SAOIRSE32

14/1/2005

UVF murders

Belfast Telegraph

Man quizzed over murder of teenagers is found dead

By Chris Thornton
14 January 2005

A man questioned about the loyalist murders of teenagers Andrew Robb and David McIlwaine has been found dead.

Noel Dillon, who had been arrested over the butchering of the teenagers in February 2000 near Tandragee, is believed to have taken his own life.

Dillon, who was in his forties, was found dead at a house in the Hamiltownsbawn Road, Armagh, on Monday at teatime.

He was buried yesterday after a funeral service at Ballymore Parish Church outside Tandragee.

Dillon was one of a number of men arrested after the two teenagers were found stabbed repeatedly on a road outside Tandragee.

UVF members were blamed for the killings. It has been alleged that they murdered the teenagers after being unable to locate two LVF members they intended to kill as part of a feud.

A number of items were also seized from Dillon’s home.

He was questioned by police and later released. Portadown-area residents say he left Tandragee shortly afterwards and may have lived in the Republic for some time.

He is understood to have been living in Belfast at the time of his death.

“He came from a decent family,” said one friend. “They would have had no truck with what happened.”

A member of the McIlwaine family said: “Even if he was involved in David’s killing, this is not something we would have wanted. We don’t want any other families to suffer the way we’ve suffered.”

Last year police began new forensic tests on items seized at the time of the killings.

The PSNI has refused to comment on the tests, but it is believed they hoped recent advances in forensic science would yield new evidence.

It is not known whether items seized from Dillon’s home were among the evidence submitted for new testing.

Another man was charged in connection with the killings, but the charge was later dropped.

No one has been convicted in connection with deaths.

The Police Ombudsman is currently looking into police handling of the probe.

National Park status

Belfast Telegraph

Protection plea for Ulster’s gems

By Nevin Farrell
14 January 2005

Areas like the Glens of Antrim and Lough Neagh should have National Park status, an Ulster Unionist Party Assemblyman has said.

Jim Wilson is appealing to the public to campaign for the protection of the countryside and help highlight the need for national park status for some of the areas of outstanding beauty in the province.

He said: “Unscrupulous developers, bad planning practice and, add to this, interference and campaigning by do-gooders who have little knowledge of life in the countryside, are all threats to rural Ulster.

“Northern Ireland is the only part of the British Isles to have no national parks system. Our neighbours in England, Scotland, Wales and the Republic have all enjoyed this privilege for some time.

“A working party has now been established to consider legislation for Northern Ireland’s first national park in the Mournes, which is a welcome step in the right direction and I applaud it.

“Here in Co Antrim, however, we have a wealth of natural beauty in the Glens of Antrim and around Lough Neagh and I would like to see ideas progressed about how these areas can also attain national park status.

“National Parks will boost the economy through tourism and careful landscape management plans will help protect farmers and communities steeped in agriculture.

“I am impressed by the efforts of the Ulster Society for the Protection of the Countryside to fortify campaigns to protect rural Ulster.

“Recently they campaigned vigorously to save Wilfred Capper’s Ulster Way from being phased out and now they are an influential member of the Mourne National Park Working Party.

“I would urge anyone who has a personal interest in outdoor life and the protection of our environment and its inhabitants to play a more active role by joining such a body.”

Shoukri

Belfast Telegraph

Ihab Shoukri on terror charges

By Ben Lowry
14 January 2005

The North Belfast loyalist Ihab Shoukri appeared in court today on terror charges. The 31-year-old defendant, of Alliance Road, is charged with membership of the UFF and the UDA.

He said nothing during this morning’s appearance at Belfast Crown Court, and was remanded in custody until January 21.

As Shoukri entered the dock, his brother Andre gave him the thumbs up from the public gallery and five other men sitting nearby grinned at the defendant.

Minutes later, a security man told this group to keep quiet. As Ihab left the dock, his brother told him that they could speak later by phone.

Earlier this month, Ihab agreed to go back to jail of his own accord, deciding not to oppose a prosecution bid to keep him locked up.

McMenamin

Belfast Telegraph

Policing board member in new attack

By Ruairi McLaren
14 January 2005

A North West MLA today vowed that he will not give in to a campaign of terror against him by dissident republicans.

