GLOBAL DANGERS TO JOURNALISTS

NUJ Belfast & District Branch Chair Bob Miller opens the seminar  Photo: © Michael Fisher

NUJ Belfast & District Branch Chair Bob Miller opens the seminar Photo: © Michael Fisher

NUJ Belfast and District Branch held a seminar at the Linenhall Library Belfast on global dangers to journalists. The President of the International Federation of Journalists Jim Boumelha was among the speakers. Local photographer and NUJ member of honour Kevin Cooper spoke about dangers for journalists in Northern Ireland. Another branch member photographer Sarah Hunter spoke about her experiences in Somalia and introduced a Somali journalist and asylum seeker. Ciaran Ó Maolain also addressed the gathering. Afterwards I introduced a round table discussion with the speakers about human rights issues of concern to journalists.

NUJ Photographer Kevin Cooper addresses seminar  Photo: © Michael Fisher

NUJ Photographer Kevin Cooper addresses seminar Photo: © Michael Fisher

Stressing the importance of the union’s Code of Conduct Kevin Cooper said his guidelines were to be true to yourself and be prepared to stand up on issues of concern. He said journalists had a right to do their work unhindered. Despite the peace process, some journalists in Northern Ireland were working under threat, he said.

Photographer Sarah Hunter, another member of the Belfast and District Branch, spoke about the dangers to journalists in Somalia, where she has done work for various NGOs.

Photographer Sarah Hunter addresses seminar Photo: © Michael Fisher

Photographer Sarah Hunter addresses seminar Photo: © Michael Fisher

Ciaran Ó Maolain speaking at the NUJ seminar  Photo: © Michael Fisher

Ciaran Ó Maolain speaking at the NUJ seminar Photo: © Michael Fisher

IFJ President Jim Boumelha Photo: © Michael Fisher

IFJ President Jim Boumelha Photo: © Michael Fisher

A5 AUGHNACLOY

A5 Western Transit Corridor  Photo: Mouchel

A5 Western Transit Corridor Photo: Mouchel

The A5 dualling scheme from the border at Aughnacloy to Derry (described as a ‘motorway’ by Sinn Féin) is like a STOP/GO/STOP board for traffic. One minute it’s on, then it’s held up, now it seems to be on again. It’s reported tonight by the Ulster Herald that Northern Ireland’s Deputy First Minister Martin McGuinness has announced that the Irish government has agreed to review its decision to withdraw a £400million funding pledge for the A5 dual carriageway. Speaking in the Stormont Assembly Mr McGuinness said the development emerged at last week’s North-South Ministerial Council meeting in Armagh.

“We had a very constructive discussion at the NSMC and the Taoiseach gave a clear commitment to seek additional structural funds to restore their contribution to this essential North-South project,” said Mr McGuinness. The Irish government had originally pledged in the region of £400m towards the construction of a new £850m 55-mile dual carriageway between Derry and Aughnacloy, which would link in with Dublin bound traffic via the N2 towards Emyvale and Monaghan. However the funding pledge was withdrawn in November 2011.

Welcoming the announcement, West Tyrone MP Pat Doherty said, “A restoration of the funds from Dublin will reignite this entire project. At the same time, Sinn Féin will continue to engage with the North’s Regional Development Minister Danny Kennedy to ensure the legal issues which have delayed the northern end of the project are expedited without delay.”

 

AEJ THERESA VILLIERS

NI Secretary of State Theresa Villiers MP  Photo: © Michael Fisher

NI Secretary of State Theresa Villiers MP Photo: © Michael Fisher

This is the text of the speech which the Secretary of State for Northern Ireland Theresa Villiers MP delivered at a lunch in Belfast I organised last Friday on behalf of the Association of European Journalists (Irish Section). Most of the AEJ members are based in Dublin.   

NI Secretary of State Theresa Villiers MP  Photo: © Michael Fisher

NI Secretary of State Theresa Villiers MP Photo: © Michael Fisher

“It is a great pleasure to speak to the Association of European Journalists here in Belfast this afternoon and I am grateful to Eileen Dunne, Martin Allioth and Michael Fisher for their kind invitation to do so. In my remarks today I’d like to set out the government’s position in relation to the so-called ‘On the Runs’. And I’d like to highlight some of the challenges facing both the government and the executive as we work together to build a better future for everyone in Northern Ireland.

Victims

As regards ‘on the runs’, I’d like to start by reiterating just how much the government appreciates the deep sense of anger felt about what has happened. For many people the judgement in the Downey case accompanied as it was by details of the scheme put in place by the last government to deal with on the runs has been a cause of considerable distress and grave concern. I recognise that the people who must be feeling that distress and concern at its most intense levels are the families of those murdered in the appalling terrorist atrocity in Hyde Park over 30 years ago who hoped that justice might at long last be done.

NI Secretary of State Theresa Villiers MP  Photo: © Michael Fisher

NI Secretary of State Theresa Villiers MP Photo: © Michael Fisher

But this issue affects victims of terrorism more widely people, like the relatives of the Kingsmill massacre who I met last week – people who have never seen the killers of their loved ones brought to justice. Nobody who meets the victims of terrorism here in Northern Ireland can fail to be deeply moved by the pain and suffering that many of them still feel long after the events that caused their terrible loss and bereavement.

And I am very, very sorry that what’s happened in recent days will have revived painful memories for many victims, putting them through the agony of loss all over again. This controversy is a reminder to us all that in any process for dealing with the past, it is the interests of victims that must come first.

