Europe | |
Irish gun owners can now shoot intruders | |
2010-07-21 | |
The new bill was published by Justice Minister Dermot Ahern yesterday. Under the bill homeowners will be allowed to use "reasonable" force against intruders to defend themselves, others or their property. This includes lethal force, depending on the circumstances. Justice Minister Dermot Ahern stated that house owners could use guns in self-defense, especially if the intruders were armed but said it would ultimately be a matter for the courts to resolve. The bill also clarifies that a house owner will not be required to retreat from an intruder. and that intruders injured as a result of reasonable force won't be able to sue the house owner. "The bill is welcomed because it aims to clarify the entitlements of a homeowner when faced with the situation where an uninvited intruder has entered the home," AGSI vice-president Dan Hanley told the Irish Examiner. "The bill aims to shift the balance of rights back to the homeowner where it should always have been. It is intolerable a homeowner should be compelled to retreat in front of an intruder who has entered the home and who may have malign intentions towards the homeowner, the family or the home owner's property." Hanley added: "It is ridiculous to suggest the bill, which attempts to redress a serious legal imbalance, would provide a license to kill or a 'have-a-go' charter for homeowners, the vast majority of whom will continue to act with good sense and in a peaceful way." Minister Ahern also dismissed the suggestion the bill was a "license to kill". He stated it merely allowed for lethal force provided it was justifiable. Rural Link, the national network of community groups in rural Ireland welcomed the bill, saying it was "sensible legislation giving much needed clarity to homeowners on their rights when confronted by intruders". The Irish Council for Civil Liberties however, stated it would inspect the bill to establish that it was "human-rights compliant". The need for new legislation became evident after an intruder, John Ward, was shot dead while on the land and dwelling area of Mayo farmer, Padraig Nally. Nally was convicted of manslaughter, but his conviction was later overturned after a public outcry. Burglaries in Ireland increased from 23,600 in 2007 to 26,800 in 2009. Violent burglaries rose from 255 to 363 in the same period. | |
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Europe |
Up the Irish! Irish minister says EU treaty referendum defeated |
2008-06-13 |
"Auntie Beeb" (BBC) Irish Justice Minister Dermot Ahern says substantial vote tallies across the country show the European Union Lisbon reform treaty has been rejected. Tallies are not official, but Mr Ahern says it is clear the No vote is ahead in a vast majority of constituencies. This would scupper the treaty, which must be ratified by all members. Only Ireland has held a public vote on it. Mr Ahern is the first senior figure from the Irish government to admit that it looked like the treaty had failed. How the Irish Saved Civilization II: Electoral Boogaloo. |
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Europe | |
Ahern triumphant in Irish elections | |
2007-05-27 | |
On a day of high political drama, Fianna Fail confounded its critics with a sensational electoral performance that opened up the possibility that it could form a single-party government. Enda Kenny's opposition Fine Gael party also made considerable gains but it was a bad election for the smaller political parties. Sinn Fein, in particular, failed to make the breakthroughs it expected in constituencies in Dublin and Donegal. And Deputy Prime Minister Michael McDowell quit politics after losing his seat as his Progressive Democrats party lost a number of high-profile candidates. With many seats still to be decided, Fianna Fail strategists were not ruling out the possibility that they would have to enter into a coalition again. With the party chasing the magic 83-seat figure for an overall majority, the Foreign Minister Dermot Ahern said: "We potentially will be around the 80-seat mark. "That might mean we won't have to look at coalition options." He also confirmed Fianna Fail received congratulations on their success from an unlikely source last night - Ian Paisley's Democratic Unionists. He received a message from the DUP leader's son, Ian Paisley jnr, a junior minister in the new Stormont Executive. "He congratulated me and the party," Mr Ahern said. "He said maybe the DUP could take a few lessons on vote management from the Fianna Fail election machine." | |
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Europe | ||
EU Panel OKs Report on CIA Flights | ||
2007-01-24 | ||
![]() The report, the conclusion of a yearlong investigation into CIA activities in Europe, also accused EU foreign policy chief Javier Solana and other high-ranking officials of failing to fully cooperate with the probe. It also called for unspecified sanctions against member states found to have violated EU human rights principles.