Strabane DPP member, Eugene McMenamin was targeted by hoax bombers yesterday, the second time he has been subjected to threats this week.

But he vowed today that he would face down the threats, saying he would not be bullied into leaving the Strabane District Policing Partnership.

The hoax bomb discovered on his car in Strabane town centre yesterday was the latest attack in a long-running campaign of intimidation being waged against the West Tyrone MLA.

Police cordoned off the area and sent for the bomb squad.

Mr McMenamin said: “I had parked my car near my office in Abercorn Square. I was just getting into it with my wife when we noticed the device on the passenger side windscreen.”

Police later confirmed the device was a hoax.

Earlier this week Mr McMenamin was one of a group of District Policing Partnership members targeted with hoax letter bombs.

Nationalist MLAs Mr McMenamin and Pat Ramsey have both been subjected to particularly vicious hate campaigns.

Out of the West

Irelandclick.com

Out of the West
Welcome to the North 2005

aThe behaviour of those who have accepted as fact the opinion of Hugh Orde on the Northern Bank robbery (and even he said it was just an opinion) is as reprehensible as it is predictable.

They should be aware, though, that this is not consequence-free activity. For those who put their critical faculties to one side in order to promote a partisan political agenda, there is a price to be paid in terms of credibility, and that price will be paid; probably later rather than sooner, but it will be paid.

Let’s be absolutely clear about this: there can be few people thundering on about the Northern Bank robbery and the dire implications for the republican movement who aren’t uncomfortably aware that what they’re doing is shabby and disreputable. To apportion blame authoritatively in regard to a crime for which no-one has been arrested, much less charged, is a very dangerous business indeed. In the long-term, of course, it’s more damaging to the cause of unionism than it is to the cause of republicanism because in the greenest parts of the North, the contemptuous cynicism about this state and its supporters is deepening by the day.

Anyone genuinely interested in a stable future for these six counties as part of the United Kingdom realises that this is only possible when the hitherto reviled and persecuted republican underclass becomes convinced that things are different and that a modus vivendi within the present border is, if not preferable, at least possible. But those behind the present political onslaught are driven not by common sense, but by personal and political animus. Ian Paisley’s ‘Smash Sinn Féin’ campaign was seen to fail miserably, but there are those who are pursuing the same agenda with a lot more vigour and ruthlessness than the old preacher ever did. The pretence that the frequently disappointed but persistent ‘good guys’ – the British and Irish governments, the ‘constitutional’ parties, thinking journalists – are doing their level best to bring Sinn Féin into the political fold lies in tatters, and exposed is a Canute-like determination to hobble republicans electorally, by foul means or foul.

In republican areas of the North, there’s a growing conviction that so rattled is the political establishment by recent republican advances that the intelligence agencies have been given free rein to do whatever it takes to close down Sinn Féin as an electoral force. But because they know as much about this community as they do about the remotest tribes of Equatorial Guinea, the scenarios that are presented to the Sinn Féin constituency as reasons to be fearful – Castlereagh, ‘Stormontgate’, Colombia, the Northern Bank and whatever’s next – are viewed as part of a quasi-military anti-republican conspiracy. And the Shinners reap the benefits. If there was an election here tomorrow with the Northern Bank storm blowing stronger than the Atlantic gales, Sinn Féin would clean up.

The I’m With Hugh gang don’t have to take my word for it: they should walk down the streets, meet people in the shopping centres or chat to them in the pubs and clubs. Maybe they might be able to work out – because I haven’t been able to – whether the most powerful sentiment is anger or disgust.

What kind of state is it, they’re asking, in which a senior policeman has effectively the same power as the highest court in the land? Why would the PSNI, the republican movement’s most ferocious opponent, say anything other than the IRA did it, and just as importantly, why would otherwise intelligent people accept that bald statement without the merest scintilla of evidence?

Because it’s clear now that this is a state whose very inception flew in the face of justice and democracy, and in which those qualities have been corrupted rather than cherished. And that’s more true today than it ever was.
Two weeks ago there was a strong sense in West Belfast that the IRA did the Northern Bank job – that was never the case with the last setpiece scandal, Castlereagh. We could probably go further than that and say that there was a strong hope in West Belfast that the IRA did it. But with the passing of the days and weeks and the political furore growing in inverse proportion to the amount of evidence, suspicion and resentment are the order of the day.