NI Secretary of State Theresa Villiers MP  Photo: © Michael Fisher

NI Secretary of State Theresa Villiers MP Photo: © Michael Fisher

On the Runs

The arrangements for dealing with OTRs were put in place by the previous government beginning in 2000 and then accelerated after the failure of the Northern Ireland Offences Bill in 2006.

Essentially the process involved Sinn Fein submitting a list of individuals living outside the United Kingdom who believed that if they returned here to Northern Ireland or any other part of the UK that they might be wanted by the police in connection with terrorist offences committed before the 1998 Belfast Agreement. These names were then checked by the police and in some cases by the Public Prosecution Service.

If that checking process concluded that the lack of evidence available at the time meant that there was no realistic prospect of prosecution, then the individuals concerned were informed that they were no longer wanted by police in a letter signed by a Northern Ireland Office official. Yet the recipients of these letters were also made aware that should sufficient evidence subsequently emerge connecting them with terrorist offences, then they would still be liable for arrest and prosecution in the normal way.

AEJ Chair Martin Alioth and Secretary of State Theresa Villiers MP  Photo: © Michael Fisher

AEJ Chair Martin Alioth and Secretary of State Theresa Villiers MP Photo: © Michael Fisher

Support for the rule of law

So I want to be very clear. No one holding one of these letters should be in any doubt. They are not “get out of jail free cards”.

They will not protect you from arrest or from prosecution and if the police can gather sufficient evidence, you will be subject to all the due processes of law, just like anybody else. The letters do not amount to any immunity, exemption or amnesty something that could only ever be granted by legislation passed by Parliament.

They were statements of fact at the time regarding an individual’s status in connection with the police and prosecuting authorities. It was on that basis that when the current government took office and was made aware of these arrangements that we allowed the list of names submitted to our predecessors  – by that stage coming towards its end  – to continue to be checked.

In total, of the 200 or so cases considered under the scheme, 38 have been looked at since May 2010 and of these 12 received letters saying they were no longer wanted. No letters have been issued by the NIO since December 2012 and as far as this government is concerned, the scheme is over. If at any time we had been presented with a scheme that amounted to immunity, exemption or amnesty from prosecution implied or otherwise we would have stopped it immediately.

This government does not support, and has never supported, immunities, exemptions or amnesties from prosecution. That is we vigorously opposed the Northern Ireland Offences Bill in 2005, that would have introduced what amounted to an amnesty and which was abandoned in the face of widespread condemnation. We believe in the application of the rule of law and due process. And that applies across the board to anyone,  including those who are in possession of a letter under the OTR scheme.

So for the avoidance of any doubt, it needs to be clearly understood by all recipients that no letters which have been issued can be relied on to avoid questioning or prosecution for offences where information or evidence becomes available now or later. And in the case of Mr Downey, it was the fact that the letter he was sent was factually incorrect and misleading that led the judge to rule that an abuse of process had occurred. John Downey should never have been sent a letter saying he wasn’t wanted by the police because at all times he was wanted by the Metropolitan police in relation to the Hyde Park bombing.

NI Secretary of State Theresa Villiers MP  Photo: © Michael Fisher

NI Secretary of State Theresa Villiers MP Photo: © Michael Fisher

Independent review

The Prime Minister reacted swiftly to the concerns about the scheme expressed by the First Minister, the Justice Minister and the broader public by announcing a judge-led investigation of the scheme. Its terms of reference require the inquiry to provide a full public account of the operation and extent of the scheme establish whether other mistakes were made and to make recommendations.

This will be a meaningful, exacting and rigorous process to get to the truth of what happened to provide the answers for which the public are calling, and do everything possible to remove any impediments to the future operation of justice, perceived or real. I expect the judge’s report to be provided to me by the end of May. Until that time there are limits on what I can say because I do not wish to cut across the judge’s work or pre-empt his or her conclusions.

But I do want to say this. No more side deals.

As you will all here appreciate, the collapse of the Downey case and the revelations on OTRs that came with it occurred at a time when the parties in the Northern Ireland executive were discussing possible ways forward on flags, parading and the past. Both the UK and the Irish governments were very supportive of those efforts and hopeful that progress could be made.

Of course I understand that events of the past few days have caused some to question whether the discussions on the so-called Haass issues have a future. But the reality is that whatever the conclusions of the inquiries into the OTR scheme, the issues under consideration in those leaders’ meetings will still need to be dealt with.

The imperative to make progress on flags and parading remain every bit as strong as it was when the Northern Ireland Executive began this process last year. And on the past, one of the lessons of the last 10 days must surely be that more than ever we need an agreed approach and structures that can operate in a balanced and transparent way that commands public confidence.

We need to see an end the era of secret side deals and evasive parliamentary answers that too often characterised the handling of the political process here and undermined confidence in it. I regret the fact that this government did not discuss the OTR scheme with ministers in the executive, particularly when we concluded in August 2012 that anyone wanting to raise new cases should direct them to the devolved authorities. And I have made that clear both to the First Minister and the Justice Minister.

I believe that the way in which the previous government withheld the scheme from Northern Ireland’s politicians, from parliament and from the public in the aftermath of the failure of the legislation in 2005 was wrong and I welcome the apology Labour gave for that earlier this week.

Politics of delivery 

NI Secretary of State Theresa Villiers MP  Photo: © Michael Fisher

NI Secretary of State Theresa Villiers MP Photo: © Michael Fisher

Making progress on flags, parading and the past could free up the space for politicians to focus more on other issues that are critical to our future, such as rebalancing the economy, reforming the public sector and building a genuinely shared future. Because let’s face it, the vast majority of people in Northern Ireland do not wake up on a Monday morning worrying about the past, flags or parades.

