Thursday, December 20, 2007

Kneejerk Reaction to some recent news stories

Adjective

kneejerk

  1. Of a reply or reaction, automatic and easily predictable; reacting spontaneously in the expected manner.[1]



This evening, Newstalk reported the following:

Falling employment in the construction sector can be an opportunity for Ireland - that's according to Enterprise Minister Micheal Martin.

Speaking in Dublin at the launch of the Fas annual labour market review the minister said the slowdown in house building gives us the chance to help wean our economy off its dependence on construction.


You can read the full story here.

(My emphasis added).

Now if this isn't the biggest example of Doublespeak since Kevin Keegan told us that yes, David Batty would comfortably slot his penalty home against Argentina back in 1998, well then I don't know what is. Or maybe it isn't Doublespeak, but it's something similar.

How can huge job losses in the construction industry be presented as an opportunity or a chance? How come this chance is only presenting itself now? Surely there were plenty of opportunities to "wean our economy off its dependence on construction" a few years ago when the sector was genuinely booming. Why wasn't the chance grabbed then?

On 27 November, two stories in
The Irish Times caught my eye. They were both in the international section. The first was in the 'other stories' sidebar:

Bin Laden to address Europe

DUBAI - Al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden will address the people of Europe in a message to be posted on the internet "soon", an Islamist website said yesterday.

"Soon, God willing, [ we will post] a new message to the European people from the lion Imam who defeated the Americans and tyrants, Sheikh Osama bin Laden," said the pro-al Qaeda website which regularly posts messages from the militant leader. -
(Reuters)


When were the Americans and tyrants defeated by Sheikh bin Laden? Is he referring to attacks on US soldiers in Iraq? The killing of civilians in Manhattan? By his reasoning, does killing a number of US citizens equate with defeating the whole US nation? By the same logic, can I claim to have beaten John McEnroe in tennis, because I have beaten a tennis player before, so therefore I have beaten all tennis players, so therefore I have beaten John McEnroe?

On the same day, Lorna Siggins of The Irish Times reported on a speech given by an Indian journalist, Palagummi Sainath, at Irish Aid's conference in NUI Galway. According to Siggins, he laments the media's role in propping up rampant corporate power. He said that:
'EU subsidies to Irish and other European farmers are having a "devastating" effect on farmers in India and Africa.'
Regarding this devastating effect, Jeffrey Sachs, in 'The End of Poverty' had some things to say about EU protection of EU farmers in the context of global inequality. Sachs argued that the tarrifs are in place to protect EU food producers from the large food producers of North America, New Zealand, Australia and Argentina. Where the barriers to come down, chances are that it would be those markets who would gain the most, rather than the less developed Indian and African ones.

Picture: University of Miami Department of Biology

Wednesday, December 19, 2007

Seven Mile Run

What is the point in having a few links to some (presumably useful) websites to the left of my blog postings if I’m not going to give some background on each of the websites?

That is a matter open to debate. Anyway, without further ado, I would like to extol the virtues of Mapmyrun.com.


The website is very user-friendly, and does exactly what it says on the address bar. Instead of using the tried and trusted secondary school geography class trick of an Ordnance Survey map, piece of paper and a ruler, users can now plot out routes (for running, walking, cycling, whatever-your-having-yourself) on maps of any location in the world, to calculate the distance of their run, walk, cycle or whatever-their-having-themselves.


I was pointed to the site in one of The Irish Times’ soccer correspondent, Emmet Malone's articles in which he detailed his preparations to run last October’s Dublin Marathon. This is what he said of the site:


The most straightforward website is mapmyrun.com , an easy to use site that allows you to mark out, record and share training routes in any location. Other features (these require free registration) include a training log, in which you can record every aspect of marathon build-up from distances and times to calorie intake and weight loss.


To cut to the chase, a couple of months ago I decided I would attempt a marathon myself, some time in Spring 2008. I spoke to a friend of mine, a veteran of one-and-a-half marathons, and he suggested running a half-marathon in January, in order to get his tally up to two but also as a preparation for a full one. So back onto Google I went, and found out about the Genk Half-Marathon, which is taking place in the town of Genk in Northern Belgium on January 13th. That is the only reason why I did the below run this afternoon.


Started at my house, then went to Ivan's, up by Thomond Park, right along Clancy Strand, crossed Sarsfield Bridge, down the steps, left up to Henry Street at Jury's, up along South Circular Road past Mary I, down Courtbrack Avenue, turned right passing heavy traffic, lots of trucks on the Dock Road, over the New Bridge, along the lower North Circular Road and home. Less than a month to go. In future I think I'm gonna try and avoid the Dock Road, you may as well put your mouth up to a truck's exhaust pipe and inhale.



Saturday, December 15, 2007

Student Life in Limerick

What do the general public of Limerick think about students from their dealings with them? What do students themselves feel Limerick has to offer? Have a listen here.

Limerick has quite a high ratio of full-time students to the city’s total population. There are at least 15,000 full-time students here. However, perhaps due to the biggest third-level institution, the University of Limerick, being located on the outskirts of the city – in actual fact, it is in fact outside the city boundaries, in Limerick County Council’s administration area – sometimes people don’t associate Limerick with being a ‘university town’, in the same manner that, say, Galway is often considered.

In recent years, many articles have been published in the media about Limerick’s development taking the shape of a ‘doughnut’ - in other words, while there is much investment in the outskirts of the city, the city centre itself is losing out. The Irish Times reported this week that ‘retail values in Limerick city centre were lower than in the periphery’. I find this whole area of the city’s development a very interesting one, and so was happy to find out what people thought about students’ contribution to the city.