Anger, disgust, suspicion, resentment. Welcome to Northern Ireland, 2005.

Andersonstown News report

Irelandclick.com

Bank Heist: Here we go again
A special Andersonstown News report on another ‘meltdown’

The political fall-out from Hugh Orde’s laying of the blame for the Northern Bank robbery at the door of the IRA has uncanny parallels with another meticulously planned and executed job – the break-in at Castlereagh on the evening of March 17, 2002.

That the IRA was behind the break-in beggared belief. The three-man team behind the raid wore no masks or gloves, they gained easy access past heavy security at the entrance to the building. They made no attempt to conceal their faces from the battery of security cameras outside and inside the building – not suprising, really, because the cameras had been de-activated. The trio knew their way around the building and the only one of them to speak had an English accent. Claims that the IRA had been assisted by an American chef working inside the building have never been substantiated. Undoubtedly, a chef would have been able to tell the break-in team where the HP sauce and the beans were kept; questions about how he would have been able to get the team past perimeter security, or how he would have knowledge of the rooms holding Castlereagh’s most closely guarded secrets have never been answered – although he lives openly in New York, no attempt has been made to have him extradited.

The first question traditionally asked by the IRA when considering the smallest military engagement, never mind a politically explosive high-wire operation, is this: what are the risks compared to the potential benefits? The answer was that the risks were absolutely enormous and the benefits uncertain at best – a calculation that would have seen anyone suggesting such a venture laughed out of the safe house.

All of this was reflected in the considered response at the time of UUP leader David Trimble who said he would wait to see the proof before acting, a position that was warmly welcomed by Sinn Féin’s Mitchel McLaughlin.

Trimble’s party colleague, the then Lord Mayor of Belfast Jim Rodgers, said he didn’t think the IRA was involved and added that the whole episode “stinks to high heaven”. Outgoing RUC Chief Constable Ronnie Flanagan said he would be “most surprised” if the IRA was involved, hinting strongly that he believed it was an inside job. More predictably, though, from other unionists and from the Irish and British media burst a tidal wave of hysterical recrimination which swept away common sense and objective analysis. Republicans were refusing to end the conflict; Sinn Féin weren’t fit for government.

Sound familiar? Stay with it…

Regardless of what their boss thought about the matter, the RUC went on to launch a series of highly publicised raids in nationalist areas of Belfast and Derry during which six people were arrested. Five of them were quickly – and quietly – released and one was later charged with possession of information unconnected to the Castlereagh raids, including possession of biographies of leading Tories John Major and Norman Lamont and a 1988 New Statesman article on international eavesdropping. In a statement the RUC said they were “interested in a number of mobile phones that were being used in West Belfast in the period leading up to the break-in and on the night of the robbery itself.” No more was ever heard about the mysterious mobile phones. The PSNI continued to focus their attention on republicans.

In October four people were charged after raids on their homes in Belfast once again unleashing a flood of shock-horror stories about death lists and prominent targets. A local businessman became the fifth person charged after he rejected attempts to recruit him as an informer. Charges against two, including the businessman, were later dropped (quietly); charges against the remaining three were later substantially reduced (quietly) and a case which many legal observers believe to be pitifully thin is being persevered with (watch this space).

The investigation was frontloaded with the sensational and highly publicised raid on the Sinn Féin offices at Stormont during which a single Windows floppy disc and a CD-Rom were taken in a laughably brief search that nevertheless involved a mob of boiler-suited officers and saw parliament buildings ringed with Land Rovers. At a press conference in November, Acting Deputy Chief Constable Alan McQuillan said the Castlereagh investigation had taken the PSNI “into the very heart of the Provisional IRA.” Impressive stuff, but no-one was ever charged with IRA membership. Ian Paisley Jnr of the DUP said, “The revelations by ACC McQuillan that the police have now uncovered active IRA spying activity is another signal that their political counterpart in Sinn Fein is not fit for government. Lives have undoubtedly been saved by police actions.” The floppy disc and CD-Rom were (quietly) returned to Sinn Féin.

