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category national | miscellaneous | news report author Tuesday October 29, 2002 12:36author by MG Report this post to the editors

It is now perfectly clear that Operation Hyphen was little more than a propaganda exercise conducted at the expense of many decent, hard-working and entirely innocent individuals . . . The truth is that just 16 of the 140 people arrested were actually evading deportation orders. (I'm reprinting this in full as you need to subscribe to Ireland.com. The original article is in today's Irish Times.)

The desire to be seen doing something
By Fintan O'Toole



Time and again in recent years the question has had to be asked: where were the guards? Garda action on political, planning and big-business corruption has been notable by its absence. Police interventions in these areas have generally been slow and cautious reactions to revelations by the media or tribunals.

Nor, in spite of some superb investigative work by a few teams of gardaí, has there been much evidence of a coherent, pro-active approach to church collusion in child abuse.

When these questions are raised, the answers are fairly consistent. The Garda can only act on specific information and complaints. Large-scale operations might be good for the optics, but are not good police practice. The desire to make political gestures by sending in the guards must be resisted. Garda operations must never be motivated by the simple desire to be seen to be doing something.

Fair enough. What, though, are we to make of last July's much-hyped Operation Hyphen? This huge show of force, aimed allegedly at illegal immigrants, took place in the Dublin region on July 16th and elsewhere in the State on July 23rd. Houses were raided at dawn. People were dragged away from pubs, hotels and restaurants where they were working. There was a simultaneous media blitz, with the Garda press office and the new Minister for Justice, Michael McDowell, making tough noises about the need to uphold the law.

It is now perfectly clear that Operation Hyphen was little more than a propaganda exercise conducted at the expense of many decent, hard-working and entirely innocent individuals. Figures given by McDowell in the Dáil this month in response to questions from Ruairí Quinn present a shocking picture.

A huge Garda force was deployed for the operation: 200 in Dublin and 400 in the rest of the country. Nearly 300 premises were raided. In all, 140 people were arrested. In the attendant publicity, the impression was clearly given that these people were suspected of being illegal immigrants, or failed asylum-seekers against whom deportation orders had been issued.

The truth is that just 16 of the 140 people arrested were actually evading deportation orders. Fifteen of these people have been deported, and one was released for medical reasons but will be deported later.

Seventy-four were not asylum-seekers at all. It seems that a small number were illegal immigrants in the normal sense of the phrase: people who had no official status. Most, however, seem to have been people who came here legally with work permits.

Their breaches of the regulations were minor and technical. Some had failed to register with their local Garda station. Most, seem to have been victims of the State's inefficient bureaucracy rather than of their own neglect.

In Co Clare, for example, 12 people working in the catering industries were charged under Operation Hyphen. The employer of five of them, the Lisdoonvarna hotelier, Jim White, pointed out that he had applied to renew their work permits the previous December, but the applications had not yet been processed by the State. Technically, these people were indeed illegal migrants. Yet without them, the tourist industry would collapse: 85 per cent of White's staff in Lisdoonvarna are non-national.

It is also notable that the charges against all 12 people in Clare were thrown out of court because they were improperly drafted. In other words, people were charged with not having their paperwork in order and released because the people who charged them couldn't get their paperwork in order.

THE third category of people arrested under Operation Hyphen is the most scandalous of all. If there were 16 failed asylum-seekers and 74 people charged with mostly technical breaches of the immigration laws, that means that 50 people were arrested for no reason whatsoever.

The wrong done to these people is not just an individual injustice. The very public nature of the operation made it, in effect if not in intent, a piece of anti-immigrant propaganda. It played into a set of stereotypes in a way that could only reinforce prejudice and criminalise entire categories of people.

In the light of the Taoiseach's extraordinary decision last week to promote Noel O'Flynn, the most virulently anti-immigrant TD, to the chairmanship of a Dail committee, it is hard not to see the whole show as a gesture of appeasement towards the far right.

I don't know how much Operation Hyphen cost, though the deployment of 600 gardaí doesn't come cheap. What's significant, however, is that Michael McDowell doesn't know either. He was, he told the Dáil, "not in a position to furnish the House with the cost of Operation Hyphen".

This suggests that the cost of the operation, in terms either of financial layout or of the diversion of Garda resources from the investigation of far more serious crimes, was simply not an issue. When it comes to using gardaí to make a political gesture, all such considerations can be brushed aside. Provided, of course, the target is a vulnerable, voiceless group and not a corrupt but powerful institution.

Related Link: http://www.ireland.com/newspaper/opinion/2002/1029/374083OP29FINTAN.html
author by William A Finnertypublication date Tue Oct 29, 2002 19:58author address author phone Report this post to the editors

Why should ANYBODY get away with breaking the law?? Whether it be Bertie, Desmond Connell, Ray Burke, Ivan Payne or the little scumbag who throws bangers into your Grannys letterbox. Are you seriously saying that laws should only apply to some sections of the community and not others?? Would you agree that only Travellers should be arrested for litter offences, and not settled people? You sound like you would agree with that.

author by spockpublication date Tue Oct 29, 2002 23:55author address author phone Report this post to the editors

ah billy, you will have dozens of bright eyed swmmies angrily replying to you tomorrow, you would have been on safer ground saying that there should be one law for the politicans and another for the rest of us. You see they hope to avail of those laws when they are our new rulers in the distant future.

author by MGpublication date Wed Oct 30, 2002 11:32author address author phone Report this post to the editors

As far as I can tell, Fintan O'Toole is calling for the law to be applied equally to everyone. He is not advocating selectivity. He is calling for the Gardai to use the same resources on corrupt politicians as they do on soft targets like "illegal" immigrants. He is also urging the Gardai not to waste time on propaganda exercises targeting foreigners without proper documentation when serious crimes are being committed by an untouchable elite.

PS: Mr Finnerty, aren't you currently on the run from the law? If you believe in ALL criminals being brought to justice, maybe you should come home and face the music.

author by Daithipublication date Wed Oct 30, 2002 13:44author address author phone Report this post to the editors

Different Finnerty, I think. I think we have both a "William Finnerty" and a "William A Finnerty".

What are the odds of that, eh?

author by William A Finnertypublication date Wed Oct 30, 2002 15:37author address author phone Report this post to the editors

Yes, I have previously stated that I am not associated with the Other "Mr Finnerty" and I am most definately not on the run! Mabey I should change my name.

 
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