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Clongriffin, Dublin: Well Known Northside Drug Dealer Michael Kelly Murdered

16 Sep

Gardaí are appealing for witnesses to the murder of a 30-year-old man in Clongriffin in Dublin this Thursday afternoon.

 NEWS UPDATE:

GARDAÍ are bracing themselves for further gang violence after one of the country’s top crime bosses was gunned down.

Two gunmen were waiting for Michael Kelly when they shot him at an apartment complex at Clongriffin in north county Dublin yesterday.

The attackers moved in when they saw Kelly exiting an apartment block at Marrsfield at about 1.15pm.

The 30 year old was walking towards a waiting car, driven by a friend, who had just arrived.

He was shot at least three times and died at the scene.

Gardaí were last night waiting to talk to the friend who was driving the car.

Gardaí believe the attackers escaped in a silver Micra car. A car matching that description was found nearby not burnt out and forensic tests are being conducted.

Kelly, a convicted drug dealer from Kilbarrack, north Dublin, was a top target for several Garda units.

He imported huge consignments of drugs into the country, which were then divided up among other gangs across Dublin. He was a target of the Criminal Assets Bureau and last December was forced in the High Court to surrender a house in Co Meath and two cars after they were deemed to be the proceeds of crime.

He was also a suspect in relation to at least three murders.

Gardaí had warned him his life was in danger. He has spent much of his time abroad, in Spain and Holland, and had only recently returned home.

A major garda operation has been put in place and detectives are drawing up a list of possible enemies.

They are thought to include criminals from Kelly’s home area in Kilbarrack. They are suspected of having previously targeted members of his gang.

These criminals, including two brothers, are among suspects for the double murder of innocent men at a Finglas petrol station last November. Glen Murphy, 19, and Mark Noonan, 23, were mistaken for two criminals working for Kelly.

The feud between this gang and Kelly’s outfit is believed to stem from an internal gang row, thought to have started over the proceeds of a security van robbery seven years ago.

Also on the list of suspects are a group of hitmen from west Dublin who Kelly is thought to have hired to killed two senior members of his gang.

David Lindsay, 39, and Alan Napper, 38, vanished in July 2008 and were last seen in Clane, Co Kildare.

There were reports that Kelly declined to pay the hitmen the agreed amount and they, in turn, made the crime boss a target.

Kelly was also linked to the murder of drug dealer Anthony Foster in Kilmore, north Dublin, in July 2008.
30-year-old was warned his life was in danger

30-year-old was warned his life was in danger

Michael Kelly shot several times

Michael Kelly shot several times

Six One News: Paul Reynolds: Victim was shot by two gunmen
 
Gardaí are appealing for witnesses to the murder of a 30-year-old man in Clongriffin in Dublin this Thursday afternoon.

At a news conference this afternoon, gardaí said Michael Kelly was shot several times by at least two gunmen in the Marrsfield area.

The attack took place at around 1pm.

Mr Kelly was suspected of having links to a number of murders and missing person investigations. He had been warned that his life was in danger.

The Criminal Assets Bureau had also previously been successful in taking a house and two cars from him, which the courts agreed were the proceeds of crime.

Gardaí believed he had been trafficking in huge consignments of drugs from mainland Europe – which he then sold on to criminal gangs for distribution and street sale.

The area where the shooting happened has been sealed off and a car found nearby is also being examined.

Gardaí are asking witnesses to contact Coolock Garda Station on 01-6664200, or the Garda Confidential Line on 1800-666111. www.garda.ie

Dublin: Hundreds Of Parents,Teachers & Children March Against SNA Cuts In Schools: UPDATED

14 Sep

The Fine Gael/Labour government is being warned it faces a similar fate to the Fianna Fáil/Green coalition unless it U-turns on the issue of special needs assistants (SNAs).
 
Hundreds of campaigners opposed to reduced spending on SNAs took to the streets in Dublin today.
 
LINK TO PHOTO ALBUM:
Copyright Free for private or community use: NO SALES:
They marched from the Central Bank to the Dáil, demanding fair treatment for children with special needs.
 
Principal at Griffeen Valley Educate Together National School in Lucan, Co Dublin Tomás O’Dulaing said: “(The Government) can find money to bail out the richest and the most powerful in our society…but they can’t, they tell us, find the money to look after the most vulnerable in our society.
“We simply don’t accept that and will fight them until they change their minds.”
The total number of special needs assistants is being cut from 10,800 to 10,500.
Mr O’Dulaing said this equated to “300 children who are capable of great personal development, but who will be unable to attain that because of these cuts.
It’s the thin end of the wedge.”
 
NEWS UPDATE:
SOME parents of special needs children wiped away tears as they joined hundreds of protesters demonstrating outside the Dáil.

Parents joined teachers in a march to Leinster House to demand a reversal in cuts to the number of special needs assistants (SNAs).

They joined others at the gates, campaigning against pension levies and the Government’s austerity programme.

Traveller representatives said their community had been hit particularly hard by the cutbacks.

Impact trade union spokesman Philip Mullen said the cuts made no financial sense as the children affected would need to go back into special education units, which would cost the taxpayer as much as SNAs.

Demonstrators angry at how the pensions levy will affect their Tara Mines retirement payments, wore their mining clothes as they mingled with members of the Alliance Against Cuts in Education outside the gates of the Dáil.