The report, drafted by Italian Socialist Giovanni Fava, was backed by Socialists and Liberals; center-right deputies rejected it as ideological, biased and inaccurate. It was also criticized by some of the 13 EU nations implicated, including Germany and Ireland. "Instead of highlighting ways in which extraordinary rendition could be prevented in the future, the report indulges in political point-scoring," said Irish Foreign Minister Dermot Ahern. While It also obtained information from Eurocontrol, the EU's air safety agency, according to which more than 1,200 undeclared CIA flights entered European airspace since the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks on the United States. "We have uncovered serious breaches of human rights. We recognize the need to combat terrorism but this can only be done using legal methods," said Wolfgang Kreissl-Doerfler, a Socialist member of the committee. But members of the European People's Party, the largest political grouping in the European Parliament, argued that much of the report was based on hearsay. "The report is full of phrases like 'we believe' or 'we think' - that's unacceptable. It did not come up with anything we would not have known, but it did manage to split the assembly according to who's pro-American and who's anti-American," said Italian conservative Jas Gawronski.
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Israel-Palestine-Jordan | ||
EU moves closer to talks with Hamas | ||
2006-09-03 | ||
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European ministers held a brainstorming session in Finland yesterday. The Finnish minister Erkki Tuoioja, chairing the two-day meeting, said they have to be ready to talk to all parties, including Hamas and Syria. However Hamas, which is on the EU's terror list, would first have to recognise Israel, he added. But a government of national unity, which Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas is negotiating, offers a way out of this difficulty. President Abbas is insisting that parties to such a national government would accept conditions the same as those set by the EU an end to violence, recognition of Israel and adherence to agreements between Israel and the Palestinian Authority. After the meeting Foreign Minister Dermot Ahern said that with agreement on a government of national unity there will be at least tacit acceptance of a two-state solution. This line of thinking was put to the ministers by But all of this is conditional on President Abbas succeeding in forming a multi-party government. Mr Ahern pointed out there would be additional problems as the Hamas deputy prime minister, six other ministers and 30 members of the legislative council are all in Israeli jails.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran | |
Europeans reach out to Hezbollah's backers in bid to end crisis | |
2006-08-03 | |
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Spanish Foreign Minister Miguel Angel Moratinos, a former EU Middle East peace envoy, was due to visit Damascus after talks in Beirut with Lebanese leaders, diplomats said. | |
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Europe |
Watch for US prisoners, Irish airport staff are told |
2006-06-18 |
Staff working at Shannon Airport are being pressed to report any evidence they see of trafficking of prisoners by the US military. It follows the discovery by a cleaner last Sunday of a manacled soldier on board a US civilian aircraft at the airport. The incident has proved highly embarrassing for the Irish government, which had always accepted assurances that no such traffic passed through its airports. Foreign Minister Dermot Ahern has now signalled that gardai may carry out random checks of US planes using the airport, but in the absence of any concrete decision human rights groups have asked staff at Shannon to report anything out of the ordinary. |
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Home Front: Politix | |||
McCain and Hillary Rally Illegals | |||
2006-03-17 | |||
Senators John McCain (Rino.-Ariz.) and Hillary Clinton (D.-N.Y.), the current frontrunners for their parties 2008 presidential nominations, joined Senators Teddy Kennedy (D.-Mass.) and Charles Schumer (D.-N.Y,) in rallying a group of illegal aliens who came to Washington, D.C., on March 8 as part of a lobbying effort funded by a foreign government to push for amnesty for illegal aliens.