For this podcast, I went out onto the streets of Limerick to get some people's views on students' contribution. I also caught up with St. John Ó Donnabháin, President of the University of Limerick Students' Union, to find out what he thinks Limerick has to offer for students.

Backing track used: The Skin of My Yellow Country Teeth by Clap Your Hands Say Yeah
Photo: Tony Bracjun

Monday, December 10, 2007

Experts gather for International Resuscitation Conference 2007

RESUS 2007

Every year up to 360 people die as a result of overcrowding in Irish hospitals, delegates heard at the 2007 RESUS International Resuscitation Conference and Skills Showcase held at the South Court Hotel last weekend. Fergal Hickey, President of the Irish Association of Emergency Medicine said that: ‘An overcrowded hospital should now be regarded as an unsafe hospital.’ He was referring to Australian research which showed conclusively the link between Emergency Department overcrowding and mortality rates.

RESUS is an event that aims to increase survival for cardiac arrest, trauma resuscitation, road traffic accidents and poisonings, according to Geraldine Quinn of the HSE. The two day event was chaired by Dr Cathal O’Donnell, Emergency Consultant in Limerick and Ennis Regional Hospitals and was attended by 450 people from the medical, nursing, emergency and voluntary services. It combined presentations from national and international experts; a demonstration of emergency service providers in action and a national skills showcase and competition.

Quoting from the HSE’s Emergency Taskforce Report Findings, published last June, Mr Hickey said that the overcrowding problem is not the fault of Emergency Departments themselves, but a symptom of a lack of hospital capacity and community services.

He said that conditions in Emergency Departments, along with the constant barrage of criticism of them in the media, criticism which is often unjustified in his view, have a detrimental effect on morale, resulting in serious problems for the departments retaining and recruiting staff. ‘Why would want to you work in a relative hellhole?’ he asked.

He also expressed his grave concerns about how Irish hospitals would cope with a SARS-type epidemic in the future. He recalled that in the 2003 Canadian SARS outbreak, one person carrying the respiratory disease caused the infection of 128 patients and staff on a Toronto emergency ward resulting in 17 deaths. He predicted the figures would be far grimmer should something similar happen on an Irish emergency ward.

The conference also heard from Michael Hughes of the Northern Ireland Ambulance Service who spoke about paramedic preparedness for terrorist attacks. His message was that the attitude of, ‘It could never happen here,’ has to be scrapped, so that the emergency services are, ‘Prepared for it when it does.’

Dr Joe Treacy, Director of the National Poisons Information Centre outlined some facts that have been becoming all too apparent from recent news stories – that ecstasy use has plummeted, while cocaine use is going up. The chances of death from cocaine are quadrupled when it is taken with alcohol, he said. Deaths resulting from cocaine use are increasing exponentially. Earlier delegates heard from Gardaí that in a sample of recent cases involving people driving under the influence of intoxicants, 50% of the offenders had been driving under the influence of illegal substances.

Teams of emergency service personnel from across the country took part in competitions demonstrating the best provision of emergency life support and resuscitation skills. The winning teams came from the Dublin Fire Brigade, Red Cross Limerick and Lough Derg Lifeboat Station.

On Friday Limerick County Fire & Rescue Service, the Midwest Ambulance Services and members of the Garda Traffic Corps demonstrated best practice in managing road traffic casualties and safe patient removal techniques in a re-enactment of the aftermath of a crash.

‘It’s just to show people what it’s like,’ said Garda Tony Miniter of the Limerick Traffic Corps, explaining why they staged the reconstruction. ‘To see the dirty raw edge of it can even catch the medical experts by surprise.’

Garda Miniter fronts the Lifesaver Project, a pilot initiative aimed at showing young people in the Midwest the harsh consequences of dangerous driving. Their message is ‘Especially important coming up to Christmas time,’ he added.

Saturday, November 24, 2007

International Student Badminton Tournament

Limerick Post

The sound of shuttlecocks being whacked over nets echoed around the Arena and old Sports Building last weekend, as UL hosted the fourth annual Irish International Student Badminton Tournament. 230 players, from novices to internationals, spent all of Saturday and Sunday trying to serve, smash and sneakily drop shot their way to victory in the Badminton Ireland event.

In total, roughly 300 matches were played altogether, according to tournament administrator, John Donovan. Players competed in four different sections according to their ability across five disciplines – men’s and ladies’ singles, men’s and ladies’ doubles and mixed doubles.

In order to promote socialising across team and country borders, partners for the doubles events are selected randomly. The scoring was calculated using the Swiss Ladder System, which means that all players play the same amount of matches in a league. It also meant that every single rally counted towards the overall rankings. After the first round of matches, the top two players play each other, as do the third and fourth ones, and so on. This format meant that people were always playing against people of similar ability, and it lead to some close-fought matches.

The overall team award for winning the most amount of games by their players across all disciplines went to the Erasmus University of Rotterdam, who emerged out of the 24 colleges represented to take the top prize. The past winners of the event are NUI Galway, UCC and Karlsruhe from Germany.

Some of the top players used last weekend’s event as a warm-up for the European University Championships that are taking place this week in St. Petersburg. Gary O’Sullivan, holder of a badminton sports scholarship at UCC who is representing the Cork team in Russia this week, spoke highly of the standard of play on show at UL this weekend. ‘You couldn’t ask for a better preparation,’ he said.