United Left Alliance TD Richard Boyd Barrett and other opposition TDs, including those from Sinn Féin, joined with the loud but good-natured crowds to protest against the austerity policies of the Fine Gael/Labour Coalition.

Mr Boyd Barrett said it was wrong for the Government to pump so much money into bailed out banks, when the poor and vulnerable were “paying the price” for the policy.

The main issues protested about also dominated Leader’s Questions, where Independent TD Finian McGrath accused the Taoiseach of ignoring the plight of special needs children and raised concerns about the Government’s plan to increase the school starting age to five.

Mr McGrath said it was unacceptable for disabled children to be “locked out of school” on their first day back because of the cuts in the numbers of SNAs.

Enda Kenny replied that no decision has been made on the school starting age and that the Government was devoting all the resources it could to education.

Sinn Féin leader Gerry Adams said €317 million had been put into bailed-out banks since the Dáil last met in July and that this should have been diverted to job creation.

Fianna Fáil leader Micheal Martin attacked the Government’s pension levy which was introduced to fund the jobs initiative, as he said it penalised some pensioners on low incomes and that unemployment had risen by some 28,000 since the initiative was announced in May.

Mr Martin also accused the Taoiseach of disrespecting the Dáil by refusing to release advice the Government had received before imposing the pension levy, which Fianna Fáil had to later obtain through the Freedom of Information provisions.

Dublin: ‘Unjust, Austerity Measures Being Forced Down Our Throats’: Left Alliance

13 Sep

Left-leaning TDs have warned the Government to expect mass resistance to further austerity measures ahead of December’s budget.

The United Left Alliance (ULA), made up of five TDs, said it will be mobilising a mass campaign of civil disobedience against the planned household charge, claiming the Government had declared war on homeowners.

As the Dail meets on Wednesday for the first time since the summer break, Dun Laoghaire TD Richard Boyd Barrett vowed the group would be an opposition of action and not just words.

TDs Joan Collins, Clare Daly, Joe Higgins and Richard Boyd Barrett from the United Left Alliance

“We believe the key priority is to build a mass movement of resistance and people power opposed to these unjust, economically stupid austerity measures that this Government is trying to ram down our throats,” Mr Boyd-Barrett said.

“So we will be dedicating ourselves in the run-up to the budget to building mass protest and mass mobilisation against austerity policies.”

Socialist TD Clare Daly said the group would strenuously resist the Government’s planned 100 euro temporary household charge, and lead a campaign of civil disobedience.

“All of us as TDs pledge to be at the forefront of a non-payment campaign, a mass campaign of civil disobedience where we intend to make this charge uncollectible,” she said.

Most homes are to face the flat-rate charge from January with the threat of a further 10 euro fine for every month the payment is late.

Ms Daly pledged the ULA TDs would stand behind any household which chooses not to pay the charge.

And Mr Higgins said the United Left Alliance will serve as a catalyst bringing together diverse campaigns and organisations opposed to the “failed austerity agenda”.

NEWS UPDATE: ADDITION:

Irish consumers are still paying almost 20 per cent more than the European average for goods and services, despite a drop in inflation, according to the latest figures from Central Statistics Office (CSO).

The exchequer deficit remained the highest of any EU member state in 2010 according to the Measuring Ireland’s Progress 2010 report published today.

Government debt was at just over 96 per cent of gross domestic product (GDP) up from 25 per cent of GDP in 2007.

Consumer prices fell in 2010 but remained high by EU standards. Ireland was the fifth most expensive EU state in 2010, after Denmark, Finland, Luxembourg and Sweden, with prices 18 per cent above the EU average.

However this represents a considerable improvement on 2009 when Irish prices were 26 per cent above the EU average and second only to Denmark  

The State has remained in recession for the third year in a row with a public balance deficit of 32.4 per cent of GDP, the largest by far of any EU member state. Government debt increased substantially to 96.2 per cent of GDP in 2010, the fourth highest debt/GDP ratio in the EU, having been 25 per cent only three years previously.

Despite this Ireland still had the joint third highest GDP per capita in the EU at 25 per cent above the EU average.

The employment rate at 58.9 per cent was below the EU average and the unemployment rate was the sixth highest in the EU.

In population terms the State had the highest proportion of young people in the EU, and the lowest proportion of old people. Ireland has the lowest divorce rate and the highest fertility rate in the EU, and its population is increasing at a higher rate than in any other EU country.

In relation to education, average class sizes at primary level were the second highest in the EU in 2010, though the early school-leaver rate is better than the EU average. The proportion of the population aged 25-34 that has completed third-level education is the third highest in the EU.

The number of homes built in 2010 was 14,600, back to the level it was at in 1970 and down from a peak of almost 90,000 in 2006.

Call for mass civil disobedience ahead of …

Worst of slump ‘yet to come’

Autumn of strikes edges closer

Implementation of Italy’s reforms crucial …

Hit by stinging austerity measures, the Greek …

 

Dublin: Where Lies The Limits To Austerity Inflicted Poverty In Ireland? : Special Report

13 Sep

(There Is, So Much That Can Be Robbed From Those With Nothing and Nothing Can Be Robbed From Those With Much)

DUBLIN (Reuters) – Aisling McNiffe’s voice crackles when she talks about her son’s school prospects.

