lowry. He hassled and hassled and hassled about that, Jackie, and about Michael being appointed to something."

Jackie Healy-Rae, who is considering a run for the Presidency, last night said he couldn't remember the contents of the deal. "I really don't know at this stage," he said. "I don't, I swear to God. Between what I looked for and what I got, that's where I'd be getting confused."

Tuesday, 5 April 2011

knock airport access works

Tom

Good to hear from you. I am delighted to say we have made much progress. Our new signage for the car park highlighting the PRM car parking spaces is in place. We have modified the toilet on the main concourse near the arrivals doors and this is now a lot more spacious and accessible. We have put in a new signage plan in the car park which makes it much clearer where to park and set down.



Work in progress

We have ordered alarms for all the PRM toilets
We have ordered signage for the disabled toilets which will hopefully arrive in next couple of weeks
We have committed to making ‘way finding’ one of our next big projects and are currently researching some initial steps in this regard.
We have obtained the intercom and a fold down seat for the shelter in the car park. Installation of the intercom is on our electrical contractors list and we hope to have this completed soon.


I am away on holidays shortly and want to suggest later in week commencing 2nd May for a visit if that’s ok. We expect to be very busy over Easter and thus I would prefer to aim for a quieter week.



Let me know how that suits you?



Regards



Trina Donohue

HR Manager

Garda - "Give me your name and address or I’ll rape you"

Garda - "Give me your name and address or I’ll rape you"
Date: Tue, 2011-04-05 08:29
“Give me your name and address or I’ll rape you” - the words of a Garda Sgt as he discussed with at least two other Gardai how they were going to interrogate one of two female Shell to Sea campaigners they had arrested and who were being brought to Belmullet Garda station. Just second earlier while they were discussing how to interrogate the women one Garda suggested they threaten her with deportation. The Sgt responds with the addition of the rape threat which he repeats before another so far unidentified Garda chimes in with “hold it there, give me your name and address there, I’ll rape you” prompting the Sgt to repeat it one last time as “or I’ll definitely rape you.” [Listen to the 2 minute audio]

The Garda press office have tried to spin this horrific revelation by press releasing that a “Garda Superintendent from outside the Mayo area was appointed this afternoon to carry out an examination of the alleged derogatory remarks.” Shamefully but unsurprizingly RTE initially simply reprinted and broadcast on the Nine o’Clock News this press release without question, despite the fact that audio, video and a transcript were all sent to the station 10 hours beforehand, around 11pm on Monday.

This morning despite having access to the audio for 20 hours Morning Ireland has not yet chosen not to play it and worse still to spin the alleged remarks as simply being “of sexual and disturbing nature”. Both the original Garda remarks, the attempt by the press office to spin it and the compliance of the state broadcaster with this strategy demonstrate how completely Shell have managed to bend all sections of the state to its will. If you have not yet listened to the audio you should do so now to understand what was actually said - with the audio in circulation online we expect RTE will be forced to broadcast it. [Listen to the 2 minute audio]

Dublin Shell to Sea spokesperson Caoimhe Kerrins has said of the recording that “This is shocking and extremely serious. It is very frightening for those of us involved in the campaign. Gardai are the people that women are supposed to trust when they need to report a rape. Gardai are supposed to be responsible for bringing rapists to justice.”

Two of the Garda on the tape have been in the area since the start of the struggle against Shell’s experimental gas pipeline and so are “known to campaigners” for their roles in numerous other incidents. They have have identified by the Rossport Solidarity Camp which so far has chosen not to make their identities public. We are also aware of who they are but will reluctantly follow the lead of those directly involved in not publishing them.

It is telling that despite the fact that at least one other Garda joins in the interrogation discussion the Garda press release only refers to an investigation of two officers, presumably the ones named in the transcripts that Shell to Sea had provided to the media. Are we to believe that the Garda are incapable of working out who that third unnamed officer is? And what are we to take of a media that supplied the transcripts to the Garda and then not only failed to run with the actual story of Garda discussion using the threat of rape as an interrogation technique against a women in their custody but in the knowledge of what that story was ran instead with the spin!

