Upcoming Eventsno events match your query! New Eventsno events posted in last week
Blog Feeds
Anti-Empire
Human Rights in IrelandPromoting Human Rights in Ireland
Lockdown Skeptics
Voltaire NetworkVoltaire, international edition
|
![]()
national / arts and media Wednesday June 07, 2006 - 23:35 by Danny Morrison
![]()
No Text version on Examiner site yet - right-ciick on graphic to enlarge, or left-click to save and print. ... read full story / add a comment
international / crime and justice Wednesday June 07, 2006 - 18:29 by Council of Europe
The report of the Council of Europe makes chilling reading for anyone who wanted to believe that Ireland's government would uphold the norms of civilised behaviour as reflected in the European Convention on Human Rights or the Geneva Conventions or the Convention against Torture... ... read full story / add a comment
international / arts and media Wednesday June 07, 2006 - 17:13 by Dave
![]()
Director Ken Loach spoke to Tom Behan about his award winning new film The Wind That Shakes The Barley, which is about Ireland’s fight for freedom Even though Ken Loach’s new film The Wind That Shakes The Barley hasn’t yet opened in cinemas, it has already won a high profile award and created controversy. Ken Loach is on a high after winning the Palme d’Or at the Cannes Film Festival. Some elements of the British media have insinuated it was just a fluke, or that he won as a kind of “lifetime achievement award”. from latest issue of Socialist Worker www.socialistworker.org.uk Link to original ... read full story / add a comment
national / miscellaneous Wednesday June 07, 2006 - 15:39 by tom eile
Seeing as RTE 's website today has no story about the body found at Carnmoney Cemetery on Monday , here’s a link from BBC northern Ireland . A mans body was found by a workman with what looked like a knife sticking out of it , but the PSNI do not suspect murder . The catholic plot in the cemetery has been repeatedly vandalized by unionists over the past couple of years. ... read full story / add a comment ![]()
national / rights, freedoms and repression Wednesday June 07, 2006 - 14:49 by Danny Morrison
![]() ![]()
In a forthcoming BBC documentary Richard O’Rawe once again will be claiming that the republican leadership rejected a deal from the British government shortly before the death of Joe McDonnell on July 8th 1981. Richard is a former blanket man and PRO in the H-Blocks. Whilst in jail Richard never raised his claims with the leadership in prison or the leadership outside. After Richard’s release he worked with me in the Republican Press Centre for a year and never mentioned the allegations he now makes. He neither approached Brendan ‘Bik’ McFarlane, O/C of the prisoners, nor me to ask us our recollections of this period when he was preparing for his book. Last year Richard alleged that in late July 1981 I sat at a meeting with hunger strikers’ families with a deal from the British government in my back pocket and didn’t tell them. When I pointed out that I had been in hospital in Dublin during that period Richard realised his memory was false and discreetly dropped the claim. He claims he wrote the book out of concern for the relatives, yet he never told them. Instead, he published extracts from the book in the ‘Sunday Times’. ... read full story / add a comment
international / rights, freedoms and repression Wednesday June 07, 2006 - 06:40 by anon
![]() ![]()
international / arts and media Monday June 05, 2006 - 21:09 by David Manning
Preempting the backlash Mark Dooley in the Sunday Independent preempts the opportunistic war critics in one of their rare moment of "I told you so": "Get used to hearing the name Haditha, a city in Iraq's Al Anbar province. Last November, a homemade bomb exploded beneath a US military vehicle as it patrolled the city. It killed a 20-year-old marine, Miguel Terrazas." ... read full story / add a comment
national / rights, freedoms and repression Monday June 05, 2006 - 19:14 by RFE
Guests: Éamonn McCann, a regular commentator and a former leader of the civil rights movement in the occupied six Irish counties and Martin Ingram, a former British Force Research Unit (FRU) agent. Ingram was the first to say that Freddie Scappaticci, the head of the Provo security apparatus and a lethal killer, was the notorious British agent known as 'Stakeknife'. He had also named Dennis Donaldson as another British operative within the Provos. ... read full story / add a comment ![]()
national / anti-capitalism Monday June 05, 2006 - 15:42 by Conor J. McGowan
![]() ![]()
Further to last weeks pamphlet on the post war revolutionary situation in Italy from 1943-48, the ISN have made available our latest pamphlet on the left in lo stivale: “Italy’s Red Decade Social struggles & political power 1968-80”. ... read full story / add a comment
international / anti-war / imperialism Monday June 05, 2006 - 13:57 by redjade
![]()
More than those who protested in Dublin on Feb 15 2003 ... read full story / add a comment |
|