While these are important matters, the priorities for most people are issues like jobs, pensions, transport, schools and hospitals and that’s where they expect their politicians to focus their energies. Today we are over half way through the second term of the second Assembly since devolution was restored in May 2007. That’s the longest period of unbroken devolved government in Northern Ireland since the closure of the Stormont Parliament in 1972. And that’s not bad when one considers the number of commentators who predicted that a coalition led by the DUP and Sinn Fein couldn’t last six months let alone more than six years.

And the executive here can cite a number of real achievements, not the least of which is its continued success in bringing foreign direct investment into Northern Ireland. This has helped make Belfast the second most popular city in the UK for FDI.

The First and deputy First Minister have also published Northern Ireland’s first ever locally agreed community relations strategy, Together: Building a United Community. But for all that the executive has proven stable and delivered in a number of areas, I believe that there is a clear public perception out there that more still needs to be done. That comes across in successive opinion polls but also in many conversations I’ve had with business people, journalists and others across Northern Ireland.

Of course I understand that a mandatory coalition that embraces 5 parties with fundamentally divergent views on constitutional, economic and social issues was never going to be easy to operate. Yet one of the central features of the 1998 settlement, as amended at St Andrews in 2006, was precisely to bring together politicians from different traditions and show that they could deliver for the good of the people of Northern Ireland as a whole. And it’s crucial that we make it work. Of course the UK government as guarantor of the devolution settlement under strand one of the Belfast Agreement can encourage and help.

AEJ President Eileen Dunne and Secretary of State Theresa Villiers MP  Photo: © Michael Fisher

AEJ President Eileen Dunne and Secretary of State Theresa Villiers MP Photo: © Michael Fisher

Making difficult choices

But Northern Ireland’s politicians also need to move beyond the issues that have dominated political debate here and recognise that difficult choices are often needed in order to deliver the services the public want and expect. So we have to press ahead with implementing the economic pact we agreed jointly last summer just before the G8.

For the government that means delivering on issues like start-up loans, access to finance and the necessary preparatory work needed to enable a decision to be made in the autumn on whether to devolve corporation tax powers. But the executive too needs to move forward on economic reform such as tackling business red tape, streamlining planning, investing in infrastructure and reforming the public sector.

We want Northern Ireland to be an even more attractive place to do business and to be able to take full advantage of the recovery that is underway as a result of our long term economic plan. And that requires difficult choices on reforming welfare so that Northern Ireland has a system that rewards work, tackles the causes of dependency, and continues to protect those in genuine need while being fair to taxpayers whose money funds the system. And difficult choices are also needed if people in Northern Ireland are to be given the same protection from organised crime as people in Great Britain now have through the work of the National Crime Agency.

In this long running debate I believe that protecting the public from serious organised crime should now be the overriding priority and that the time has therefore come for executive to press ahead on the NCA, so that it is allowed to work properly in Northern Ireland for the good of everyone who lives here.

AEJ Chair Martin Alioth and Secretary of State Theresa Villiers MP  Photo: © Michael Fisher

AEJ Chair Martin Alioth and Secretary of State Theresa Villiers MP Photo: © Michael Fisher

The role of UK government in today’s Northern Ireland 

I want to conclude with a word about the UK government’s role here. Of course devolution has significantly altered that role.

We are no longer responsible for the day to day delivery of public services which is now rightly the responsibility of the executive. But we do remain fully engaged. That’s why despite the deficit we have responded positively to requests from the Chief Constable for significant additional funding for the PSNI in order to combat terrorism and help keep people here safe and secure. It’s why we agreed the economic pact last May enabling us to work more closely with the executive here than any other devolved administration in the rest of the UK.

It’s why we brought the G8 Summit of world leaders here so that the eyes of the world could focus on Northern Ireland as a great place to visit and invest. It’s why we responded swiftly to the request to devolve long haul air passenger duty to help save Northern Ireland’s vital direct transatlantic link. It’s why we fulfilled our pledge to bring about a fair solution for those investors in the Presbyterian Mutual Society who were unable to access their money.

It’s why we’ve safeguarded Northern Ireland’s Assisted Area Status a key priority for the executive and a status which significantly enhances Northern Ireland’s ability attract jobs and investment. It’s why we introduced tax relief for high end film and TV production that was crucial to securing a fourth series of Game of Thrones for the Paint Hall studios in Belfast. And it’s why we’ve supported the executive by maintaining public spending here at 2% per head higher than the UK average. And all of this is underpinned by a government that is not neutral about Northern Ireland’s position in the UK.

Of course, as the agreements make clear, the consent principle is paramount and the future of Northern Ireland will only ever be determined by the people in Northern Ireland. But while the UK government might not have a vote, we do have a voice. And that voice is resoundingly for the United Kingdom with Northern Ireland playing a full and active role within it.

A United Kingdom in which we are all stronger and better together. And in carrying out our responsibilities we are mindful at all times of our duty to work on behalf of the whole community here, in helping to build a stronger economy and a shared future, and a peaceful, stable and prosperous Northern Ireland for everyone.

And that’s a commitment that we’ll continue to deliver with determination and with enthusiasm. Thank you.

SECRETARY OF STATE

Theresa Villers MP  Photo: Conservative Party

Theresa Villers MP Photo: Conservative Party

This is the text of the speech which the Secretary of State for Northern Ireland Theresa Villiers MP is due to deliver at a lunch in Belfast I have organised on behalf of the Association of European Journalists (Irish Section). Most of the AEJ members are based in Dublin. The speech was released in advance last night by the Northern Ireland Office:

“In my remarks today I’d like to set out the Government’s position in relation to the so-called ‘On the Runs’. And I’d like to highlight some of the challenges facing both the Government and the Executive as we work together to build a better future for everyone in Northern Ireland.