Rossport Solidarity Camp have published a transcript of key sections of the recording on Indymedia.ie as below

TRANSCRIPTS OF KEY SEGMENTS:

[ These transcripts, as well as the recording, were provided to the mainstream media by the Rossport Solidarity Camp. The Gardaí in question were named in the original transcripts. The Irish Times changed the name of the Sergeant to “Garda A” and changed the name of the other Garda to “Garda B”. Rossport Solidarity Camp also decided to remove the names of the Gardaí before publishing here, but changed the Sergeant’s name to “Sergeant” and the other named Garda to “Garda A”, and incorporated this into the video file on Vimeo. Hence there seems to be an inconsistency between the Irish Times transcripts and the Indymedia transcripts, but there is not. “Garda B” in the Irish Times is “Garda A” on Indymedia and Vimeo. ]

Sergeant: “Who is them two lassies, do you know the two of them?

Garda A: “I don’t know the second one, the first one is with blonde hair.”

Unidentified Garda: “She was up on the tractor earlier on.”

Sergeant: “It’d do no harm to get the second one’s name again?

Garda A: “She’s some Yank. I don’t know who the fuck she is.”

Unidentified Garda: “ Is she a Yank?

Garda A: “It sounds like it, it sounds like it, the accent anyway

Unidentified Garda: “Sounds like a Yank or Canadian.”

Garda A: “Well whoever, we’ll get Immigration fucking on her.”

Sergeant: “She refused to give her name and address and told she would be arrested.”

Garda A: “.......and deported”

Sergeant: “And raped.”

Garda A: “I wouldn’t go that far yet….. She was living down at that crusty camp, fuck sake, you never know what you might get.”

Sergeant: “Give me your name and address or I’ll rape you.”

Unidentified Garda: “Hold it there, give me your name and address there, I’ll rape you.”

Sergeant: “Or I’ll definitely rape you.”

Unidentified Garda: “Will you be me friend on Facebook?”

[Conversation continues about Facebook in Garda station]


Pic: One of the two campaigners shortly before being arrested, source indymedia.ie

Excerpt from video camera recording in which Gardaí discuss safety and techniques for arrest at protests.

Sergeant: [on phone to a colleague]: “I know we don’t want to be arresting them but by the same token, we were left with no option. We have an issue there as well with the lads in the protest removal team there, of actual climbing the tractors. So what we’re going to do is we’re going to get safety ropes and ladders and we’re going to leave them in the van in case we have to go up on the cab of the tractor again. So we’re looking after that now at the moment.”

Sergeant: ends call.

Garda A: “You see at least you’re a sergeant, like.”

Sergeant: “ like some of auld timers who were here in the area in the first and second campaign. I’ll tell you one thing, the decisions that were made policing at that time.”

Garda A: I’ll still go back to what says there . . . If someone gets hurt we’re going to be on our own in the blocks.”

Sergeant: “. . . I don’t think we’re going to be on our own. If we have exercised due diligence and we have used common sense and used whatever was available to us to remove them. At the end of the day, we have a certain duty of care to them. We ask them to get down, if they don’t get down, we tell them we are taking them down forcefully. We take them down forcefully.

“We use whatever means at our disposal, which includes ladders and ropes or whatever to get them down safely. If one of them slips, so fuckin. What can we do?”

Garda A: “Ladders and ropes. All I’m saying is, the point is

‘Garda, are you a member of the protest removal team?’

’I am.’

’Have you received training with working at heights?’

’Yes, I have.’

. . .’How did you train to bring someone down?’

’In a harness with ropes.’”

“We didn’t have any of them options today there . . . That’s all I’m saying. And is dead right; if we’re in the box:

’Have you received training on how to take a protester down from heights?’

’Yes’.”

“And if we did it with ropes and harnesses . . . then why did you let my client fall? Did you not go get your ropes and harness to take her down. That’s all.”

Sergeant: “. . .To get them down safely we’d have to erect a scaffold tower beside them and abseil them down. And and, the, the, taking the common-sense approach, and a common-sense view, it would be impractical to erect a scaffolding tower to get them down off it. And we use whatever safe means at our disposal, as we considered safe protest removal team to take them down, ie, ropes and ladders.”

Unidentified Garda: “What was the obstruction?”

Garda A: “There was no obstruction . . .”

Sergeant: “They were obstructing the road.”

Garda A: “There was no obstruction . . . The tractors all other vehicles were able to get past.”