To this day, no-one has been charged in connection with the Castlereagh break-in. Not surprisingly, the Castlereagh episode has all but disappeared from the political discourse.

Against that background, it might be expected that another setpiece shocker involving an elaborately plotted and daringly executed operation followed by virtual political meltdown would give politicians and journalists pause for thought. Not a bit of it – even as the Land Rovers were lining up again outside republican homes in West Belfast in time for the evening news, the same siren voices were raised making precisely the same noisy and apocalyptic political predictions.

Last Friday’s press conference at which Hugh Orde duly pointed the finger of blame at the IRA was a confusing and contradictory hotch-potch of claims and allegations about which no evidence was offered. Mr Orde claimed that he was making the statement for “operational” reasons, without actually telling us what those reasons were; in the next breath he said that he was making the statement because media speculation was getting in the way of the investigation and he wanted to bring it to an end. Here’s the quote: “It now makes sense that we make an attribution because it makes operational sense, and it will allow us to get on with the enquiry unhampered by some of this unnecessary speculation.”

The naming of a culprit by a police force which has not amassed enough evidence to warrant an arrest, never mind charges, is so damaging to fairness and due process that it boggles the mind. And impressed as we are by Mr Orde’s dedication to the operational considerations of a single investigation, one wonders whether the questionable short-term benefit of bypassing the concept of innocent until proven guilty is worth the risk of ending the peace process. Hugh Orde says that is not his concern – he is fond of repeating the mantra that he’s not a politician, he’s a cop. But he revealed at the press conference that he was naming the IRA to end media speculation. If doing something to get the press off your back is not a political act, then perhaps he’s in need of a new dictionary.

Mr Orde also said he was pointing the finger at the IRA because “Northern Ireland is a unique policing environment” which “inevitably gives rise to questions as to who or what organisations committed what crimes, and how did they plan it, and who organised it. This would not happen anywhere else in the United Kingdom.” Really? Is Mr Orde telling us that the Met didn’t come under pressure after the Brinks Mat robbery? That English detectives don’t come in for some rough treatment from Fleet Street during the course of major investigations? Can it really be only here in the North that hacks get excited by big stories? Can it really only be the local press that wants cops to tell them something they can write about? The reality, of course, is that journalists put policemen under huge and sustained pressure – it’s their job.

When we talk about the peace process, we’re talking about people’s lives, let’s be completely clear about this. And yet the standard of proof required for the PSNI – or the Independent Monitoring Commission, for that matter – to cast judgement is not only massively less than even Diplock courts require, it is something about which we are allowed to know absolutely and precisely… nothing.

Mr Orde told us: “But what I can say is, on the basis of the investigative work that we have done to date, the evidence we have collected, the information we have collected, the exhibits we have collected, and bringing all that together, and working through, it is in my opinion the Provisional IRA were responsible for this crime and all main lines of enquiry currently undertaken are in that direction.”

So, on the basis of i) investigative work; ii) evidence collected; iii) information collected; and iv) exhibits collected, the PSNI have not been able to make one single arrest or to get one single republican into an interrogation room (not the hardest of tasks), but they are able to state that the Provisional IRA is guilty and trigger a political reaction exactly the same in effect as if Martin McGuinness been tried and sentenced to 25 years. In the Alice in Wonderland world that we inhabit today, the Chief Constable is able to speak ex-cathedra without producing a grain of evidence, and even the unelected members of the International Monitoring Commission have an effective veto over political progress. Newspaper leader writers treat Hugh Orde’s opinion (he was careful to point out that it was only his opinion, although you wouldn’t know it) as though it were incontrovertible fact and have constructed fantastic political scenarios on that flimsy foundation to the point where a media consensus has been arrived at and to depart from it is to run the risk of being condemned as mad, bad, a fellow-traveller, or all three. If all the papers agree that it was the IRA, if the Chief Constable says it, if the political parties with the exception of Sinn Féin say it, if the British government says it, if the Irish government says it, then it must be true.

The dogs on the street and all that.