Both the participants and organisers heaped praise on the quality of the venue. The fact that Badminton Ireland chose to host the event in UL for the fourth year running is a testament to the fantastic facilities on offer there, according to Ivor Guiney, club captain of the UL Badminton Club. He also remarked that there has been speculation that the Malaysian Olympic badminton team are looking into using the Arena as a training venue for the 2012 London Games.

Wednesday, November 14, 2007

Student badminton puts Limerick on map

Limerick Independent, Limerick Leader

Up to 250 student badminton players from all over Ireland, the UK and Europe converged on the University of Limerick Sports Arena last weekend for the fourth annual Irish International Students Badminton Tournament.

The Irish ISBT is organised by students, for students. Badminton-playing students, alumni and members of universities competed in four skills sections, ranging social players to top national league standard.

Similar tournaments take place all over Europe. The first ISBT was hosted in the Netherlands 21 years ago by the DIOK Badminton Club of the Universiteit Twente in Enschede, in a bid to promote the sport of badminton and its social aspects of.

Last weekend’s tournament, said Mary Browne Director of Development & Coach Education with Badminton Ireland, could not have gone ahead without the help of a string of volunteers, spearheaded by Emma Lindqvist, Youth Leadership Development Officer with BI.

They have been working on the organisation since spring. The tournament format reached Ireland in 2004, and since then it has been held in Limerick.

Ivor Guiney, club captain of the UL Badminton club, said: “It was a privilege to have one of the main international student tournaments in UL for the fourth year running. The fact that it was booked out shows the enormous level of interest from all around Europe in coming to Limerick to play in the fantastic facilities we have here.”

Indeed, according to Ivor, there are rumours afoot that the Malaysian team is considering UL as a pre-Olympic acclimatizing camp before the London games in 2012.

Badminton is thriving locally with 11 clubs active in both Limerick city and county.

Ivor explained: “We’ve got 192 members on the books off and on, playing from Division 2-6 in Limerick. We are also entering a team in the Intervarsities and attending ISBTs in Cologne and Oslo. Anyone is welcome to join—the more members we have the better!”

Thursday, November 01, 2007

Adults go back to school in increasing numbers

Limerick Independent

While the back to school rush is a recent memory for many schoolchildren, they are not the only ones returning to education. Adults form a large number of those who stocked their shopping trolleys with pens, refill pads and highlighters last August. According to Aontas, the Irish National Association of Adult Education, 150,000 adults participate in evening courses annually.

According to a survey by Learning Ireland, an educational publisher, Irish people see the importance of continuing their education throughout their working lives. More than 4 out of 5 of respondents to the Lifelong Learning Index 2006 say they have taken an adult education course, while 77% plan to enrol in a course in the next twelve months.

The national situation is replicated in Limerick, with many educational centres around the city, from secondary schools to third level institutions, buzzing with activity every evening, as adult learners flock to classes in diverse subjects.

Pat Maunsell is a busy man. As the Director of Adult Education at Limerick Senior College, one of the biggest providers of evening courses in the Midwest Region, he oversees an operation that gives courses to some 3,000 learners per annum. He explained some of the reasons motivating adults to return to education.

He noted that while certain learners seek to gain extra qualifications in order to progress in their careers, this is not the only reason why evening courses are so popular today. Others may treat a course as a hobby, while some enjoy the social aspect. He said that there is an increasing emphasis on the idea of work-life balance: ‘People know you have to unwind and de-stress as well as being ambitious and gaining qualifications.’

Mr Maunsell admitted that while for some learners the return to the classroom environment can be intimidating, he said: ‘We give them information at the beginning of the course, and try to present them with an adult friendly environment.’

Although most courses, especially year-long ones, follow the traditional academic pattern of beginning in September, there are many others that start in January. The City of Limerick Vocational Education Committee have published a free guidebook providing detailed information on adult learning opportunities offered by all providers in Limerick City. It is available in many bookshops and educational centres, should you wish to make an education-based New Year’s Resolution next January. A complete listing of courses can also be found on the VEC's website.

Thursday, October 25, 2007

Letter to Kieran O'Donnell TD regarding a Shannon-Limerick Rail Link

Dear Mr O'Donnell,

I was glad to hear of the question you put to Minister Dempsey about the prospect of a rail link between Shannon Airport and Limerick city. I read about it in both The Irish Times and the Limerick Post.

The Irish Times report said the following:

"The feasibility study by MVA Consultants has put a cost of €700 million on constructing the rail link. However, this has been disputed by the locally-based Shannon Rail Partnership which claims that the rail link will cost €240 million."

In your follow-up questions on the matter, would it be possible for you to get MVA to explain why the discrepancy between the two estimates?

My second point is with regard to what Mr Jim Gallivan, Business development manager with Iarnród Éireann, said: "Milan has three airports and no rail link with a population of eight to 10 million and the greater Limerick-Shannon area has a population of 150,000 and the current population densities do not justify the project at the moment.

"The figures don't stack up and maybe in 15 to 20 years' time, the population density might be there," he added.

I would like to alert Mr Gallivan to the existence of the Malpensa Express, which I used this summer.

Unfortunately I only used the train on the return leg of my journey my way back out to the airport - when I went into the city on arrival I took the bus, which took about 2 and half hours due to a traffic accident and terminally clogged dual carriageway, compared with the 35 or so minutes the train took.