Victims

As regards ‘On the Runs’, I’d like to start by reiterating just how much the Government appreciates the deep sense of anger felt about what has happened. For many people the judgement in the Downey case … accompanied as it was by details of the scheme put in place by the last government to deal with On the Runs … has been a cause of considerable distress and grave concern. I recognise that the people who must be feeling that distress and concern at its most intense levels are the families of those murdered in the appalling terrorist atrocity in Hyde Park over 30 years ago … who hoped that justice might at long last be done.

But this issue affects victims of terrorism more widely … people like the relatives of the Kingsmill massacre who I met last week … people who have never seen the killers of their loved ones brought to justice. Nobody who meets the victims of terrorism here in Northern Ireland can fail to be deeply moved by the pain and suffering that many of them still feel long after the events that caused their terrible loss and bereavement.

And I am very, very sorry that what’s happened in recent days will have revived painful memories for many victims, putting them through the agony of loss all over again. This controversy is a reminder to us all that in any process for dealing with the past, it is the interests of victims that must come first.

On the Runs

The arrangements for dealing with OTRs were put in place by the previous government … beginning in 2000 and then accelerated after the failure of the Northern Ireland Offences Bill in 2006. Essentially the process involved Sinn Fein submitting a list of individuals living outside the United Kingdom who believed that if they returned here to Northern Ireland … or any other part of the UK … that they might be wanted by the police in connection with terrorist offences committed before the 1998 Belfast Agreement. These names were then checked by the police and in some cases by the Public Prosecution Service.

If that checking process concluded that the lack of evidence available at the time meant that there was no realistic prospect of prosecution the individuals concerned were informed of that they were no longer wanted by police in a letter signed by a Northern Ireland Office official. Yet the recipients of these letters were also made aware that should sufficient evidence subsequently emerge connecting them with terrorist offences … then they would still be liable for arrest and prosecution in the normal way.

Support for the rule of law

So I want to be very clear. No one holding one of these letters should be in any doubt.

They are not “get out of jail free cards”.

They will not protect you from arrest or from prosecution and if the police can gather sufficient evidence, you will be subject to all the due processes of law, just like anybody else. The letters do not amount to any immunity, exemption or amnesty … something that could only ever be granted by legislation passed by Parliament.

They were statements of fact at the time regarding an individual’s status in connection with the police and prosecuting authorities. It was on that basis that when the current Government took office and was made aware of these arrangements … that we allowed the list of names submitted to our predecessors … by that stage coming towards its end … to continue to be checked. In total of the 200 or so cases considered under the scheme 38 have been looked at since May 2010 … and of these 12 received letters saying they were no longer wanted.

No letters have been issued by the NIO since December 2012 … and as far as this Government is concerned, the scheme is over.

If at any time we had been presented with a scheme that amounted to immunity, exemption or amnesty from prosecution … implied or otherwise … we would have stopped it immediately. My party and this Government do not support, and have never supported, immunities, exemptions or amnesties from prosecution.

That is why the Conservative Party, the Liberal Democrats and many others vigorously opposed Peter Hain’s Northern Ireland Offences Bill in 2005 that would have introduced what amounted to an amnesty and which was abandoned in the face of widespread condemnation. We believe in the application of the rule of law and due process … and that applies across the board to anyone … including those who are in possession of a letter under the OTR scheme.

So for the avoidance of any doubt … it needs to be clearly understood by all recipients that no letters which have been issued can be relied on to avoid questioning or prosecution for offences where information or evidence becomes available now or later. And in the case of Mr Downey it was the fact that the letter he was sent was factually incorrect and misleading that led the judge to rule that an abuse of process had occurred. John Downey should never have been sent a letter saying he wasn’t wanted by the police because at all times he was wanted by the Metropolitan police in relation to the Hyde Park bombing.

Independent review

The Prime Minister reacted swiftly to the concerns about the scheme expressed by the First Minister, the Justice Minister … and the broader public … by announcing a judge-led investigation of the scheme. Its terms of reference require the inquiry to provide a full public account of the operation and extent of the scheme … establish whether other mistakes were made … and to make recommendations.

This will be a meaningful, exacting and rigorous process to get to the truth of what happened … to provide the answers for which the public are calling … and do everything possible to remove any impediments to the future operation of justice, perceived or real. I expect the judge’s report to be provided to me by the end of May. Until that time there are limits on what I can say because I do not wish to cut across the judge’s work or pre-empt his or her conclusions.

But I do want to say this.  No more side deals.  As you will all here appreciate, the collapse of the Downey case … and the revelations on OTRs that came with it … occurred at a time when the parties in the Northern Ireland Executive were discussing possible ways forward on flags, parading and the past. Both the UK and the Irish Governments were very supportive of those efforts … and hopeful that progress could be made.

Of course I understand that events of the past few days have caused some to question whether the discussions on the so-called Haass issues have a future. But the reality is that whatever the conclusions of the inquiries into the OTR scheme, the issues under consideration in those leaders’ meetings will still need to be dealt with.

The imperative to make progress on flags and parading remain every bit as strong as it was when the Northern Ireland Executive began this process last year.  And on the past, one of the lessons of the last 10 days must surely be that more than ever we need an agreed approach and structures that can operate in a balanced and transparent way that commands public confidence. We need to see an end the era of secret side deals and evasive parliamentary answers that too often characterised the previous government’s handling of the political process here … and undermined confidence in it.