In fact, the only thing that can be said with any degree of certainty is that nobody knows. The press is in makey-uppy heaven – that legal limbo when no-one has been arrested or charged and they can (and do) write whatever balderdash takes their fancy. The PSNI knows nothing; if they did they would swoop immediately and decisively, such is the career-threatening depth of their humiliation. The political parties clearly know nothing as they readily admit to have taken their cue from the PSNI. The two governments know nothing because they’re hearing the same things which Hugh Orde is hearing, ie ‘high-grade’ intelligence of such quality that not a single arrest has been made and not a penny has been recovered.

And guess what? The Andersonstown News doesn’t know either. But we’re happy to be among the very few to admit as much.

South Belfast

Irelandclick.com

South Editorial

This week we are proud to unveil the all-new South Belfast News.
As the only paid-for weekly in South Belfast we have been given a makeover for 2005. However, the changes are more than just cosmetic.

South Belfast is the most socially, economically and culturally diverse area of our rapidly changing city.

The community has had to face its fair share of problems over the past 12 months with over outdated planning laws and the problems caused by over population of the Holylands as a result. The recent rise in racially motivated attacks against South Belfast’s growing ethnic community, and the anti-social behaviour caused by a minority of students has meant the spotlight being thrown on the area for all the wrong reasons.

In the three years we have been in business the South Belfast News has never shied away from highlighting injustices wherever we see them.

However, a community is about much more than this, and a community paper that adequately serves the people must be there for not only the trials but also the triumphs.

As the most rapidly expanding area of our city, South Belfast has so much to offer with its diverse population. It is rich in history, the epicentre of our city’s arts and culture, with theatres, art galleries, museums and festivals that attracts thousands of tourists each year.

The South Belfast News wants to reflect the hopes and aspirations of the people of South Belfast, to celebrate the achievements of our children and young people. We want to be there to record your child’s first day at school but also be around for the day they graduate from Queen’s University.

As South Belfast adapts and grows in these rapidly changing times, so this paper will be there each step of the way to report on the important issues and to celebrate the achievements of our children and young people, should that be on the sports pitch or in the classroom, on the stage or in the community sector.

This latest investment is a clear signal to the people of this thriving area of Belfast that the South Belfast News is your paper and is here for the long haul.

Road Service

Irelandclick.com

Mother shocked that Road Service hasn’t installed improved signs

A coroner’s court has heard that the driver of a car that crashed killing his two passengers was twice over the drink driving limit.
The three young Ardoyne men tragically lost their lives in the crash last January.
And signs at the junction where Gary Black, 22 and David Anderson 18, were killed instantly when the Ford Mondeo in which they were travelling plunged over a steep embankment and crashed into a warehouse wall could have been better displayed, the hearing heard.
Theresa Anderson the mother of David Anderson said she was shocked that the Road Service had not installed improved signage.
It was revealed there was a total of ten accidents at the junction of Hyde Park and Mallusk Road between January 1999 and September 2004.
Forensic expert Damien Coll said the driver had tried to brake to avoid the embankment. Tyre marks on the grass verge indicated that he was travelling around 50mph after he applied the brakes.
“The anniversary of their deaths is on the 26th of this month and it’s very upsetting that other people could have died during this time,” said Theresa Anderson. Belfast coroner John Leckey expressed his concern about the junction.
“The families have understandable concerns about this particular junction and if things had been different regarding the warnings that there was a T-junction the outcome may not have been a fatal one.”
Pearse Doherty, 18, a back seat passenger in the vehicle died five days after the crash that caused a hole in the wall of the warehouse and the car to override the embankment and plunge 14ft.
His mother Eilish this week urged young people to think twice before getting into a car or behind the wheel.
“Pearse was just a normal 18-year-old. He had a girlfriend and liked to go out with his mates,” she said.
“He had gone to the GAA with his friend and then went for something to eat. They were picked up by Gary and David and Pearse’s friend later got out of the car. No one knows where they were going. Pearse had a seat belt on in the back, a thing he never did. But his injuries were too severe for him to survive the crash.
“I would say to young people if they are going out to park the car up. There’s plenty of taxi depots in the area.”

Journalist:: Staff Reporter

parking

Irelandclick.com

Paying the price

by Victoria McMahon

The parking problems that plague residents of South Belfast may be coming to an end but residents will most likely have to pay out for the privilege of parking outside their own homes, it can be revealed.

Three problem-hit areas have already been earmarked for pilot parking schemes to be developed and due to commence the middle of this year.