That said, I don't think there is any point in comparing the needs of the Limerick-Shannon area with those of a metropolis like Milan. In any event, the Italian Institute of Statistics put the population of the Milan metropolitan area at 7.4 million, which is a bit less than the 8 to 10 figure given by Mr Gallivan. Anyway, just because Milan didn't invest in proper rail links to its airports does not mean that Limerick should copy its mistakes. There are plenty of examples around Europe of towns and cities of similar size to either Limerick or its catchment area which manage to install rail links between the airport and city, a quick glance at the Ryanair website and other websites of other airlines brings up the following:

  • Friedrichshafen, Germany. Population: 58,068
  • Newcastle-upon-Tyne, UK. Population: 259,536
  • Blackpool, UK. Population: 142,700
  • Trondheim, Norway. Population: 161,730
  • Pisa, Italy. Population: 90,482
  • Douglas, Isle of Man, UK. Population: 26,218
  • Southampton, UK. Population: 228,600

What all these cities have in common, apart from similarly sized populations to the Limerick-Shannon area (in the case of Southampton and Newcastle-upon-Tyne it is not inconceivable that the population of the Midwest would reach that figure within the next 15 years) but also the fact that they all boast airport-city centre rail links.

Mr Gallivan even admitted that in 10 to 15 years time the population of the region might be large enough to warrant a rail link.

I believe a line must be reserved for a future rail link to prevent houses being built there in the future, and to avoid the development of this rail link becoming as wasteful as other Fianna Fáil infrastructure projects.

With regard to the Shannon-Limerick rail link, has the idea of developers contributing towards the capital cost of the project being looked into, like what happened with the Sandyford Luas line?

Please continue your hard work campaigning on this issue, as it is an important one in terms of the sustainable development of the region.

Best regards,

James Gaffney,
Limerick.

Photo: kikiprinci

Wednesday, October 17, 2007

O’Carroll-Kelly creator has UL audience in hysterics

Limerick Independent

The audience was left in hysterics last Wednesday evening when Paul Howard, author of the infamous Ross O’Carroll Kelly series of books and columns, rolled into town to read extracts from his latest bestselling novel, ‘This Champagne Mojito is the Last Thing I Own’.

The UL Jean Monnet Lecture Theatre’s austere surroundings were transformed by colourful promotional posters stating, ‘The Ego Has Landed,’ and, ‘This poster is basically, like, morkeshing my new column, roysh’. And the writer’s ‘lecture’ generated more laughter than would be heard in that venue in a week of college classes.

For the uninitiated, the character of Ross is a satirical depiction of a wealthy, self-obsessed, South Dublin-dwelling rugby player. The stories, written in diary form, mock the “materialistic nonsense” that people in Ross’s social circles place so much importance on. He described one of the main events that influenced the creation of the series ten years ago. In a previous incarnation, Howard had worked as a freelance sports journalist. He went to cover a Leinster schools rugby match, and witnessed a father giving out to his son for not playing that well that day. The son’s response was to tell his dad to shut up and open his wallet. It was witnessing this scene, of children treating their parents like walking ATM machines, said Howard, that prompted him to parody the lifestyles of Ireland’s affluent classes.

Some readers observed that his latest offering is a somewhat darker, comparing its mood with the last in the Harry Potter series. Howard admitted this, noting that in some ways the ups and downs of Ross’ life could be seen as mirroring the path of the Irish economy. However, in an ‘interview’ Ross gave on his website, all comparisons with the bespectacled wizard end there: “I’m five books in and I’ve scored more birds than Enrique Iglesias and his old man put together. And they call Harry Potter a wizard?”

Saturday, October 13, 2007

Human Rights and Criminal Justice Conference

Irish Human Rights Commission and Law Society of Ireland

5th Annual Conference

Human Rights and Criminal Justice

13 October 2007


The Criminal Justice Act 2007 came under heavy criticism from numerous parties yesterday at the Fifth Annual Conference of the Irish Human Rights Commission and the Law Society of Ireland. At the conference, entitled Human Rights and Criminal Justice, the Act was criticised for both the manner in which it was passed by the Oireachtas and in terms of the provisions that it contained.

James MacGuill, Senior Vice President of the Law Society, described the Act as a, ‘draconian and obscene element of legislation’, and vowed that his organisation would continue to highlight attacks on civil liberties posed by the Act.

While the delegates acknowledged that violent, gangland drug-related crime is a serious cause for concern in this country, they argued for a calm, focussed approach in countering the crime problem, rather than, ‘soundbite solutions’, in the words of Dr Maurice Manning, President of the Human Rights Commission.

Dr Manning criticised the manner in which the Criminal Justice Bill of this year was made an act. He stated that in this case the Oireachtas was dominated by the executive branch. There was inadequate use of the Committees System – a system, he said, that is in place to prevent legislation from being rushed through without due consideration to all its implications. He bemoaned the, ‘arrogance of ministers’, in rushing through this piece of legislation, regretting that they did not exercise fully their right and duty of parliamentary scrutiny.

In a further denouncement of the way in which the 2007 Act became incorporated into Irish law, Michael O’Higgins SC, Chairman of the Irish Criminal Bar Association, contrasted the parliamentary process it went through with the considerably more rigorous debate that surrounded the enactment of the Criminal Justice Act 1984. He observed that the 1984 Act was debated by the Oireachtas for 18 months, including 13 days in which it was examined at the Committee Stage. In stark contrast, in O’Higgins’ opinion, the 2007 Bill was passed without any effective debate. He accused the Opposition of wasting the opportunity they had, at the Report Stage, of debating the Bill section by section, by instead deciding to engage in, ‘electoral muscle-flexing’, by proposing additional sections to it.