I regret the fact that this Government did not discuss the OTR scheme with ministers in the Executive … particularly when we concluded in August 2012 that anyone wanting to raise new cases should direct them to the devolved authorities … and I have made that clear both to the First Minister and the Justice Minister.

I believe that the way in which Labour withheld the scheme from Northern Ireland’s politicians, from parliament and from the public in the aftermath of the failure of the legislation in 2005 was wrong … and I welcome the apology Labour gave for that earlier this week.

Politics of delivery

Making progress on flags, parading and the past could free up the space for politicians to focus more on other issues that are critical to our future … such as rebalancing the economy, reforming the public sector and building a genuinely shared future…. because let’s face it … the vast majority of people in Northern Ireland do not wake up on a Monday morning worrying about the past, flags or parades. While these are important matters, the priorities for most people are issues like jobs, pensions, transport, schools and hospitals … and that’s where they expect their politicians to focus their energies.

Today we are over half way through the second term of the second Assembly since devolution was restored in May 2007. That’s the longest period of unbroken devolved government in Northern Ireland since the closure of the Stormont Parliament in 1972. And that’s not bad when one considers the number of commentators who predicted that a Coalition led by the DUP and Sinn Fein couldn’t last six months … let alone more than six years.

And the Executive here can cite a number of real achievements … not the least of which is its continued success in bringing foreign direct investment into Northern Ireland.  This has helped make Belfast the second most popular city in the UK for FDI.

The First and deputy First Minister have also published Northern Ireland’s first ever locally agreed community relations strategy … Together: Building a United Community.  But for all that the Executive has proven stable and delivered in a number of areas … I believe that there is a clear public perception out there that more still needs to be done. That comes across in successive opinion polls … but also in many conversations I’ve had with businesspeople, journalists and others across Northern Ireland.

Of course I understand that a mandatory coalition … that embraces five parties with fundamentally divergent views on constitutional, economic and social issues … was never going to be easy to operate. Yet one of the central features of the 1998 settlement … as amended at St Andrews in 2006 … was precisely to bring together politicians from different traditions and show that they could deliver for the good of the people of Northern Ireland as a whole. And it’s crucial that we make it work.

Of course the UK Government … as guarantor of the devolution settlement under strand one of the Belfast Agreement … can encourage and help.

Making difficult choices

But Northern Ireland’s politicians also need to move beyond the issues that have dominated political debate here and recognise that difficult choices are often needed in order to deliver the services the public want and expect. So we have to press ahead with implementing the economic pact we agreed jointly last summer just before the G8.

For the Government that means delivering on issues like start up loans, access to finance and the necessary preparatory work needed to enable a decision to be made in the autumn on whether to devolve corporation tax powers. But the Executive too needs to move forward on economic reform such as tackling business red tape, streamlining planning, investing in infrastructure and reforming the public sector.

We want Northern Ireland to be an even more attractive place to do business … and to be able to take full advantage of the recovery that is underway as a result of our long term economic plan. And that requires difficult choices on reforming welfare so that Northern Ireland has a system that rewards work, tackles the causes of dependency, and continues to protect those in genuine need … while being fair to taxpayers whose money funds the system.

And difficult choices are also needed if people in Northern Ireland are to be given the same protection from organised crime as people in Great Britain now have through the work of the National Crime Agency. In this long running debate I believe that protecting the public from serious organised crime should now be the overriding priority … and that the time has therefore come for Executive to press ahead on the NCA so that it is allowed to work properly in Northern Ireland for the good of everyone who lives here.

Conclusion – role of UK Government in today’s Northern Ireland

I want to conclude with a word about the UK Government’s role here. Of course devolution has significantly altered that role.  We are no longer responsible for the day to day delivery of public services … which is now rightly the responsibility of the Executive. But we do remain fully engaged.

That’s why … despite the deficit … we have responded positively to requests from the Chief Constable for significant additional funding for the PSNI in order to combat terrorism and help keep people here safe and secure. It’s why we agreed the economic pact last May enabling us to work more closely with the Executive here than any other devolved administration in the rest of the UK. It’s why we brought the G8 Summit of world leaders here … so that the eyes of the world could focus on Northern Ireland as a great place to visit and invest. It’s why we responded swiftly to the request to devolve long haul air passenger duty to help save Northern Ireland’s vital direct transatlantic link.

It’s why we fulfilled our pledge to bring about a fair solution for those investors in the Presbyterian Mutual Society who were unable to access their money and were so cruelly abandoned by the previous government. It’s why we’ve safeguarded Northern Ireland’s Assisted Area Status … a key priority for the Executive and a status which significantly enhances Northern Ireland’s ability attract jobs and investment.

It’s why we introduced tax relief for high end film and TV production that was crucial to securing a fourth series of Game of Thrones for the Paint Hall studios in Belfast. And it’s why we’ve supported the Executive by maintaining public spending here at 20 per cent per head higher than the UK average.

And all of this is underpinned by a Government that, unlike its predecessor, is not neutral about Northern Ireland’s position in the UK. Of course … as the agreements make clear … the consent principle is paramount and the future of Northern Ireland will only ever be determined by the people in Northern Ireland. But while the UK Government might not have a vote … we do have a voice. And that voice is resoundingly for the United Kingdom … with Northern Ireland playing a full and active role within it … a United Kingdom in which we are all stronger and better together.

And in carrying out our responsibilities we are mindful at all times of our duty to work on behalf of the whole community here … in helping to build a stronger economy and a shared future … and a peaceful, stable and prosperous Northern Ireland for everyone … And that’s a commitment that we’ll continue to deliver with determination and with enthusiasm”.