The lobbyists, part of an effort organized by the Irish Lobby for Immigration Reform (ILIR), were not petitioning their own government, of course. They were petitioning our government, using Irish government money to do it. What is the ILIR? The purpose of the new organization is to lobby for immigration reform at a local level, with a particular emphasis on the legislation proposed by Senators John McCain and Edward Kennedy (the Secure America and Orderly Immigration Act), says a January 23 press release put out by Irelands Department of Foreign Affairs. This will include lobbying congressmen and senators in a bipartisan manner.The Irish government has launched an all-out effort for the McCain-Kennedy immigration bill because it would grant amnesty to illegal aliens in the U.S. by converting them into legal guest workers. Funding ILIR is part of Irelands pro-McCain-Kennedy campaign. The ILIR has been established at a particularly critical time in the U.S. as the legislative debate on this issue enters an important phase, Irish Foreign Minister Dermot Ahern said in the January 23 release. The ILIR is throwing its weight behind the McCain/Kennedy immigration reform bill. The positive initiative taken by Senators McCain and Kennedy in the U.S. Senate, mirrored by Representatives [Jim] Kolbe [R.-Ariz.], [Jeff] Flake [R.-Ariz.], and [Luis] Gutierrez [D.-Ill.] in the House of Representatives would enable undocumented Irish people to participate in the life of their adopted country, free from fear and uncertainty. In debates on the floor of the Irish legislature, the Irish government has made clear that this amnesty provision is why they especially like McCain-Kennedy. We believe this [McCain-Kennedy] remains the most attractive approach for the undocumented Irish, as it includes provisions which would allow undocumented people to apply initially for Temporary Residence Status, but with a route to Permanent Residency, Noel Treacy, Irelands minister of European Affairs said in Irelands legislature on February 15. We know that Senators Kennedy and McCain and other like-minded senators remain convinced that proposals that require undocumented people to return home before applying for re-entry to the U.S. are not practical and will not encourage the undocumented to come out of the shadows. In a February 22 debate in the Irish legislature, Foreign Minister Ahern said he had encouraged the creation of the illegal-alien lobbying organization in the U.S. Deputies can be assured that in all my meetings with U.S. contacts, including Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, and key congressional figures, I made known the support of the government for the approach favoured by Senators Kennedy and McCain, said Ahern. Their bill has also been strongly endorsed by the Irish Lobby for Immigration Reform, a group established in December to mobilize grassroots support within the Irish community in the U.S. for immigration reform. I welcome the establishment of this organization. I encouraged the formation of such an organization and recently approved a grant of 30,000 towards its operational expenses. The Irish Times, published in Dublin, trumpeted the fact that illegals had rallied on Capitol Hill with McCain, Clinton, Kennedy and Schumer. One Times story on March 9 was headlined: Illegals lobby for right to stay in U.S. Capitol Hill became a sea of green and white yesterday as thousands of undocumented Irish immigrants came out of the shadows for immigration reform, said the Times. They were rewarded with appearances from some of the most influential figures in Congress, including the two front-runners to succeed President BushSenators John McCain and Hillary Clinton. Another item in the Irish Times, with the headline Irish rally to press for legal status in America, said: More than 2,400 undocumented Irish immigrants and their supporters rallied in Washington yesterday in support of an immigration reform bill that would allow them to remain in the U.S. legally. This report further noted that Senators Kennedy, John McCain, Hillary Clinton and Charles Schumer addressed the demonstrators, who wore white T-shirts with the slogan Legalize the Irish. There has never been a presence like weve had today, Clinton told the crowd of illegal aliens, according to the Irish Times. This kind of reception is enough to make a guy want to run for President of the United States, said McCain, after the illegal aliens gave him a standing ovation.
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Condi will tell EU to stuff it in secret prison probe | ||||||
2005-12-04 | ||||||
![]() Rice, who arrives in Brussels tomorrow for a meeting with Nato foreign ministers, has been under pressure to respond to claims the US has been using covert prisons in Eastern Europe to interrogate Islamic militants. Human rights groups have alleged the CIA is flying terror suspects to secret jails in planes that have used airports throughout Europe, including Britain.