Jack, a chirpy, fair-haired six-year old with a fondness for Toy Story movies, is the only person in the world known to have both Down’s Syndrome and CINCA Syndrome, a degenerative disease that causes crippling headaches, severe arthritis, skin rashes, deafness and blindness.

To match Special Report IRELAND/CUTS

If Jack had started school four years ago, he would have been assigned a dedicated special needs assistant to help him through a full day. But government cuts since Ireland’s housing crash in 2008 mean he will only be able to attend for an hour a day, damaging his chances of learning to communicate through pictures or sign language.

“What do they see my son as?” asks the 38-year old former air hostess, struggling to be heard as Jack plays with a music box in the living room of their bungalow in the village of Ardclough.

“He obviously doesn’t mean anything to them.”

In an age of austerity, Ireland is struggling to decide what is important. Dublin has pushed through nearly 21 billion euros (18 billion pounds) in spending cuts and tax increases, equivalent to more than 13 percent of Gross Domestic Product (GDP). Investors have been impressed by the calm in Ireland. In contrast to Greece, Britain and Spain, there has been little social unrest.

But as the cuts continue, it’s getting harder to decide what should go next. The seven-month old coalition government, headed by Enda Kenny‘s centre-right Fine Gael party, needs to find another 12 billion euros in savings or increased tax receipts between 2012 and 2015 — probably more if global economic prospects worsen. The cuts are required by the European Union and International Monetary Fund in exchange for 67.5 billion euros in loans. Outgoing European Central Bank chief economist Juergen Stark told the Irish Times this week that the country should cut further.

In its initial rush to shore up public finances, the previous centrist Fianna Fail government went after easy targets such as assistants for special needs children like Jack. The problem, as new Finance Minister Michael Noonan recently put it, is that “a lot of the low-hanging fruit has been picked.”

As other European countries are discovering, the next stage will require not just tough decisions, but a complete rethink.

“We are in a situation where right across the developed world, fiscal policy is tightening and the population is going to have to get used to getting less from the government and paying more for what they do get,” says Eoin Fahy, chief economist at Kleinwort Benson Investors.

DISASTER ZONES

After four years of austerity, public patience in Ireland is wearing thin.

Teachers, nurses and council workers have ended up with huge mortgages which are now worth more than their homes, while property developers and bankers have held on to gold-plated pensions and luxurious overseas holiday homes.

Many ordinary Irish see scope for more cuts. But they are also angry that the lean times have not brought a much bigger change of thinking from the go-go years of the “Celtic tiger” economy, when public spending more than tripled in a decade, while basic services barely improved.

Take hospitals. Even on quiet days, emergency departments in large Irish hospitals can be chaotic. People on trolleys clog corridors, sometimes waiting days for a proper bed. Exhausted doctors dodge between them as they try to grab a few hours’ sleep, like medics in a disaster zone.

Emergency departments have got even busier since the financial crash because fewer people can afford doctors’ fees or private health insurance. Staff reductions have forced some patients to wait twice as long to see specialists for non-emergency procedures. If their condition worsens, they too end up in the emergency ward.

In Dublin, savings made on nursing homes mean elderly patients, who used to wait up to two months to be re-housed, can end up occupying hospital beds for longer than a year.

“It’s so unbelievably serious and it’s only going to get much, much worse,” said one Irish doctor, who declined to be named because he was not authorised to speak to the media. “We’re putting out fires constantly — there are more people who are coming in acutely sick and there is much less room to practice any kind of preventative medicine.”

Junior doctors’ overtime allowances have been cut, but the doctor said that isn’t the main problem. “What galls us are the inefficiencies that are being paid for while there are very important things that are not being paid for,” he said.

Hospital transport is just one example. A 2009 government-commissioned report into public expenditure recommended cutting 20 percent from the annual 50 million euro bill for non-emergency patient transport. But hospitals still pay for taxis and private ambulances.

Health Minister James Reilly, himself a doctor, has pledged to overhaul the health service. But health workers say he will struggle to overturn deeply entrenched trade union positions and navigate the politics. Changes have already raised hackles. Kenny’s Fine Gael party expelled one of its lawmakers last month after he voted against a government decision to close a hospital in his constituency. A party colleague from the same region who voted in favour of the measure was spat at outside parliament, and an anonymous caller threatened to shoot him in the head.

“I would have little to no confidence that these inefficiencies could be ironed out,” the doctor says. “No matter how good the politicians are, the labour unions are just too strong and the politicians are too afraid to take them on.”

PAY RATES

One reason the electorate punished the previous administration was the years of profligacy that eventually led to the EU-IMF bailout. Between 1999 and 2009, Irish public spending more than tripled, much of it to fund pay rises rather than improve services. Average public sector pay levels increased by 35 percent over the period: in Germany, that rise was just 16 percent.

Conscious of this, Prime Minister Kenny has done away with the more lavish trappings of office, making his cabinet members come to some meetings in a minibus rather than their own saloon cars. Such gestures have so far helped keep his popularity rating high. He and his ministers are, however, still among the best paid in the world.

On average, public servants’ pay has been reduced by 15 percent in total since 2009. Some argue it should be cut again.

“If you compare the wages in the public sector with the wages in the public sector of other countries in the euro area, together with Greece, Ireland is still ranking top,” Stark told the Irish Times.

He said civil service wages are “significantly lower” in other countries in the euro zone which provide financial support to Ireland.