AEJ background:  The AEJ is an independent, self-funding association for journalists, writers and specialists in European affairs. We also organise other seminars and special events from time to time. 

The AEJ offers journalists in Ireland the chance to be part of a professional and social network of media professionals and experts on European issues. Membership can provide valuable mutual support for individual journalists.   

We are not tied to any institutional or political group but are recognised by the Council of Europe, the OSCE and UNESCO. Our goals are to advance knowledge and debate on European affairs and to uphold media freedom.    

The AEJ Irish Section is part of a Europe-wide network of some 20 national sections across Europe, with more than 1000 members in all. Internationally, the AEJ has an active programme of professional activities and the annual AEJ Congress is a forum for debate on matters of common concern to journalists across the continent.

MIDWIVES’ TALES

Midwives are in the news today on both sides of the Irish Sea. In Ireland, it has emerged that midwifery staff at the Midland Regional Hospital in Portlaoise had written to two Irish government ministers in 2006 expressing concern over staffing levels at the hospital. In the 2006 letter to then minister for finance Brian Cowen and then minister for health Mary Harney, the hospital’s midwifery staff said they had “a real fear” that a mother or baby will die in their care before these issues are addressed. In the letter, seen by RTÉ’s Investigation Unit, they also said they had made their concerns known to management on a number of occasions but that nothing had happened.

The letter was written prior to all of the deaths of four babies examined in last night’s documentary ‘Fatal Failures’. The babies died in similar circumstances over a six-year period at the hospital. They were all alive at the onset of labour, but died either during labour or within seven days of birth. The Irish Health Service Executive has apologised unequivocally to the families.

In an unrelated development, RTÉ News also reported on the last baby being born at Mount Carmel Hospital in South Dublin on the day that 200 staff members have been made redundant. Another 128 staff will lose their jobs over the coming weeks. Staff attended a mass this evening to mark the closure of the hospital. Afterwards around 20 staff said they were planning a sit-in at the premises. The provisional liquidators confirmed that 572 maternity patients have been affected since the hospital went into liquidation last Friday. Four babies were born today and the final arrival was a girl.

In Westminster, the House of Commons Public Accounts Committee, like its Oireachtas counterpart, is playing an important role on the issue of health services, especially maternity. Channel 4 News reports that in a damning investigation into the state of maternity care, the Public Accounts Committee criticised both the British Department of Health and NHS England for being unable to tell it who is accountable for “ensuring something as fundamental” as whether the NHS has enough midwives. It said it had gathered evidence that “many maternity services are running at a loss, or at best breaking even, and that the available funding may be insufficient for trusts to employ enough midwives and consultants to provide high quality, safe care”.

The report added that “although there has been a welcome increase in midwives, there is still a national shortage in Britain of some 2,300 midwives required to meet current birth rates. Pressure on staff leads to low morale and nearly one-third of midwives with less than 10 years’ work experience are intending to leave the profession within a year. Over half of obstetric units do not employ enough consultants to ensure appropriate cover at all times.

The committee reported that rates of infection among new mothers, infection to the baby and injury to the baby “are all higher at the weekend”. It added: “Although there have been substantial improvements in levels of consultant presence on labour wards in recent years, over half of obstetric units were still not meeting the levels recommended by the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists at September 2012.”

Labour MP, Margaret Hodge, who chairs the committee, said: “The vast majority of women who use NHS services to have their babies have good experiences, but outcomes and performance could still be much better. Despite an overall increase in the number of midwives there is still a shortage of 2,300 that are required to meet current birth rates – a truly worrying figure. What’s more, the Department of Health and NHS England struggled to tell my committee who is accountable for ensuring something as fundamental as whether the NHS has enough midwives. As things stand, there is evidence that many maternity services are running at a loss, or at best breaking even, and that the available funding may be insufficient for trusts to employ enough midwives and consultants to provide high quality, safe care.”

Royal College of Midwives

Royal College of Midwives logo

Cathy Warwick, chief executive of the Royal College of Midwives (RCM), said: “Maternity services are many thousands of midwives short of the number needed to deliver safe, high quality care. The birthrate remains exceptionally high and as this and the National Audit Office report states, births are also becoming increasingly complex. This puts even more demands on midwives and maternity services. We are seeing areas such as antenatal and postnatal care in particular suffering because trusts often do not have enough midwives to provide consistent and high quality care before and after pregnancy.”

RCM Chief Executive Cathy Warwick  Photo: © Jess Hurd/RCM

RCM Chief Executive Cathy Warwick Photo: © Jess Hurd/RCM

RCM campaign badge

RCM campaign badge

She added: “At the moment there seems to be a gap between the actual cost of maternity care and the amount of money hospitals get to provide it. This cannot continue and maternity services need to see the money they receive meet the cost of care. If this does not happen I fear services will be cut, choice will be reduced and care will suffer.” Details of the RCM’s report on the state of maternity services in the UK (2013) can be found here and the full report is available here. It was launched in London on December 11th.

MAYOR OF MANY COLOURS

Launch of Belfast Children's Festival  Photo: Arts Council via twitter

Launch of Belfast Children’s Festival Photo: Arts Council via twitter

Lord Mayor of Belfast Máirtín Ó Muileoir showed he is a man of many colours…or at least his hair is…when he launched the Belfast Children’s Festival (March 7th-14th) in the city centre this morning along with the Chair of the Arts Council Bob Collins. Hairdressing meets art by Sienta La Cabeza, a Catalan group from Barcelona.