Irish Foreign Minister Dermot Ahern said Rice told him in Washington she expected allies to trust that America does not allow rights abuses. An unnamed European diplomat who had contact with US officials over the handling of the scandals told Reuters yesterday: 'It's very clear they want European governments to stop pushing on this... They were stuck on the defensive for weeks, but suddenly the line has toughened up incredibly.' Andrew Tyrie, the Conservative MP who will be chairing a Commons committee of MPs along with Menzies Campbell, Liberal Democrat foreign affairs spokesman, has said Rice needs to make a clear statement. She 'does not seem to realise that for a large section of Washington and European opinion, the Bush administration is in a shrinking minority of people that has not grasped that lowering our standards [on human rights] makes us less, not more, secure'.
Straw is also facing calls to allow MPs and human rights groups access to Diego Garcia, the British island in the Indian Ocean being used as a US military base. It has long been suspected that the island has been used to hold or transfer terror suspects to secret US jails.
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Home Front: WoT | |
Condi Will Divulge Secret Prison Material to Euros | |
2005-12-02 | |
![]() If US leaders want to look resolute, then the last place they should table information that could aid the enemies of America is: off American soil. No matter what Condi reveals, the Euro-snots will call it: grovelling. The Anglicism "row" connotes a diplomatic dispute, that will inevitably draw fire from upwardly mobile Euro-Socs. Condi shouldn't set herself up for media-political pillorization. US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice will make a statement on the row over reported secret CIA prisons when she visits Europe next week, Irish Foreign Minister Dermot Ahern said. Ahern also said after talks with Rice here that she gave him categoric assurances that Ireland's Shannon airport had not been used for "untoward" purposes as a transit point for terror suspects. The Irishman said Rice, due to make a four-nation swing of Europe next week, told him she would answer a formal query from the European Union on reports of clandestine interrogation centers in Europe. Condi: just say, "I'll get back to you on that," and let it hang for a year. "She will be answering the (EU) letter. She made that quite clear," Ahern said. "She will also be making a statement when she goes to Europe." He said the top US envoy would make it "quite clear that as far as Americans are concerned, they have not infringed any international human rights laws in relation to this." The United States has been under mounting pressure to come clean about reports of the "black site" prisons in Europe as Rice prepared to leave Monday on a trip to Germany, Romania, Ukraine and Brussels for a NATO meeting. The State Department on Thursday released the letter from Britain asking, as acting EU president, for clarification of media reports "suggesting violations of international law" in the detention or transport of terror suspects. Condi: just say, "I will leave all speculation to consumers of that type of pseudo information." Ahern said he was satisfied with Rice's explanation concerning Shannon, a refueling stop for the US military where some 270,000 servicemen transited between January and October of this year. "As a friendly nation, I totally accept the categoric assurances that they have given us," he told reporters after meeting with Rice. He said Ireland would not open any investigation of the matter. Belgium announced earlier Thursday that it had launched a probe last week to see if any of its military or civilian airports had been used as transit points for US planes transporting Islamic militants. Belgium: first, you stop sending Islamonazi convert-skanks to Iraq for blow-up terror. The inquiry found that no military airport had been used but Belgian authorities were still looking at the more heavily frequented civilian facilities, Foreign Minister Karel De Gucht said. Ahern was asked about the possibility Shannon might have been used by CIA planes that were not carrying any prisoners on board but were en route to a third country to pick up some. He said press reports were unconfirmed. "If anyone has any evidence of any of these flights please give me a call and I will have it immediately investigated," the Irish envoy said. "Nobody has come forward." Once when the Ranger carrier group docked off San Francisco, the Mayor asked the Admiral if the Ranger carried nuclear weapons, and she was told: "We neither confirm nor deny anything concerning the armament status of our ship." That's all anyone out of the loop needed to know.