Sergeant: “They were obstructing the road. Excuse me. If a car stops there, in the middle of that fucking road, and it’s stopped there, it’s obstructing the road. It doesn’t have to be blocking it. If it’s parked there it’s obstructing it.”

Unidentified Garda: “Well if nothing else they were obstructing the vehicle.”

Garda A: “That’s the only vehicle obstructed.”

Unidentified Garda: “. . . free passage.”

Sergeant: “The vehicle was obstructing the road. Just because other vehicles could pass didn’t mean the road wasn’t being obstructed.”

Sergeant seems to get out of the car . . .

Garda A: “We all said this, it was a safety issue.”

Unidentified Garda: “It was the best option . It was the best option at that time, there’s no doubt about it.”

Garda A: “We all said it because of a safety issue. There was three up, there was a wind blowing. And like did you fucking feel safe, 100 per cent safe going up there taking down two people.”

Unidentified Garda: “No”.

Garda A: “...I don’t know what you thought?”

Unidentified garda: “All I know is that if something happens, who’s going to stand fucking behind me.”

Garda A: “And do you honestly think that is going to turn around and say “oh look it”. We got trained a certain way.

’Garda did you fucking, take a protester down the way you were trained’.

’No I didn’t.’

’Well then Guard.’

“And the job will say were you fucking trained a certain way. The job will fucking ditch you.”


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


Dublin Shell to Sea described how the Garda came to record themselves and hand over this recording to the campaign as follows
Last Thursday, 31st March 2011, several Gardai, including a Sergeant, accidentally recorded their own conversation while travelling in a squad car in north Mayo. They had just arrested two female protesters at a Shell compound at Aughoose, had seized their camera and had let the camera continue recording in the car. The women were travelling in two other Garda cars in the same convoy.

After the women were released without charge, and the camera returned to them, the women discovered the recording of the Garda conversation. This included the Gardaí talking about threatening to rape one of the women in their custody. They also talk about whether they should bother adhering to safety procedures for removing protesters from heights: the Sergeant advocates ignoring the rules learned in Garda training. “

One of the two women described how on playing back the tape “It was terrifying to hear Gardaí talk in this way about rape. How can women living in the area feel safe when such a culture of brutal intimidation and violence exists here?”

The communities around the pipeline route have been under siege for years by an occupying force of Gardai and private security that at times of tension has reached 500 or more personnel. Garda have made threats to rape women involved in the campaign in the past during this occupation. Residents have complained of private security from IRMS filming their children on the beach or apparently filming them inside their houses. Several residents and many campaigners have suffered injuries, some of them serious, as the result of Garda violence. The Garda have arrested people at the moment Shell needed them arrested and the courts have tried people on the days Shell needed them out of the way. The vast majority of the Irish media have remained shamefully silent as this has happened or worse still have taken part in smear campaigns against the campaigners.

The short tape contains many of the other stories the media has refused to report, casually discussed by the Garda in the car. The time below is for the edited Audio that has been made available, long silences in the original have been removed reducing the recording time to 25 minutes from the original 40. The sound quality has also been enhanced. [Listen to the edited Audio]

At 4.35 the Sgt. rings his superior to say he has arrested two people even though he is not really meant to. This is the infamous ‘no arrest’ policy under which Gardai used violence against campaigners rather than arresting them because the jailing of the Rossport five had led to such public outrage.

At 4.50 and at other intervals they discuss how their methods of moving protesters creates dangers to the protesters and themselves, at 18.30 they have a disagreement over whether if this leads to injuries they will be protected by ‘the job’ or not.

At 9.05 they reveal that the calling of a National Day of action the following day has lead to the cancellation of all work and the they had demanded that a full unit of the riot squad be sent to the area.

At 11.20 we hear them filling in the overtime forms, the huge Garda presence at Corrib has resulted in million of euro in overtime costs alone as the people of Ireland pay to protect Shell’s plundering of our Oil & Gas.

At 23.50 you can just make out them discussing the protests during the June bank holiday in 2008 when a scrum of Garda almost pushed several protesters over a 6m cliff onto the rock below.

This is not a case of a couple of rotton apples, rather this tape is further evidence of the way all sections of the state have been mobilised in aiding Energy corporations plunder the 540 billion worth of Oil & Gas Resources that Ireland has. With such extreme profits to be made is it any surprize that such extreme lengths are being gone to to break the resistance to the Great Oil & Gas Giveaway