SAOIRSE32

11/8/2008

Omagh relatives stunned by memorial service snub

Breaking News.ie
11/08/2008

Relatives of the victims of the Omagh bombing say they are stunned that the leaders of the four main churches in the town won’t be attending their memorial service on Sunday.

Instead, the main churches have decided to send representatives to the official service of remembrance being organised by the local district council on Friday.

A Presbyterian church spokesman says they agreed unanimously that it was more appropriate to attend the council’s event to mark the 10th anniversary of the Real IRA atrocity.

Michael Gallagher, who lost his son Aidan in the explosion, says the relatives are hurt and surprised by the snub.

Devlin family believe ‘PPS failing’

BBC

**The BBC needs to refer to people by their names and not call them ‘the stab family.’ I personally find that totally unacceptable and have changed the headline.

The family of a murdered Belfast teenager have said the Public Prosecution Service is failing the people of Northern Ireland.


Thomas Devlin was stabbed to death

Thomas Devlin was stabbed to death close to his north Belfast home in August 2005.

His mother, Penny Holloway, said the PPS should be tougher on knife crime.

Ms Holloway said it needed to follow the English system where everyone involved in a murder would be held responsible for it.

“A joint enterprise is where all of those people involved in an incident, such as a murder, would all be held responsible for the outcome of that,” she said.

“We have seen the Crown Prosecution Service take a very robust approach on this and they have secured convictions on quite a few cases, particularly in respect of knife crime where people have been murdered.

“One person may have stabbed someone, but all those present would have been charged with murder or manslaughter.”

Protests over city library plans

BBC
11 August 2008

A campaign to save Belfast libraries which public service union Nipsa says are facing the axe is to be stepped up this week.

The union has organised midday protests at Ballymacarett and Ardoyne libraries in the city on Tuesday.

But the Belfast Education and Library Board said no proposals had been passed to close libraries and a consultation process was under way.

“The aim is to provide a modern service for the city,” a spokesman said.

“The ‘Future Vision for the Library Service in Belfast’ is available on our website.”

Nipsa’s Dooley Harte said: “We hope our demonstrations at Ardoyne and Ballymacarrett will create a greater awareness to library users of these closure plans and we encourage members of the public to attend our demonstrations,” he said.

“While we recognise the difficult financial position of library services at present, we are opposed to these proposals as they remove services from some of the most socially deprived areas in Belfast.

“Proposals will close libraries in Ardoyne in north Belfast and Ballymacarrett in east Belfast as well as libraries in Sandy Row, Ligoniel, Oldpark and Suffolk.”

DUP: IRA ruling council must disband

Breaking News.ie
10/08/2008

**Hey Jeffrey! Let’s talk about LOYALIST weapons!

The DUP today demanded a clear end to the IRA’s ruling army council after senior police warned judging its disbandment may be difficult.

Jeffrey Donaldson said the IRA should not function in any way.

But PSNI assistant chief constable Peter Sheridan said the IRA’s command, while not a security threat, had not formally disbanded.

The British and Irish Governments have asked the Independent Monitoring Commission (IMC) to prepare a special report on the group’s structures by September 1 as the Assembly considers whether to request devolved policing and justice powers.

Mr Donaldson said: “Whilst we note that the IMC has been asked to prepare a special report on paramilitary structures, including the current status of the IRA, we will be making our own assessment and using our own security contacts.

“The briefings we receive on a regular basis establish the extent to which the IRA has progressed with the dismantling of its paramilitary structures.

“It remains our position that the army council must leave the stage and that the IRA should no longer function in any respect.”

Sinn Féin is a partner in government with the DUP, which wants no trace of any private army linked to the administration.

The two largest parties at Stormont have agreed that the justice portfolio would be held by a single minister from outside their ranks. There has been no finalised timeframe for transferred powers.

The British government and Sinn Féin have been pressing for speedy change but the DUP wants to wait until unionist confidence in the process has been established.

The Alliance Party and SDLP have been touted as candidates for the position, although Alliance leader David Ford ruled his members out.

Mr Sheridan, a PSNI senior intelligence analyst retiring within weeks to take up a post at Cooperation Ireland, said: “The final ending of the Provisional Army Council (PAC) may be difficult to call. If three of them met today to plan the way forward, is this a PAC meeting?

“They have not formally disbanded but they aren’t doing what they were set out to do and they aren’t a security threat.

“In a democratic society you clearly cannot have an army council. It is for the police and the security services to deal with the dissidents.”