The process came in for further criticism from him because in his opinion, there was no meaningful debate on the infringement posed by the Act to the right to silence.

According to O’Higgins, the Act was passed in such a hasty manner for a number of reasons, notably a lack of public engagement with government. In his view, the electorate voted for the current government for the same reasons shareholders elect a CEO – government today is more about economic management than it was in the 1980s. He described this paradigm shift in Irish society when he said that the Oireachtas of 1984 governed over people, while that of 2007 governs a nation of individuals.

He acknowledged that there has been an increase in violent crime since the 1980s, saying that as, ‘property prices have soared, the price of life has plummeted.’ He concluded that as long as the diminution of rights is seen by society as only the diminution of certain people in society’s rights – those of suspected criminals – we as a whole will be poorer.

James MacGuill in turn credited the media for calling for a delay in the enactment of the Bill. However, he was scathing with his words for the then Tánaiste, Michael McDowell, saying that one, ‘can’t blame the media for the madness of the Tánaiste’, in relation to the Act.

The conference heard from Des Hogan, Acting Chief Executive of the Irish Human Rights Commission about certain aspects of criminal justice policy and their effect on human rights. He called for caution when deciding to change the criminal law, reflecting that:

    ‘On the one hand the desire to change the law to meet perceived new threats of crime and on the other, the imperative of approaching any law reform proposals carefully when long-established rights are at issue.’

With regard to the expansion of police detention powers that the 2007 Act allows, he commented that:

    ‘No empirical evidence supports the contention that prolonged detention benefits investigation or increases the possibility of a successful conviction, and indeed no one has yet been detained for the full 168-hour period under the 1996 Act.’

While concluding that there is an increasing perception that decreasing the rights of the suspect by definition increases the safety and protects the interests of victims and wider society, he warned against balancing and rebalancing human rights principles depending on short-term political motivations.

This view was shared by other speakers at the conference, including Sir Geoffrey Bindman, Chairman of the British Institute of Human Rights, who spoke of the need to counter the myth that human rights are a way of helping guilty parties escape justice or of enabling wrongdoers to delay and add to the cost of the legal process.

Senator Ivana Bacik, who chaired the opening session, spoke of the need to review and challenge the idea that there can be a trade-off between civil liberties and civil security.

Past conferences have dealt with issues such as Human Rights in Committed Relationships, Migrant Workers and Human Rights Law, and Achieving Rights Based Child Law. However, in the words of Dr Manning, yesterday’s theme of Human Rights and Criminal Justice, was more controversial and certainly most timely in the light of the current problems, on the one hand of increased violent criminality, and on the other of criminal justice legislation being rushed through the Dáil.

Photos from Hjem and Simon McGarr

Tuesday, October 02, 2007

Thousands of second-level students flock to careers event at Limerick Racecourse

Limerick Independent

At least 4,000 secondary school students attended a careers fair held at Limerick Racecourse yesterday. The event was organised by the local branch of the Irish Guidance Councillors, and is now in its fifth year running. There were information stalls from over 50 institutions, who informed students about potential educational and employment opportunities available for when they leave school.

Mary Kearney, chairperson of the organising committee, told this reporter that the popularity of this event has been increasing with each year. The event attracts students from all over the Mid-West region. Outlining one advantage of this careers fair, Ms Kearney noted that in the past, local school-leavers would have to travel to Dublin to attend the careers exhibition at the RDS, as there was no similar event in this part of the country.

She spoke of the merits of the Greenmount venue. She was very praiseworthy of the staff and management of Limerick Racecourse, while also noting that from a teacher’s perspective the day is more manageable because rather than managing a group of students for a four-hour each leg return journey to Dublin they can be in and out of the Patrickswell venue within an hour and a half. She also said that there is less potential for discipline problems at her group’s venue, because the Careers Exhibition is the only thing happening on the day at the racecourse, there is much less chance of students becoming distracted or wandering off – their focus remains on career options.

Among the third-level institutions represented at the fair, UL, UCC and LIT seemed to be the popular choices among students. The guards, army and teacher training courses offered at Mary Immaculate College also proved to be popular draws. Institutions offering Post Leaving Certificate courses were kept busy with inquiries, with many students seeking to go onto further education using this route. Three talks were also given throughout the day by UCAS, the body responsible for handling applications to full-time degree programmes in Britain. These were attended in great numbers.

The organisers noted that as has been the case each year they have run the exhibition, popularity of the courses on offer varied according to gender, with nursing and language courses tending to be more popular with girls while boys tended to gravitate in greater numbers towards more technical programmes. One possible reason given for this trend by Ms Kearney is the fact that often girls’ schools simply do not offer technical subjects to Leaving Cert students so they would not be exposed to the skills needed to go onto further study in that area.

Regarding the issue of gender imbalances in certain employment sectors, Lieutenant Nessa Maloney of the Irish Naval Service, a male-dominated institution which only began offering cadetships to women in 1994, said that her organisation actively seek female recruits by attending girls’ schools to give demonstrations about working in the naval service. Anne-Marie Hannon, of the admissions division of Mary Immaculate College, which offers a number of primary teacher training courses, noted that although primary school teaching is one area where females vastly outnumber males, her institution does not specifically target male students when promoting their B.Ed course in the same way the navy does to females. However, they may do so in the future.