“The only way I can see realistically that you can make savings and maintain services is to cut pay,” says Joe Durkan, associate research professor at the Economic and Social Research Institute (ESRI), an independent think-tank that is partly funded by the Department of Finance.

“You need more flexibility and to row back on the big increases that went to higher-paid public servants throughout the ’90s and 2000s. We did all these things when it looked like we had plenty of money. We can no longer afford them.”

But the new government has vowed to honour a pledge by the previous administration not to target public sector pay again. It also wants to avoid forced redundancies, as long as unions agree to voluntary job cuts, longer working hours and to persuade their members to be redeployed.

Ireland’s energy minister has rejected Stark’s calls for more savings: “You can come to a position where you have too much austerity,” Pat Rabbitte told state broadcaster RTE on Monday.

Kevin Callinan, the deputy general secretary of IMPACT, the main public sector trade union, shakes his head at the idea of further pay cuts.

“There’s a view out there on the right that if the money isn’t there you have to have job cuts, you have to have pay cuts. That’s an okay view until you have to run a country,” he said from his union’s offices, a stone’s throw from one of the country’s main children’s hospitals.

IMPACT even opposes wage reductions for the higher paid public servants, saying that before the cutbacks, only 15 percent of public workers earned more than 60,000 euros annually. Trade unions argue that the deal to protect public workers’ pay has helped cushion Ireland from unrest.

Push them any further, says Callinan, and they could take to the streets.

“This deal is a safety net for members. It’s the glue that is holding a lot of this together,” he said. “If the agreement wasn’t there or the other side reneged on the agreement it would be a very big mistake to take for granted that people would be as passive as they have been.”

SOMETHING GOOD

That almost certainly means that the extra billions will have to come from services and social welfare payments, and tax increases.

Kenny has ordered a review of all state spending. That analysis, which wraps up later this month, will help form the basis of what the government says will be a complete overhaul of the public sector.

A moratorium on recruitment and promotions, and retirement packages that include a tax-free lump sum of one and a half times final salary, have already brought down the number of people working in the state sector by more than five percent since the end of 2008 to just under 303,500 at the end of March. The government wants to reduce numbers by a further eight percent by 2015.

But a progress report in June warned that slimming down public services was likely to hit the most vulnerable in society — children, the elderly, the sick and unemployed.

Annie Matthews is about as vulnerable as you can get. Born with a rare neurological condition, schizencephaly, the two-year old has holes on either side of her brain and can have up to 100 seizures a day. She wasn’t meant to make it to her first birthday, never mind her second.

“She is immobile, she can’t walk, talk or hold things. She can’t swallow, she has no sucking. She is blind but generally she is a happy-go-lucky child,” said Suzanne Matthews, cradling her daughter through yet another fit in their living room in the Dublin seaside town of Skerries.

Annie has perfect hearing and loves U.S. blues musician Joe Bonamassa. She also needs 24-hour care. Suzanne and her partner Carl Brennan have three other children, aged seven to 13, and would be lost without the nursing respite care they get from a local charity, the Jack & Jill Foundation.

But the foundation’s state funding has been reduced and the 40 hours’ weekly help Suzanne and Carl used to get is down to 32. “It has left a strain on us,” said Suzanne. “If it was to be taken away from us altogether….” she trails off.

“I wouldn’t have been able to cope without them. I’d probably be in a mental institution if it wasn’t for Jack and Jill.”

Jack & Jill raises 80 percent of its funds privately, largely through donations of old mobile phones. At an annual 2.7 million euros, its budget is a touch less than the annual cost of furnishing Ireland’s 227 senators and members of parliament with prepaid envelopes. The charity says it has supported more than 1,300 children with brain damage and it saves the government money by helping parents look after their children at home instead of sending them to live in hospital.

Founder Jonathan Irwin hopes the government will use the spending review to increase the use of private groups that can save the country money.

“There is a lot of fat and duplication,” he says. “Let’s get something good out of the recession.”

REFORM AND RESENTMENT

That’s a hope echoed by Ed Walsh, the founding president of the University of Limerick, and an influential voice in Irish education. He wants Ireland’s European and IMF creditors to force through deep changes.

“The whole public sector is ripe for reform,” he says, suggesting the school system could be taken on first.

Ireland has dropped down the rich-country rankings in literacy and mathematics over the past decade; multinational companies, a key source of employment, want the country to improve education standards.

Teachers’ salaries have been reduced by around 14 percent since the beginning of 2009 and they have agreed to work up to 36 hours extra a year for no additional pay.

But Walsh, who has served on Ireland’s National Council for Curriculum and Assessment, believes wages need to be cut further to allow investment elsewhere. Newly qualified teachers earn less than the OECD average of just under $29,000 (18,267 pounds). But experienced teachers are among the best paid in the world. Reuters calculations and OECD data put the top basic salary for an Irish teacher, at around $52,700, well above the OECD average of $48,000. Secondary school teachers spend some 173 days a year in the classroom, against an average of 184 days in the developed world.

The main teachers’ union, the Irish National Teachers Organisation (INTO), has rejected Walsh’s calls for further pay cuts. “Primary teachers along with other public servants had already taken a 14 percent reduction in pay,” says Sheila Nunan, general secretary of the INTO. “In addition to that they are dealing with the same increased taxation and health contributions as every other worker.”