The scheme will take a similar form to parking programmes currently running in England and Dublin, with ‘residents-only’ designated parking areas being put in place to clamp down on commuter parking, and the decriminalisation of parking offences making it possible for appointed civilians to enforce parking regulations in their own areas.

Minister of State for Northern Ireland John Spellar said: “Depending on the PSNI ability to enforce, it is hoped that three pilot schemes – Joy Street in the Markets, the area between Donegall Pass and Vernon Street and the Blythe Street area of Sandy Row – will be implemented by mid-2005, subject to the backing of local residents.”

Sinn Fein’s MLA for South Belfast, Alex Maskey, has broadly welcomed the proposals but fears the finer details of the programme and its dependability on the necessary PSNI resources could halt its implementation.

He said: “I very much welcome this scheme, at least it’s a start that the government is taking this issue seriously.

“My worry is if it is subject to PSNI resources it may not go ahead.
“The subject of PSNI resourcing is the key problem and it could result back into the chicken and egg situation.

“No matter what your views are on policing they don’t need to be involved in issuing car-parking tickets.

“There are many streets where an ambulance won’t be able to get down if someone needed it immediately.

“That is just one of the worries residents are constantly flagging up about parking outside their own homes.”

Mr Maskey said there has been a “mixed response” from residents about the strong possibility of being charged for parking outside their homes.

“With people already paying their road tax and their rates they feel it is their right to park outside their own houses.

“Commuter parking has spread like a virus, making it a serious inconvenience especially for young families and the elderly in these areas, so something just has to been done,” said the South Belfast MLA.

Journalist:: Staff Reporter

flasher

Irelandclick.com

Cavehill flasher at large

A flasher who has exposed himself to a number of people around Cavehill and the Waterworks is still at large this week.
A number of people have reported the sick fiend to the North Belfast News and the PSNI confirmed they have received reports of a man exposing himself to walkers.
A PSNI spokeswoman confirmed they were “looking for someone” who had been reported to them in the run up to Christmas.
“The problem is that people are only reporting sighting this individual after they get to work or when they come home from work at night. By then there is no way of knowing where he is.”
One caller to our newsroom said she was sickened with the man who exposed himself to her.
“He’s out in the mornings when mothers are bringing young children to school. It’s really disgusting to have a pervert like this stalking the streets.”

Journalist:: Staff Reporter

Malone Road apartments

Irelandclick.com

Carmel opposes new barracks development

South Belfast councillor Carmel Hanna has expressed serious concerns over a proposed new development of 75 apartments on the Malone Road Area.

The development, one of the largest in South Belfast, will be at the former British army barracks on 44 Windsor Park.

Developers, the McGinnis Group, have seen their proposal meet with approval by the Planning Service providing they “hear and take on board all views before a final decision is reached.”

Speaking yesterday, Councillor Hanna MLA said: “I would have hoped that the local community would have had more say on the matter.

“While I do believe that we need more housing, I don’t think that it’s acceptable to build something of this size in this area. There is too much of this kind of property being built as it is.”

The Planning Service confirmed that they had consulted with Roads Service and a Conservation Area architect , as well as meeting with local residents.

“We have listened to all views expressed and there is satisfaction that the development will not cause demonstrable harm,” said a Planning Service spokesperson.

But Cllr Hanna believes that the development will have a serious impact on the area.

“I am very concerned that it will lead to an unwelcome increase in traffic.

“And among other things, it will also have a negative impact on the Malone Conservation Area.

“It’s not that I have a problem with people living there, but I feel that the area would be better served with family housing and not block apartments, which by their very nature do not add to a sense of community.

“We all know that these kind of ventures are purely there to make as much money as possible for the developers. They certainly have very little benefit to the community as a whole.

“I would like to think that the planners would occasionally take a firmer hand with these kind of development proposals rather than just let them pass through all the time.”