Photo: Kman999

Thursday, September 27, 2007

"Shell to Sea" Meeting in Ennis

The ‘Shell to Sea’ campaign is still very much a national issue, not just a local one, was the message heard at a public information evening hosted on Wednesday by the Clare Shell to Sea group. Countering allegations that their campaign is a case of NIMBYism, the group emphasised that if the Corrib Gas Project is allowed to go ahead in its current form, it will set a precedent for similar projects to be undertaken in other parts of the country. Stating that while the legal campaign against the project is ongoing, but alluding to the sometimes slow workings of the legal process, one campaigner said that the protests must continue on the Erris Peninsula, in order to delay the project enough so ‘justice can catch up.’

Introducing the meeting, Fiona Wheeler, chairing the event, told a packed auditorium at the Glór Theatre in Ennis, Co. Clare that the Shell campaign shared a lot of common ground with the ‘Save Tara’ movement to have the M3 rerouted from its route through the Tara-Skryne Valley. According to Bob Wilson of the Clare group, included among the issues uniting the campaigns are: the fact that both involve the laying down of infrastructure, a pipeline in Mayo and motorway in Meath, along contentious routes; that the approval of these routes was fast-tracked; and there were alternatives to both but these weren’t pursued with any great vigour.

The assembled members of the public were shown a short documentary which followed the recent experiences of Willie Corduff, one of the five members of the Rossport Five, jailed in 2005 for refusing to obey a temporary court injunction forbidding them to interfere with work being undertaken by on their land, who was this year awarded The Goldman Environmental Prize. According to Corduff, it was public pressure that caused Shell to ask their lawyers for the injunction which the men were in breach of to be lifted, which led to their release, in September 2005. He believes that sustained public pressure can eventually lead to the alteration of the Corrib Gas line’s project, if not its cancellation altogether.

Having taken the opportunity to note the presence of a plainclothes Garda among the audience, and announcing that this was a ‘grave insult’ to the campaign group, making them feel they were being treated as ‘a subversive group’, the chairperson then introduced the main speaker of the evening, John Monaghan, an engineer neighbour of Mr Corduff and active campaigner against the project.

Mr Monaghan outlined what the campaign group are doing at the moment; why they are doing it; and the possible future courses of action for the group. He mentioned similarities between their movement and that of Tara, observing that in both instances more direct and less destructive alternative routes were never properly considered by those in charge of the respective projects. Airing his belief that ‘oil companies feel they can simply stroll through’ local communities, he surmised that his group’s main objection to the project was that it is unique and experimental from engineering, societal and legal points of view.

Outlining the engineering processes at work in the pumping of the gas onshore, Mr Monaghan noted that in the Environmental Impact Statement for the project stated that inland gas refining ‘goes against international standard practice.’ He said that one of his group’s main objections to the project was with its health and safety aspect, in particular with regard to the high pressures that the gas will be pumped inland, and the unacceptable risks of death or serious injury this high-pressure posed to the public. He noted that the proposed pressure of untreated gas in the Corrib pipeline is 144 bar, contrasting this with the maximum pressure Bord Gáis are allowed to pump their treated gas, which is 88 bar. He recalled that while Shell had attempted to ease concerns about the high pressure by highlighting the extra thickness of their piping, he drew attention to a report in which it was concluded that this extra thickness adds greater weight to the pipe structure which in turn leads to a greater chance of subsidence, which in turn leads to an increased risk of cracks and explosions. As well as mentioning health and environmental concerns arising from the toxic chemicals added to the gas during the refining process, such as possible contamination of the local water supply, Mr Monaghan also accused Shell of not following industry best practice which states that gas pumped at high pressures must be routed at certain minimum distances away from dwellings.

A charge was levelled at the government by the group of neglecting the rights of the local community around Bellanaboy – behaviour that would be acceptable of a private oil company, but totally lacking on the part of the government, whose duty it is to protect its citizens. The group called it ‘perverse’ that the Department of Marine is advertising for exploration off other parts of the west of Ireland. They fear that such exploration projects, while not only, in their eyes, giving away Ireland’s natural resources to private interests, could lead other communities to become at risk to some of the dangers outlined by Mr Monaghan.

Summing up the reasons for their opposition, the protesters feel that the decision to process the gas inland, with the attendant higher risk to the local population, was taken purely on the grounds of economics. They have no intention of stopping their campaign to delay the project. They believe that the Corrib Gas project has already set itself as a unique one in the manner in which Compulsory Purchase Orders were granted, from a health and safety perspective, and the fact that the Irish people, through the government, have no stake in the ownership of the project. While the aim of the group is to halt the project in its current form, they would accept the project if the gas was treated of shore. With regard to the influx of jobs to the sparsely populated region, the group estimate, from plans seen by them that the onshore refinery will only provide 27 permanent jobs, to people who will not necessarily be from the area.

Mr Monaghan commented that, ‘If this was in Nigeria, they’d shoot us.’ While the campaigners can be safe in the knowledge that such tactics won’t be adopted by those opposed to their cause in this country, they have vowed to continue their campaign in Mayo and elsewhere irrespective of the obstacles they encounter.

Friday, July 13, 2007

Third World Debt

Deforestation. Cocaine flooding the industrialised world’s shores. (Ask the people of Dunlough Bay!) Unemployment. Agriculture no longer a viable way to make a living for many. Immigration, both legal and illegal, on the up. Conflict and war.