With unemployment rates around 14 percent and the EU and IMF demanding savings, Walsh believes there has never been a better time to reform.

“A government would be applauded for taking a firm line in eliminating waste from the public sector,” he said. “It’s not necessarily as difficult politically now as it might have been a few years ago.”

Jack’s mother sees things more fundamentally. As the voice on her son’s music box sings “Row, row, row your boat,” Aisling McNiffe’s desperation is obvious. The mother of two had hoped school would give Jack a chance to develop new skills, and her more time for his older sister.

“The dark ages are gone when children with special needs would have been left in institutions rocking in a corner,” she insists as her son plays on the floor.

“Sometimes I wonder would they be delighted if Jack died. This is a human rights issue.”

To match Special Report IRELAND/CUTS

(This story is corrected in the 7th paragraph to add the word “economist.”)

(Edited by Simon Robinson and Sara Ledwith)

NEWS UPDATE: ADDITION:

DUBLIN (Reuters) – Ireland’s deputy prime minister rejected a call from the ECB’s departing chief economist Juergen Stark to ramp up its austerity programme and cut public sector pay again, describing it as “not helpful” in comments published on Tuesday.

Stark made the call in an interview hours before his shock resignation on Friday, increasing pressure on the government to go beyond the 3.6 billion euros (3.1 billion pounds) in austerity measures planned for next year and putting its pledge to protect public sector wages under scrutiny.

“Individuals — in this case an individual who has now resigned from the post — inventing new agendas for where the government should be going is not helpful,” Eamon Gilmore was quoted as saying by the Irish Independent.

“We have an agreement, we have a programme with the troika (of the ECB, IMF and European Commission), we’re implementing it and we’re going to continue to do that,” he told the daily.

“We haven’t been asked by the troika to go beyond it and we don’t intend to go beyond it,” he said.

Stark, the top German at the European Central Bank (ECB), resigned in a conflict over its bond-buying programme but remains on its board until a successor is appointed.

The ECB is part of the troika of official creditors, along with the International Monetary Fund and the European Commission, which monitors Dublin’s bailout progress. The ECB has lent banks in Ireland nearly 100 billion euros in emergency liquidity.

In an interview with the Irish Times published on Monday, Stark called on the Irish government to be more ambitious in cutting the public deficit ratio and complained that the wages for civil servants in Ireland were significantly higher than in many countries providing financial support to Ireland.

“That kind of encouragement from the sideline, we don’t need it and it doesn’t help what we have to do,” the Irish Times quoted Gilmore as saying.

Ireland has cut public sector pay by an average of 15 percent since 2008 but Stark said Irish and Greek workers were still better paid than their counterparts across Europe despite both countries being forced into emergency bailouts.

Gilmore said the government would adhere to a pledge not to cut public sector pay again and avoid forced job cuts as long as unions agree to voluntary redundancies and longer working hours.

Breaking this “Croke Park” deal could trigger industrial unrest and undermine the government’s ability to get Ireland’s budget deficit under an EU limit of 3 percent of gross domestic product(GDP) by 2015 from an estimated 10 percent this year.

“We’re honouring the Croke Park agreement, and we’re going to honour it and we’re going to work it,” Gilmore told the Irish Independent.

Ireland’s Finance Minister Michael Noonan, a member of the senior party in the coalition government, the centre-right Fine Gael party, has already said he is considering raising the level of adjustment for the 2012 budget to 4 billion euros from 3.6 billion euros currently.

Stark’s intervention, however, makes things difficult for Labour, the junior coalition partner led by Gilmore, who said during the election campaign that a vote for them meant things would be done “Labour’s way” rather than “Frankfurt’s way.”

Gimlore said the government had not agreed to an IMF request for Ireland to increase its privatisation budget to 5 billion euros from 2 billion euros.

“We have never agreed to 5 billion euros,” he told the Irish Independent.

(Reporting by Conor Humphries; Editing by Anna Willard

Kinsale, Co Cork: New Awareness Campaign To Highlight Youth Polydrug Abuse

12 Sep

THOUSANDS of Co Cork homes are to be targeted in a three-pronged campaign tackling drug and alcohol abuse among young people. The first phase of the drive — which includes the launch of a website and two awareness days — kicks off with the distribution of 20,000 copies of a booklet providing information, support and advice to parents and teenagers.

The booklet, entitled “Mise, My Life” will be distributed to parents and students as part of a new drive by the Kinsale Youth Support Service, which was set up in August 2010 to help young people affected by mental health problems or by alcohol or drug misuse.

“The booklet contains information, advice and tips on how to contact various support agencies. It also contains advice for parents on how to identify teenagers who are having problems with alcohol, drugs or mental health issues,” said Sergeant Ian O’Callaghan, crime prevention officer for the Cork West Garda Division.

www.drugfreeworld.org

Sgt O’Callaghan also said that more detailed information can be found on the accompanying website,

(*which is: www.kyss.ie 

(Editor’s note: *The website is still under construction).

Follow these LINKS:

 www.drugs.ie & www.spunout.ie & www.teenline.ie & www.letsomeoneknow.ie

Also: THIS  BLOG: https://drugsinfonewslineireland.wordpress.com

Glasnevin, Dublin: Drugs Worth €40,000 Seized As Gardai Raid Cannabis Growhouse

10 Sep

Cannabis plants with a value of up to €40,000 have been seized in Dublin.