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Iraq | |
Four held over kidnap of Guardian journalist | |
2005-10-21 | |
Iraqi police have arrested four men in connection with the kidnapping of the Guardian journalist Rory Carroll in Baghdad. The police are looking for a further four suspects. Carroll, 33, who has been on assignment in Iraq for nine months, was freed on Thursday night after being held for 36 hours. He is due to fly back to his family's home in Dublin tomorrow. The Iraqi police have seldom been proactive in hostage situations. But diplomats praised them for following a trail that started with the head of the family who Carroll interviewed in Sadr City. The trail led to a group of men who visited the home during the interview. Carroll was released unharmed after intensive diplomatic negotiations behind the scenes. The Irish foreign minister, Dermot Ahern, disclosed today that his government had been helped by the British, French and Italian governments. Although Carroll is an Irish citizen, the Irish government, which opposed the war, has no diplomatic presence in Baghdad. Mr Ahern also thanked the Iranian government for its help. He confirmed that no ransom had been paid and said he had no knowledge of any prisoner swaps. Within half an hour of the Guardian being alerted that Carroll was missing, government emergency hostage teams were being set up in Baghdad and in European capitals. The Guardian set up a tight-knit group of its own, and contacts were made with all sources that might help, from governments and security specialists through to clerics. Dermot Gallagher, secretary general of the Irish foreign affairs ministry, said the Irish government had been planning to send a diplomatic mission to Baghdad. "If an intelligence team stumbled on him and if the military option was to be considered - and this was not our preferred option - we would have needed to have been consulted and we would have consulted with the Carroll family," Mr Gallagher said. Carroll does not know whether the group that held him was criminally or politically motivated. But various diplomatic sources blamed one of the factions loosely united behind Moqtada al-Sadr, the Shia cleric who has a large following in Iraq and is backed by his Mahdi Army militia. Carroll was kidnapped in Sadr City, a Shia-dominated Baghdad slum formerly known as Saddam City. The cleric has nominal control of the area.
The Associated Press reported that a group of Sadr City residents had allegedly raided the area where Carroll was being held by criminals and freed him. This is inaccurate. Carroll's freedom was the result of negotiation. His release was carefully coordinated by the interim government. | |
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Iraq | |||
Al-Guardian correspondent kidnapped in Iraq | |||
2005-10-20 | |||
Diplomatic efforts are continuing to try to locate an Irish newspaper journalist feared kidnapped in Iraq. Rory Carroll, a 33-year-old Iraq correspondent for the Guardian, is reported to have been taken by armed men while on assignment in Baghdad. The paper's editor, Alan Rusbridger, said the paper was "deeply concerned" at his disappearance.
Mr Rusbridger appealed to those holding Mr Carroll to release him. "He is in Iraq as a professional journalist - and he's a very good, straight journalist whose only concern is to report fairly and truthfully about the country," he said. "We urge those holding him to release him swiftly - for the sake of his family and for the sake of anyone who believes the world needs to be kept fully informed about events in Iraq today." The Irish Anti-War Movement has also called for his release and said it would be contacting anti-occupation groups in Baghdad to try to secure his freedom. Chairman Richard Boyd Barrett said the journalist was "entirely innocent of any crime against the Iraqi people", adding: "No cause will be served by keeping him in captivity or harming him in any way."
Mr Carroll, from Dublin, was interviewed from Baghdad on Wednesday morning for RTE radio's Pat Kenny Show about the start of Saddam Hussein's trial. A few hours later, his family was informed by the editor of the Guardian that he had been "taken". The paper said Mr Carroll had been in Baghdad with two drivers and an interpreter to interview a victim of the former dictator's regime. As he left the house where the interview had taken place, he was confronted by gunmen and he and one of the drivers bundled into a car. The driver was released about 20 minutes later. His father, Joe told the BBC: "It was something we had been secretly dreading. We were hoping it would never happen." Mr Carroll said his son had received specialised training for such situations. "He knew we were worried but he used to reassure us and say it wasn't as dangerous as people outside think and if you observed basic rules of security, you'd be okay," he said. "We knew he was playing it down for our sake. It was obvious danger. The leader of Fine Gael in the Republic of Ireland, Enda Kenny, said his disappearance was a "major cause of concern". "I assume the minister for foreign affairs will take a direct and personal interest in this. "Obviously when anybody is kidnapped it is a cause of concern but as this is an Irish citizen it brings it in to sharper focus for us here." The British Foreign Office said it was in touch with the Irish authorities about Mr Carroll's disappearance. His disappearance came on the first anniversary of the abduction in Baghdad of Dublin-born aid worker Margaret Hassan, who was later apparently killed.
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