All of these calamities regularly make the headlines, and indeed, give many people many causes for worry. What they also have in common, claimed political scientist Susan George in her 1992 work, The Debt Boomerang, is that they are all directly linked to the Third World Debt crisis. Find a solution to the debt crisis, and we will be one step closer to solving those problems mentioned above. Or will we?

If the debt crisis really is the cause of such misery, it might be a good idea at this point to explain its origins. In the 1970s, the price of oil skyrocketed, making the oil-producing countries (OPEC) very rich. They deposited their profits in Western commercial banks in order to earn interest.

In order to pay this interest, banks had to make money. They did this by lending money to developing countries at very low interest rates. Unfortunately for the developing countries, the first oil-price shock lead to anti-inflationary fiscal and monetary policies in major industrial countries, and a major international recession came about in the mid-1970s. The resulting slackening of world-market demand forced the price of developing countries’ exports down, already placing them at a disadvantage when it came to repaying their debts. When the recession worsened in the 1980s, the lending banks raised their interest rates, making the debts even harder to repay, bearing in mind that the developing countries were taking in less money for their exports than at the time when they took the loans.

Some NGOs, such as CAFOD (Catholic Agency for Overseas Development) claim that money that could, and indeed should, be used for the health care and education of the debtors’ citizens, is instead used to service debts. However, this ignores the fact that the money acquired through the original borrowing wasn’t always invested in sensible projects like health and education; as Robert Guest, The Economist’s Africa editor has pointed out, much of it was squandered on prestige projects, such as dams, conference halls, steel mills many miles from the nearest port, often over budget, and so on. By undertaking projects that would never produce a return, or even worse, lining their own pockets (as Zaire’s Mobutu did) or by financing wars (as Ethiopia did), leaders of the developing world ensured that they would be unable to service their loans, let alone repay them.

That’s all well and good, but why should the ordinary citizens of Sub-Saharan Africa and elsewhere have to suffer because of their former leaders’ macroeconomic mismanagement? Some would say they shouldn’t. There is a concept in International Law known as Odious debt, which states debt incurred by undemocratic countries and used for purposes that do not serve the interests of the state should be unenforceable. The argument goes that present citizens of countries once ruled by tyrants shouldn’t have to pay for their past rulers’ misdeeds.

The counterargument to the Odious debt principle, which may explain why debts incurred by the Apartheid government of South Africa and the Mobutu dictatorship of Zaire have not been recognised by creditors as “odious”, is that governments are constantly changing in democracies, but states, as opposed to governments, are the ones that are expected to honour their debts. Indeed, it is an oft-repeated phenomenon in history, that one generation must clean up the mess left behind by the previous one.

Slogans such as “Drop the Debt” and “Make Poverty History” are useful, in that they increase public awareness of the issues, but in reality they just simplify a very complex subject. Who is to say that once a heavily indebted country receives debt relief, they will use the money freed up towards poverty reduction, rather than, say, wage war on one of its smaller neighbours, which is what Ethiopia did just a few months ago?

While I agree that while debt may be analogous to a tax on growth in indebted countries, I can’t accept the view that “calling it quits” alone is the answer. John O’Shea of GOAL has described this blind faith in the dropping of the debt as a naïve world view, in which there are no corrupt rulers, no corrupt governments and no nasty armies. Instead, these indebted governments would only be delighted to invest in education and health, if only the funds were freed up.

Unfortunately, the recent history of the Horn of Africa makes it clear, as if we needed proof, that there are still plenty of corrupt leaders and nasty armies going around. If we are serious about the combat against debt-induced poverty and its attendant problems as listed by Susan George, the question is not a simple yes or no one about whether seriously indebted countries should have their debts cancelled. Rather, it should be whether the debtor countries have the will and the ability to put in place structures to ensure that moneys freed will be channelled in the direction of alleviating poverty and not towards the armament factories or Swiss bank accounts. If the answer to the latter question is “yes”, then by all means make poverty history.

Monday, May 14, 2007

Letter to Frank McDonald following his feature on Dubai

Letter on the subject of the exploitation of migrant workers in the Arabian Gulf to Frank McDonald, Environment Editor Irish Times following his feature piece on Dubai, Bling City.


Dear Frank,


I thoroughly enjoyed your recent article on Dubai, as I did too yourself and James Nix's Chaos at the Crossroads, which I winced my way through some months back. Whatever about the subjective merits of Dubai's aesthetic qualities, you are to be congratulated for highlighting, to your readers in Ireland, the miserly wages handed out to the expatriate labourers who put its buildings in place. While the average salary figures of 150-200 Euro a month you give are obviously quite low, those at the lower end of the scale are obviously earning quite a bit less.

I get the impression that the plight of the legions of underpaid workers in the petroleum-rich Gulf States is a sorry state of affairs that goes unreported in the Western media. This, I reckon, is for a number of reasons: the lack of civil institutions in the GCC countries who compile statistics on the expatriate workers; the apparent unwillingness of the Gulf countries themselves to divulge the conditions of said workers; the fact that there are so many other horrors in the Middle Eastern region at large that merit journalistic attention, be they in Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan, or the Levant, that the difficulties of workers lucky enough to have a job pales in comparison to the lot of people an hour and a half flight to the north who are subject to the horrors of increasingly brutal armed conflict (not to speak of the jobless multitudes the army of expat workers leave behind in the Subcontinent and South-East Asia); and finally but not in isolation from the third reason speculated, the fact that the six GCC countries are key allies in the US's War on Terror, that the Western media is unwilling to rock those particular diplomatic relations boats lest they upset a few airbase aplenty Sheikhs. I accept I might be being too cynical in my last reason given.