Gardaí have seized cannabis plants with a street value of €40,000 in Dublin.

The plants were discovered in the search of a house in the Glasnevin area of Dublin.

Gardaí uncovered a functioning growhouse with 100 cannabis plants.

No arrests have been made and a forensic examination of the scene is ongoing.

www.garda.ie

Dublin: Winter Fuel Allowance Among Imminent Welfare Cuts

10 Sep

Social welfare cuts to come into effect

Cuts to the fuel allowance for some 630,000 social welfare recipients will come into effect from this week.

The cuts to the household benefits package and the fuel allowance will reduce payments to pensioners and other social welfare recipients by almost €20 a month and up to €35.29 during the winter months.

It’s expected savings of up to €65m a year will be achieved due to these cutbacks.

NEWS UPDATE:

Sinn Féin: The people of Ireland have paid enough

Sinn Féin has delivered a message to Government saying the Irish people have had enough of cuts.

Speaking today at the party’s Ard Fheis in Belfast, Sinn Féin Vice President Mary Lou McDonald said the Government must remember the plight of ordinar people when conducting its Comprehensive Expenditure Review.

“Minister, look to the top – cut at the top, because that’s where you can cut,” she told delegates.

“The ordinary people have taken enough.”

Donegal TD Pearse Doherty said that working people had “paid enough” to ease the country’s financial crisis, calling on the Fine Gael/Labour coalition to shift the burden.

Mr Doherty said the EU/IMF bailout deal was crippling the south’s economy and its society.

“Having promised to renegotiate this bad deal, the new Fine Gael-Labour government have acquiesced to the spirit and letter of the failed Fianna Fáil policy,” he said.

“In exchange for EU and IMF loans our so-called partners in Europe are forcing us to starve our domestic economy of the stimulus it needs while pouring billions of tax-payers’ monies into toxic banks.

“Only a few short weeks ago Fine Gael and Labour threw another €16.4bn of public money into the banks. Yet in the same month they were promising up to €4bn in cuts and tax hikes in the December budget.

“For those of you struggling with lower wages, rising prices and the unjust Universal Social Charge, the Government is saying that you must pay more; they are saying that you must now pay a new household charge, water charges, property taxes and increased income tax bills.

“Sinn Féin says that you have paid enough. There is a better way.”

He called for investment in jobs and services and called for the “banks and bondholders to shoulder their fair share of the burden they helped create”.

He also said an independent distressed mortgage resolution body should help families in fear of losing their homes.

Mr Doherty added: “Our choice would be to change direction and rebuild our economy in a way that puts people first.”

Party president Gerry Adams is due to deliver his keynote speech later tonight in which he is expected to suggest that the party wants to contest the Presidential election.

Stormont Agriculture Minister Michelle Gildernew is believed to be the likely candidate.

Last night Deputy First Minister Martin McGuinness announced he wants his party to lead an all-Ireland debate on building a new republic ahead of the centenary of the Easter Rising of 1916.

Mr McGuinness said that republicans had to continue to work towards Irish unity and he called for a wider debate on the issue.

He added: “I see unionists as brothers and sisters to be loved and cherished as we continue to develop a genuine process of reconciliation on our journey to the New Republic.”

His call for republicans to reach out to unionists followed the historic decision of Protestant Clergyman Rev David Latimer to address the Sinn Féin conference on last night.

Rev Latimer, the first Northern Protestant church figure to speak at a Sinn Féin Ard Fheis, praised Mr McGuinness’s work for peace and called for an end to religious division.

NEWS UPDATE: ADDITION:

IRELAND has a huge number of unemployed young people, and many of those without jobs also lack skills and qualifications — posing a great difficulty in reversing the unemployment trend.

Job losses are on the increase throughout the EU and experts warn that Ireland needs to do something about its growing army of young jobless.

Five EU countries, however, are bucking the trend with falling unemployment rates, but this is creating an even deeper division with the rest of the member states, where jobless rates continue to rise.

There was a decrease in unemployment of close to 750,000 in the 11 months up to March this year, but then the trend reversed, adding 83,000 to the dole queues in the four months to July.

This information was compiled by Eurostat, a division of the European Commission located in Luxembourg.

The EU’s mission to Ireland’s unemployment forecast for this year dropped slightly from 14.5% to 14.3%, Eurostat remain deeply concerned that this will be difficult to reverse any time soon.

More than half those on the register have been there for a year and, with more than one in five young people out of work, the fears of a jobless recovery are being played out.

Not only has the number out of work jumped from around 4% to more than 14% in such a short time, but the profile of youth who are unemployed has changed dramatically from the past.

Now a big number are without skills or higher education, having been laid off from the construction industry.

The EU’s overall youth unemployment rate has improved very slightly and in July was at 20.7%. But this varies greatly from country to country, with 46% of those under the age of 25 being out of work in Spain, while the figure for Austria is 8%.

This reflects the growing divergences between EU members, with six with relatively low unemployment continuing to see an increase in jobs. Austria has gone from 4.3% to 3.7%. Other countries seeing an improvement are Germany, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Finland and Sweden.

Spain, Greece, Latvia, Lithuania all have higher jobless rates than Ireland, while France has seen a considerable jump in two months to close to 10%.

Reports say that consumers’ fears of unemployment have risen sharply — bad news for any hope of an economic recovery through increased domestic spending, while managers in the services sector are equally pessimistic.