Journalist:: Staff Reporter

Deaflympics

Irelandclick.com

Deaflympics excitement
Ireland defeat Italy 4-3 to make it into semi-final tie with Iran

We, the Deaf Community in Ireland, are getting excited. This month is Deaflympics month, formerly known as the World Games for the Deaf, renamed to capture the spirit of the Olympics and what is even more important is that our national football team is playing there!
The amazing thing about our team is that it is an All-Ireland team – no two-teams-an-island nonsense – there are catholic and protestant players in the team.
It is because of the traditional education system where many Deaf Northies were educated in Dublin’s deaf schools.
The Irish side took on an energetic Italian side in what turned out to be a tough match in Melbourne.
In true fashion we blamed the toughness of the encounter on the wind, especially with Italy scoring the first goal within the first minute of the match with the wind at their backs.
We eventually got the win against Italy and at the end of the day the result is what matters – a win is a win.
We beat Australia on Sunday 11-0 and the GB team beat us 2-0 on January 5 and on January 7 we beat Greece 3-1.
Today (Thursday) will see us take on a well-trained team from Iran in the semi final, which should make for an interesting match.
Melbourne is staging a world-class sporting and social event for Deaf and Hard of Hearing athletes and friends from around the world for this 2005 Deaflympic Games.
In organising this event, the organising committee and their partner, Deaf Sports Australia, will raise awareness of deaf-related issues throughout the wider community and strive to ensure that a legacy program for future Deaflympians is achieved.
The Deaflympic Games, under the patronage of the International Olympic Committee, is the second oldest multi-sport and cultural festival on earth with a long and proud history since the inaugural games in Paris in 1924.
A major coup for Australia, the 2005 games will mark the second time this event has been staged in the Southern Hemisphere.
It commenced with the twilight opening ceremony on the evening of January 5, at Olympic Park, the spectacular arrival and lighting of the official Deaflympic torch set the scene for 12 days of elite sports and cultural events.
Over 3,500 athletes and team officials are expected to attend and participate in 15 individual and team sporting events to be held in and around Melbourne City and the nearby historic city of Ballarat.
In the years prior to 1924, international sports provided limited opportunities for young deaf people. Indeed there were very few national federations to provide sporting competitions for Deaf people.
Mr Eugène Rubens-Alcais, a deaf Frenchman, worked very hard to encourage six official national federations, then in existence, to accept the idea and to take part in the International Silent Games, a deaf version of the Olympic Games.
Deaf sporting leaders assembled at the Cafe de la Porte Doree, 275 avenue Daumesnil, near the Bois de Vincennes in Paris on August 16, 1924. This meeting agreed to establish an organisation called the “International Committee of Silent Sports” (CISS) to establish a union between all Deaf sporting federations and to draft statutes for this Organisation to institute and control the quadrennial Games.
This historic meeting heralded the commencement of the Deaflympic Games movement.
Belfast Telegraph’s Bob McCullough who writes regularly for Deaf Talkabout, the deaf community based column there, complained about the failing standards at the Deaflympics due to lack of funding that is much needed to run a world event, suggesting that the CISS can host the next one within the next Paralympics, the Olympics designed for people with disabilities.
As everyone in the Deaf Community knows, disability itself is a very hot potato – many Deaf people do not see themselves as people with disabilities and see their deafness as a positive thing to have.
You can see the results and more stories at:
http://2005deaflympics.com/
www.irelanddeaf.com

Journalist:: Shane Gilchrist Ó hEorpa

Jennymount Mill

Irelandclick.com

Jennymount Mill still an option for council

The DUP in North Belfast has welcomed the council’s decision to debate again the possibility of moving over 300 council workers to Jennymount Mill on the York Road.
At the first monthly meeting of our city fathers in 2005, members of the chamber narrowly voted to bring the issue of relocating city centre staff back to committee by 23 to 20.
The matter, which has been in the pipeline for two years, will now be further discussed by the Policy and Resources committee on January 21.
DUP Castle area councillor Ian Crozier said he was pleased that hopes for a regeneration of the York Road area were still alive.
“There is a lot of mileage in the proposal. I don’t think that at our last committee meeting the idea was properly discussed as it was not compared to any similar projects,” he said
The councillor maintained that the relocation of staff to Jennymount was the most cost effective option.
“In the next financial year the council is intending to shell out £650,000 on temporary accommodation. In the city centre land is £9 or £12 a square foot, in Jennymount its £7. In the long run it would make a lot of sense for the council to buy this property and fit it out.
“There is no getting away from the fact that the council needs more room and again, space to decant staff while projects are being established. Pinch points would include the departments of development, client services and health and environmental.
“Basically the Cecil Ward Building is swamped and another area would include the council’s computer section in Gloucester Street. In all we need a further permanent 60,000 square feet, and Jennymount [25,000 sq ft] would go some way to tackling this deficit.”
Despite the enthusiasm expressed by Ian Crozier about the move, staff in the council have said they are not eager to relocate to the York Road.
Over 120 staff visited the site and completed a questionnaire that revealed 86 per cent felt ‘displeased or very displeased’ about the move.
On top of this, consultants brought in by the council to review the site, said they would advise against the acquisition of Jennymount Mill.
North Belfast MLA and councillor Alban Maginness said he believed the old courthouse on Crumlin Road would be a better proposal.
“This is a better idea because of its size and location. It is more than 60,000 square foot in size and could be easily adapted to suit council needs, and it is also close to the city centre.”