Lord Mayor with Marie-Louise Muir, BBC Radio Ulster

Lord Mayor with Marie-Louise Muir, BBC Radio Ulster

The Lord Mayor even gave an interview to Marie-Louise Muir of BBC Radio Ulster’s Arts Extra programme while his hair was being reconfigured!

New-style Lord Mayor of Belfast Máirtín Ó Muileor

New-style Lord Mayor of Belfast Máirtín Ó Muileor

The Lord Mayor attended a number of other engagements throughout the day but was perhaps lucky that he did not have to chair a Council meeting! How long we have to wait until he reverts to his traditional look remains to be seen! Here’s a reminder of how things looked in the Lord Mayor’s parlour yesterday (Tuesday) when I was among a group of Lions Clubs representatives to be welcomed by him at City Hall.

Lord Mayor of Belfast Máirtín Ó Muileor with Lions 105I District Governor Liam Lyons, PDG Sean Sandford, PDG James O'Sullivan & Michael Fisher (Belfast Club)

Lord Mayor of Belfast Máirtín Ó Muileor with Lions 105I District Governor Liam Lyons, PDG Sean Sandford, PDG James O’Sullivan & Michael Fisher (Belfast Club)

SPOTLIGHT ON REPORTING

Panel discussion chaired  by Miriam O'Callaghan  Photo: Michael Fisher

Panel discussion chaired by Miriam O’Callaghan Photo: Michael Fisher

Good investigative journalism needs time for research, checking and double-checking facts and teamwork. BBC Northern Ireland’s Spotlight programme has been going for forty years. To mark the occasion the Corporation devoted a day at its Blackstaff studio normally used for the Nolan show to discuss why investigative journalism matters and to consider its future.

I did not attend the first session which included on the panel Senator Susan O’Keeffe, Michael Crick,  and Freedom of Information specialist and journalism Professor Heather Brooke. Her (London) City University colleague Professor George Brock also contributed to the seminar.

Miriam O'Callaghan introduces Sue Lloyd-Roberts, Stacey Dooley and John Sweeney  Photo: Michael Fisher

Miriam O’Callaghan introduces Sue Lloyd-Roberts, Stacey Dooley and John Sweeney Photo: Michael Fisher

The lunchtime session was chaired by RTÉ presenter Miriam O’Callaghan. Her guests included John Sweeney of Panorama, Sue Lloyd-Roberts and Stacey Dooley, who presents documentaries on BBC THREE. The latter gave us an insight into what it was like trying to make a programme in an area along the border in Mexico controlled by gangs.

Steve Hewlett chairing a panel discussion  Photo: Michael Fisher

Steve Hewlett chairing a panel discussion Photo: Michael Fisher

Many of the interesting insights into the world of investigative television reporting and the changes that have taken place came in the final session chaired by Salford Professor Steve Hewlett, a BBC Radio 4 presenter. The panellists included Roger Bolton, Darragh MacIntyre, and John Ware, who has done several investigations about Northern Ireland, the latest being on the activities of the British Army unit known as the Military Reaction Force in the 1970s. It was broadcast by the BBC last November.

Steve Hewlett chairing a panel discussion  Photo: Michael Fisher

Steve Hewlett chairing a panel discussion Photo: Michael Fisher

SECTION 31 ANNIVERSARY

Anti-Section 31 protestors in Dublin  Photo: An Phoblacht

Anti-Section 31 protestors in Dublin Photo: An Phoblacht

Twenty years ago this week (January 19th 1984) the Irish Section 31 broadcasting ban on Sinn Féin along  with republican and loyalist paramilitary groups or any proscribed organisation in Northern Ireland was lifted. This was at an important time just seven months before the IRA ceasefire. The order renewed on January 6th 1993 by the then Communications Minister Máire Geoghegan-Quinn (now an EU Commissioner) directed Raidió Telefís Éireann to refrain from broadcasting any interview or a report of an interview with spokesmen for any of these organisations. As the peace process began to take shape, the order was allowed to lapse by the Arts, Culture and Gaeltacht Minister, Michael D. Higgins (now Uachtarán na hÉireann) of the Labour party.

The republican newspaper An Phoblacht recounts how the broadcast media in the 26 Counties were now free to interview Sinn Féin spokespeople. The paper says the first such interview was with party President Gerry Adams on Dublin’s 98fm radio station. But on the BBC Northern Ireland website where I first noticed the story, it is reported that Highland Radio presenter Kevin Sharkey (now with the BBC) carried out the first such broadcast in their studio in County Donegal, where he interviewed Martin McGuinness and Pat Doherty.

TYNAN ABBEY KILLINGS

Entrance to Tynan Abbey estate  Photo:  © Michael Fisher

Entrance to Tynan Abbey estate Photo: © Michael Fisher

Ulster Unionist MLA from East Belfast Michael Copeland has reminded the public that today is the anniversary of the gun and bomb attack by an IRA gang on Tynan Abbey in County Armagh.

The IRA shot dead Sir Norman Stronge, aged 86, a former Unionist MP and Speaker of the Stormont Parliament. They also killed his son James. He was a merchant banker who had also been an Ulster Unionist MP at Stormont. He had served as an officer in the Grenadier Guards and was an RUC Reservist.

Sir Norman Stronge

Sir Norman Stronge

On Wednesday 21st January 1981, a group of men dressed in military-style uniforms forced their way into the Tudor-Gothic mansion where Sir Norman and son James lived with their family, close to the border with County Monaghan. Both father and son were alone in the library when they were sought out by the attackers and shot dead. After the men were killed, the IRA placed incendiary devices in the mansion and set it on fire destroying the mansion. They are buried at Tynan parish church.