NEWS UPDATE:

People on ‘verge of despair’ | 04/11/2010

Carbon tax voucher scheme rejected | 10/11/2010

Cuts to fuel, electricity and phone allowances for some 630,000 social welfare recipients have come into force from this week.

The cuts to the household benefits package and the fuel allowance will reduce payments to pensioners and other social welfare recipients by almost €20 a month and up to €35.29 during the winter months.

The cuts will result in savings in 2011 of €17 million and €65 million in a full year, the Department of Social Protection has said.

The cuts approved by Government last July were regrettable but necessary to achieve savings due to our commitments to the IMF-EU-ECB troika, Minister for Social Protection Joan Burton had said.

Allowances will return to 2007 levels, meaning those in receipt of these contributions will receive €8 less towards electricity a month and €8 less towards their monthly gas allowance.

Those in receipt of a smokeless fuel allowance will have the extra €3.90 weekly allowance they receive during the winter months abolished.

The telephone allowance will be cut from €25.91 a month to €22.22 except in the case of Eircom customers – the Government has negotiated a total saving of €26.86 off their bills each month.

The department said it will continue to provide for vulnerable people with special or additional heating needs through the heating supplement and exceptional needs payment scheme under the supplementary welfare allowance plan.

“Assistance with the cost of fuel, electricity, gas and telephone bills has always been an important element of social welfare provision and will continue. My department will spend over €530 million, over half a billion euros, in 2011 on these schemes,” Ms Burton said.

Dublin: Many Homeless People Rescued As Seven Fire Tenders Tackle Fire At Squat

10 Sep

There was severe traffic disruption in Dublin this morning after a fire broke out in the city centre.

Smoke billows from the building near the Matt Talbot Bridge (Pic: Trevor Hunt)

Smoke billows from the building near the Matt Talbot Bridge (Pic: Trevor Hunt)

Seven units of the fire brigade were at the scene (Pic: Ray Kennedy)

Seven units of the fire brigade were at the scene (Pic: Ray Kennedy)

Play Stop

One News: Homeless people rescued from burning building
 
A number of homeless people had to be rescued from a burning building in Dublin this morning after fire broke out on the top floor.

Seven units of Dublin fire brigade at one stage tackled the blaze at the property on City Quay beside the Ulster Bank headquarters.

There was severe traffic disruption in the city centre as a number of streets around the Custom House and the Irish Financial Services Centre area were closed.

Units from Tara Street, North Strand and Dolphin’s Barn tackled the blaze, which was confined to the top floor of the three-storey building.

Acting district fire officer Donal Petherbridge said the alarm was raised shortly after 8.30am and “a number of homeless people were led from the building”.

He said the blaze was brought under control and fire officers using breathing apparatus carried out a room-by-room search.

An investigation has begun to establish how the fire broke out.

AA Roadwatch has said that Memorial Bridge and George’s Quay have reopened, but Moss Street remains closed.

Meanwhile, the Dublin Region Homeless Executive has issued an appeal for those affected by the fire to contact them if they need assistance.

They are urged to contact the Homeless Executive on freefone 1800707707 – to access temporary accommodation.

They can also contact the Dublin rough sleeper team on 01-8720185.

Dublin: Artist To Live On River Liffey Desert Island For Festival

9 Sep

IRELAND IS to get a new island in September. It will be 10 metres wide, have one occupant and be in the Liffey by Dublin’s International Financial Services Centre for just two weeks.

Man-made desert island built in River Liffey

PHOTO ALBUM: LINK:

http://picasaweb.google.com/106601042721625135361

It will be created by artist Fergal McCarthy as part of this year’s Absolut Fringe Festival, the programme for which is announced today. From September 10th he will live on the island full-time for 10 days – although he will have a nearby rescue boat and many thousands of passers-by keeping an eye on him. “I love the idea of living on the Liffey, because it feels so underused, forgotten and overlooked,” explained McCarthy of his project, titled No Man’s Land. 

“It’s playful, but there is also the thought of the desert island as a metaphor for the times we live in as a country, which has been cast adrift slightly in the past year or two. Given that it’s located in the heart of the financial district, people can see it that way if they want.”

His island will be halfway across a 120-metre wide part of the river and will consist of a pontoon perched on top of concrete-filled tractor wheels.

It will be attached to ropes that will allow it move with the tide, and it will be covered in a “sandy glue” that will not wash off into the river. Palm trees, of course, will be a feature.

McCarthy – who last year placed large Monopoly houses on the river during the festival – will have a gas stove, a portable toilet and lights to keep the island glowing at night. His tent “will be lined with timber on the inside in case anything is jettisoned across the Liffey”.

No Man’s Land is among the highlights of the fringe, running from September 10th-25th. Emphasising its reputation for innovative and eclectic theatre and art, the theme of this year’s fringe is Brave New World. Festival director Róise Goan said: “It’s a response to the situation we find ourselves in. We sent out a call asking artists to imagine what a radically altered Ireland might look like and what art can contribute to changing our world.”

Highlights will include Twenty Ten , written by 80 anonymous contributors, and tracking a “tumultuous year” through a week of “episodes” that will be put together into a six-hour whole. Other shows include Man of Valour – about an “office drone” with a wild imagination – and Eternal Rising of the Sun , a dance show focusing on a single mother.