Journalist:: Staff Reporter

Belfast hills group

Irelandclick.com

First Belfast hills talk focus on birds

Winter has us firmly in its grip this week, but a new Belfast hills group has already launched its spring events programme beginning with a talk on the birds of the Hills by wildlife enthusiast Aidan Crean.
“It’s great to get our events up and running with such a good first event”, said the new Belfast hills partnership manager, Jim Bradley.
The Partnership is planning to work on a variety of relevant projects such as farm wildlife surveys, improvements to upland heath management and joint work with quarry owners to improve biodiversity.
“Aidan has not just a spectacular set of images of the hills’ range of winter and summer birds, but a fantastic knowledge of them as well,” said a spokesperson.
Taking place at 7pm on Thursday, January 20 at the Ballymac Hotel, the event is aimed at those both with little knowledge of the birds of prey, songbirds and waders that frequent the meadows and valleys of the Belfast hills and also those who know them well.
“Because of the way the Hills have been farmed and managed over the decades,” said Aidan, “there are many birds which have disappeared from other parts but are still to be seen and enjoyed in parts of the hills, such as curlew, lapwing and sky lark. The Hills are great both for birds making their home and those passing through in spring and autumn. It’s vital that we all help the Partnership ensure that this continues to be a haven for these special creatures”.
Further events in the spring include talks and walks about the history of the hills, viability of small scale alternative energy in the hills and the future of Divis, recently bought by the National Trust.
There is a small charge of £2 adult, £1 per child for the talk. To book or for further information on the talk on birds of the Belfast hills, contact the Partnership at 163 Stewartstown Road Belfast BT17 0HW, at telephone 028 90603466 or email info@belfasthills.org.

Journalist:: Staff Reporter

Remembering Danny Barrett

Irelandclick.com

Plaque to be unveiled in memory of murdered boy

A plaque in memory of a 15-year-old boy shot dead by the British army almost 24 years ago is to be unveiled in Ardoyne this Sunday.
Danny Barrett was sitting on a wall outside his front door in Havana Court at the height of the hunger strike in 1981 when a British soldier shot him dead. He was killed one day after Joe McDonnell died in the H-Blocks.
At the inquest into the July 9 killing the British army claimed Danny had a rifle. A member of the RUC disputed the allegations saying that no firearms traces had been found on or near the teenager. No British soldier has ever been charged with the teenager’s murder.
Now Danny’s mates have got together to publicly acknowledge his murder.
Eamon McAuley, a former friend of Danny Barrett said pals had got together thinking it was “high time” he was commemorated.
“There are murals in Ardoyne of innocent victims like Stephen Lawrence, Robert Hamill and solicitor Pat Finucane.
“But there has never been a plaque or mural to remind our children and our children’s children that an innocent 15-year-old from Ardoyne was cruelly taken from his family and friends that fateful summer of ’81,” he said.
“We would like to ask anyone and everyone to come along this Sunday at 3pm to Havana Court at the bottom of Brompton Park to remember Danny.
“We want to remember his short life and to see his plaque unveiled outside the house where he was killed. We have never forgotten him.
“He has always been in our hearts and minds and we are so proud at last to do something for his memory and for his family.”

info@irelandclick.com
Journalist:: Staff Reporter






















Get free blog up and running in minutes with Blogsome | Theme designs available here