Evidence abounds, both hearsay and documented, of foreign labour abuse and exploitation. A Sri Lankan taxi-driver told a colleague of mine (I have been working as a teacher in Qatar since last August) about one such incident of degradation. The driver's previous employment had been as a labourer with a construction firm. One day at work, after an eight-hour stretch on the job, himself and a co-worker went on their lunch break. Unluckily for them, their hard-earned break coincided with a site visit from an Egyptian engineer of the Qatari construction business. Apparently, such construction firms like their projects to finish way ahead of schedule, and the engineer was eager to do his employer's bidding. He confronted the two Sri Lankans about their slackness, and when they protested that they had been working since 4.00am, daring to suggest perhaps that even blue-overalled Gulf-based South Asians should be entitled to a lunch break, what did our Egyptian do, but hock back and spit in the lunches of the two men. Naturally enough, in my view anyway, the provoked labourer reacted by grabbing the nearest rod of metal and striking his overseer across the shoulder with it. Following this incident, the engineer went to his Qatari sponsor, claiming that he had been the victim of an unprovoked attack by one of the workers. The Sri Lankan had the initiative to approach the same sponsor off his own back before they came for him and gave his own version of events. Fortunately for him, the sponsor was horrified when he heard of his mistreatment, and had him transferred to work for another construction company. No compensation was forthcoming, and I didn't hear if the Egyptian got to keep his job or not.


The local newspapers do sometimes shed light on the injustices heaped upon the foreign guest workers. A few weeks ago I read in the Gulf Times of an Indian construction worker who had arrived in Doha about five months' ago, where he has been working in heights of 30 metres, in temperatures about as hot as the hob of hell you encountered in Dubai a few days ago, constructing one of the many glass towers that are sprouting up in the West Bay area of the city. I can't remember the details of his case, nor how he had made his way into the paper, but one detail I can remember was that one of his complaints against his employers was that in his five months' work he had only been paid 150 Qatari Riyals, in other words, about 30 Euro! When I arrived here last autumn I read the case of a group of Nepali nationals, who were protesting outside their embassy, because they had been promised jobs, by an unscrupulous employment agency, in a multinational supermarket here in Doha, only to be brought on their first day of work to a building site instead, where they would earn a fraction of what they had been promised as shelf-stackers.


Globalization and the Gulf, by John W. Fox, Nada Mourtada-Sabbah and Mohammed al-Mutawa, contains an insightful chapter on labour rights problems in the Gulf states by John Willoughby, in which he explains an all too frequent feature of migrant workers being "cheated" by agents in their home countries, often with the connivance of or a blind eye being turned by a Gulf citizen who must act as a sponsor for any expatriate labour under the region's inflexible labour laws. On a side note, the same book also contains an interesting essay on an area a good deal closer to your own area of expertise, entitled "The evolution of the Gulf city type, oil, and globalization" by Sulayman Khalaf.


Another source of the injustices suffered by the army of Third World workers in my own country of residence is the website Qatar Sucks. Don't be put off by its disingenuous name though. It is a forum where people copy and paste media stories of mistreatment of employees here in Qatar, and contains some fairly shocking, usually saddening, cases. Incidentally, when I tried to comment on one of the stories posted, a message from QTel, Qatar's state-run telecoms monopoly, blocked me from doing so. One more information source of foreign worker hardship, and the local governments' inaction in combating it, is Human Rights Watch's report on the subject, focusing on the UAE, entitled " Building Towers, Cheating Workers."


Finally, and I think you alluded to this in your own article, something must be said about the cities of the region's apparent 'fakeness' for want of a better word, a land where image is absolutely everything, substance nothing. While Dubai opts for architectural behemoths, skiing in the desert and highly luxurious if a bit gimmicky and a tad environmentally-damaging island resorts, Qatar seems to style itself as the sporting capital of the region, a Limerick of the Arabian Gulf you might say. It hosted the Asian Games last year, a regional Olympic-like tournament; its soccer league attracts big name ageing superstars – Batistuta, Romario and Jay-Jay Okocha have all graced its fine, near-empty stadiums; while top-class golf, tennis and motorsport events come here on an annual basis. Due to the fact that many of these events come to Qatar not because of the Qataris insatiable appetite for live sports but rather as a means of marketing the name "Qatar" to the outside world, tickets are often very cheap, if they carry any price at all. In keeping with its identity as the sporting hub of the region, Doha hosted a top-class athletics meeting last Friday night, which I attended. Attending alongside me were scores of blue-collared labourers bussed in from their corrugated-iron-roofed labour camps on the outskirts of the city for a night off. A benevolent gesture on their employers' behalf perhaps? Or, more likely it seems, a stunt pulled by the authorities for fear that international television audiences may witness an almost empty stadium. Image is everything in this corner of the Gulf it would seem.


Again I would like to applaud you for your mention of the immigrant labour hardship you encountered on your Dubai visit. Hopefully with more and more media attention, Western media attention in particular, something can be done to improve the conditions of the Gulf's toiling masses. Perhaps you could have a word with a colleague of yours who writes about labour/human rights issues to maybe do a more in-depth piece on this issue.


Yours sincerely,


James Gaffney,

Old Airport Road,

Doha,

Qatar (via Limerick).


Photos: Richard Messenger (workers), Ahmad Almansoor (skyline)