An Australian programme will bring four acclaimed works from Down Under, while Whenever I Get Blown Up I Think Of You will be a personal take on London’s 7/7 bombings.

Once again, several unusual venues will feature, including a car park, “peepholes” in clothes shops and a day-long series of tours on South William Street.

The Absolut Fringe will be inaugurated on September 10th with a performance by street theatre group Macnas – a free but ticketed event at the National Museum of Ireland at Collins Barracks.

Further details: www.Fringefest.com 

London: Common Chronic Diseases Killing-Off World’s Poor ‘While Rich Profit Greatly’

9 Sep

LONDON (Reuters) – Ten years after committing to fight AIDS, the United Nations is taking on an even bigger bunch of killers — common chronic diseases — in what is shaping up to be a bruising battle between big business, Western governments and the world’s poor.

Tobacco, food and drinks companies are in the firing line for peddling products linked to cancer, diabetes and heart disease, while politicians in the rich world are accused of failing to set firm targets or provide funds for a decent fight.

“This is a once in a generation opportunity. We could save millions of lives here, and it’s shameful and immoral that industry lobbying has put short-term profits in front of a public health disaster,” Rebecca Perl of the World Lung Foundation (WLF) told Reuters. WLF has been involved in tetchy preliminary talks for several months.

The fear is that big business has successfully lobbied rich governments to be only half-hearted in battling non-communicable diseases, or NCDs, despite predictions that they could cripple healthcare systems of developing countries.

A bit like climate change, preventing and treating non-communicable diseases requires wealthy nations and multinational firms to take a near-term financial hit to help prevent poor nations being overwhelmed in the future.

In these austere times, fears are already growing that a high-level U.N. meeting in New York on September 19-20 — only the second to focus on disease after one on AIDS in 2001 — could be a flop.

The gathering will include scores of delegates from U.N. member states, including around 20 heads of government as well as representatives from public health groups, non-governmental organisations, the private sector and academia.

According to those close to the negotiations, a draft version of the political declaration that will form the cornerstone of the U.N.’s thinking on NCDs contains many platitudes but few tangible commitments.

“There are no strong, time-bound commitments in there,” Ann Keeling, chair of the NCD Alliance which groups 2,000 health organisations from around the world, told Reuters. “It’s a great disappointment from that point of view.”

NOT ROCKET SCIENCE

The scale of the problem is immense. Around 36 million people die every year from NCDs — around 80 percent of them in poor nations where prevention programmes are virtually non-existent and access to diagnosis and treatment is very limited.

As a result, death rates from NCDs are nearly twice as high in poor countries as in the industrialised world.

Preventing these deaths — or at least a good proportion of them — isn’t rocket science. Proven measures such as reducing smoking rates, improving diets, making simple drugs available and boosting exercise could knock a huge hole in that figure.

“There is a common story that unites cancer, cardiovascular, diabetes and respiratory medicines around tobacco, alcohol, diet and exercise — and that is where we have the most cost-effective impact,” says David Kerr, president of the European Society of Medical Oncology.

The crucial sticking points are targets, taxes and money.

Stopping a billion people from lighting up every day or providing cheap drugs like aspirin and statins to prevent heart attacks and strokes may be cost effective, but the payback won’t be quick and it is unlikely to win many votes.

“The time horizon for the return on that investment is very long and beyond many political horizons. So it’s difficult to get people to commit to these kinds of resources,” says Gordon Tomaselli, president of the American Heart Association.

The NCD Alliance says spending $9 billion (5.6 billion pounds) a year on tobacco control, food advice and treatment for people with heart risks would avert tens of millions of untimely deaths this decade.

Is that a lot? By comparison, caring for HIV patients in developing countries already costs around $13 billion a year.

In contrast to the AIDS fight that was the UN’s focus a decade ago, the price of drugs is less an issue here, since many are available as cheap generics, although there are disputes over the cost of some more pricey products like insulin.

STUBBING OUT TOBACCO

The sharpest focus this time is on makers of fatty foods, sugary drinks and — above all — the tobacco industry, which World Health Organisation director general Margaret Chan has described as “an industry that has much money and no qualms about using it in the most devious ways imaginable.”

With tobacco predicted to kill more than a billion people this century, if current trends persist, the public health lobby says if the U.N. meeting does nothing else, it should at least make a smoke-free world one of its central targets.

Smoking alone causes one in three cases of lung disease, one in four cases of cancer, and one in 10 cases of heart disease, says Perl. “So look what a bang you get for your buck there.”

Conflicted governments will find it tough. Japan Tobacco, for example, is 50 percent owned by the Japanese government, and the massive profits of U.S. cigarette makers bolster the U.S. economy.

In China, home to a third of the world’s male smokers, the combination of taxes and sales from China National Tobacco — a wholly state-owned entity — account for around 9 percent of the government’s annual fiscal revenues.

This is all the more reason, according to Paul Lincoln of the UK National Heart Forum and Jaakko Tuomilehto, an epidemiologist at the University of Helsinki, to hike cigarette taxes, curb advertising and insist on graphic health warnings.

“There are no more excuses,” said Lincoln. “We have the know-how. The challenge as ever in public health is to overcome the ideological and vested interests.”

Tuomilehto is more blunt: “It’s a crazy thing to have a product in the shops that kills every second consumer — it’s madness.”

(Editing by Sonya Hepinstall)

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