He also said that in his current assessment the IRA was in the final “end game”.

Traditional Unionist Voice (TUV) MEP Jim Allister said devolving policing and justice responsibilities was the wrong move.

“The key thing about policing and justice the minute it is devolved is the powers it brings to the Office of the First Minister and the Deputy First Minister.

“You can’t have in government a party with a paramilitary structure.”

A spokesman for Sinn Féin said: “The IRA have clearly gone off the stage and have done so since 2005.

“But there’s still attempts being made by some people to drag them back on and I think that’s silly.”

O’Loan urges bishops to make island-wide reforms

PATSY McGARRY
Irish Times
11 August 2008

IRELAND’S CATHOLIC bishops need to arrive at agreement on an island-wide basis on the issues facing the future of the Catholic Church here, former Northern Ireland ombudsman Nuala O’Loan has said.

She has also called for the setting up of a general assembly of priests, “of their own choosing rather than by bishops’ appointment”, which could be organised on a diocese by diocese basis.

Ms O’Loan was speaking to The Irish Times as sources indicated disquiet among Irish Catholic priests, particularly in the Dublin archdiocese, at how appointments to parishes are made and at reorganisation of parishes.

She said there was “no concerted action” by the Catholic Church in Ireland to address its problems, adding that what was necessary was a much more pro-active approach following “major, major consultation”.

A first question which ought to be addressed was “How many dioceses do we need?” she said, and “when that’s decided we can look at the number of parishes needed”. In the process, where church buildings were concerned, she felt that, once ownership issues were sorted out, these could provide financing when it came to the rationalisation of services.

All of this “has to be done in a consultative way”, she said. “There are talents available” among lay people who could help with administrative, recruitment and audit control functions, she said. She suggested the bishops might adopt an approach to change similar to that employed by the Patten Commission in Northern Ireland.

“Its essential principles are transferable,” she said. There could be consultations with dioceses which could come back to the bishops with recommendations, she said, going on to quote the civil service maxim that “what’s measured gets done”. And whereas “the laity are going to have to be more proactive”, she warned against the “busybody lay person”.

She disputed whether there was a personnel crisis facing the Catholic Church in Ireland and repeated what she wrote in a recent Irish Catholic article that “even with 1,500 priests in Ireland (currently there are 4,402, including secular priests and members of religious congregations) we would still have one priest for every 3,000 or more people. Compare that with the priest I met recently, in rural Timor Leste, who has a parish of 30,000!'’

She said “personnel is not a major issue [in the Irish Catholic Church] but morale is, as is a sense of isolation, lack of appreciation and low income”. She also felt that “some priests carry a tremendous administrative burden”.

Catholic priests who had left to marry should be allowed back into the ministry, she said, while the decisive factor on celibacy was “what is the right thing to do, then find the way to do it”. She believed a married priesthood had practical implications, such as income support, which would also have to be addressed.

An illustration of the frustration felt by priests in the Dublin archdiocese is contained in the current issue of the Irish Catholic, where a a letter signed “a priest of Dublin. Name and address with the editor” is highly critical of Archbishop Diarmuid Martin.

It said that “if one wanted to devise a scheme to offend, belittle and sow the seeds of dissension among the clergy it would be difficult to come up with anything better than His Grace of Dublin has managed to concoct in the manner of the Dublin diocesan appointments 2008″.

It accuses him of “arrogance worthy of a feudal overlord” in his treatment of his priests and of showing “a worrying disregard for the foot soldiers on which the Church in Dublin depends.”

No one was available from the archdiocese to comment on the letter.

REPUBLICAN PRISONER SENTENCED TO SOLITARY CONFINEMENT IN CO. ANTRIM GAOL

Republican Sinn Féin
10 August 2008

For confirmation contact:
Richard Walsh (Publicity Officer) on
07835 620 592 (Six Counties)
087 261 8603 (26-Counties)

Republican Sinn Féin and the Republican Prisoners’ Action Group have learnt that a Republican prisoner in Maghaberry Gaol, was sentenced last Thursday, 7th August, to seven days in solitary confinement. The prisoner had objected to an inappropriate search being conducted on his person last month.

A spokesperson said: “We oppose the excessive and invasive searches imposed upon Republican prisoners in Maghaberry on a frequent basis. The punishment meted out to this prisoner is also to be condemned. Although he is currently being held in solitary confinement, he is not alone as the thoughts of everyone committed to the Republican cause are with him at this time.”

ENDS

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