Sir Norman was one of the oldest people killed during the troubles in the North. A local minister stated that he thought members of the Stronge family were in danger but he never suggested they move. The IRA said the Stronges had been chosen as what they called “the symbols of hated unionism”. Neither Sir Norman nor James Stronge had been prominent in unionist politics for some time.

Tynan Cross & Parish Church  Photo: © Michael Fisher

Tynan Cross & Parish Church Photo: © Michael Fisher

The IRA said the attack was a “direct reprisal for a whole series of loyalist assassinations and murder attacks on nationalist people and nationalist activists”.

PAISLEY DOCUMENTARY

Paisley: Genesis to Revelation with Eamonn Mallie  Photo: BBC NI website

Paisley: Genesis to Revelation with Eamonn Mallie Photo: BBC NI website

Ouch! Looks like the DUP handlers have been working overtime to get their retaliation in first, in advance of the broadcasting of the second part of Eamonn Mallie’s interview and documentary featuring the former DUP leader and former Free Presbyterian Moderator Lord Bannside. Worth remembering that Ian Paisley is now 87, as one of the party’s responses remind us.

Statement from Democratic Unionist Party Spokesman: “Lord Bannside is entitled to his own opinions – however, he is not entitled to his own facts. The Party deeply appreciates the contribution Lord Bannside made to Northern Ireland and to the growth of the DUP.  Despite the headlines regarding these programmes, the Party will not be losing focus. Our greatest ever electoral victory, in 2011, gave us a mandate to keep Northern Ireland moving forward. We will get on with that task.

We are saddened to see Lord Bannside harm his own legacy.  In his later years as Party leader, many colleagues shielded his frailty from public view, to avoid embarrassment and protect his legacy.  Those people are hurt by untrue and bitter comments contained in the documentary.

The party, unlike the media, has not been granted an advance viewing, however, the programme maker and the BBC have already been informed of the inaccuracy of those claims made in the programme about which they have notified us. The Party does not intend to respond to the personal opinions expressed in the programme – those making the comments must take responsibility for them – but it will not let untrue assertions dressed up as facts go unchallenged.

Dr Paisley, as he was then known, gave a number of interviews on the occasion of his retirement announcement.  In those interviews he stated that he had been considering his retirement for some time and had himself chosen the time to stand down.  Moreover he denied that he had been “pushed”.  The public may well ask whether then or now they have been misled. Worse, he now seeks to place the responsibility for his decision on those who protected him most when, at 82 years of age, his ability to perform his duties was seriously diminished and causing widespread concern.

Contrary to media speculation, the party has not mounted any form of legal challenge to this programme. When the Party sees the second programme, rather than relying on third party accounts, it will decide if any further response is necessary.”

Statement from Rt Hon Peter Robinson MLA, Democratic Unionist Party Leader: 

“There are many who will believe that in agreeing to participate in these interviews Lord Bannside will have done nothing to enhance his legacy. They will struggle to reconcile the spirit and tone he presents with that which they will have known and admired.  This is not the Ian Paisley we knew.

As someone who faithfully served Dr Paisley for many decades I will make one final sacrifice by not responding and causing any further damage to his legacy beyond that which he has done himself.  Rather than return insult for insult, let me bless him with the mercy of my silence and wish him well.”

Statement from Rt Hon Nigel Dodds MP, Democratic Unionist Party Deputy Leader: 

“I am personally very saddened to learn of the tone and contents of the latest programme on Lord Bannside.   All of us who worked hard for him and with him for many years wished only the best for him and for our country. It is to be deeply regretted that at 87 and retired that this programme may be what is remembered about him rather than the good things that he did.

Clearly the passage of time has diminished accurate recall of events.   What is being said now by Lord Bannside about meetings is inaccurate and stands in stark contrast to everything that he said and did at the time and, indeed, during the years since.  As Lord Bannside is not long out of hospital I wish him well in his recovery.”

Statement by Lord Morrow of Clogher Valley, Democratic Unionist Party Chairman:

“I have served as Chairman of the DUP for most of the period discussed in the programmes. During that time, I have some great memories of Dr Paisley.  I am saddened by this turn of events.  Throughout my political lifetime I was a loyal friend to Lord Bannside.  I wish him well in his recovery.  These latest utterances do not do justice to someone who was a giant in unionism in Northern Ireland.”

Statement from Timothy Johnston, former Special Advisor to First Minister Ian Paisley: 

“I am deeply saddened to learn of the general content and tone of the Ian Paisley programme to be broadcast by the BBC on Monday evening. After a long and distinguished career it is very regrettable that Dr Paisley, as well as Mrs Paisley, and those who now advise them, have co-operated in the making of two programmes that have significantly and irreversibly damaged his historical legacy.  Unsurprisingly the events of that time have not been accurately recalled and indeed the “research” used by the production staff is wrong in many significant respects.  Some of the programme content is simply untrue.

I totally refute any allegation, suggestion or implication that a survey conducted was “framed” by me or anyone else.  Dr Paisley commissioned the survey and was aware of its nature and its findings at the time.  At no point then or since has Dr Paisley or Mrs Paisley sought to raise these concerns with me despite having had every opportunity to do so.

I learned many valuable lessons while working for Dr Paisley, one of which was not to discuss internal party business in public.  I have no intention of departing from the advice he proffered at the height of his career.  While saddened by this turn of events I wish Dr Paisley well for the future.”

Whatever about the reaction from the politicians, it was interesting that the final quote came from Timothy Johnston, former special advisor to Ian Paisley when the DUP leader became First Minister in a power-sharing Exective with Sinn Féin, along with UUP and SDLP representatives in May 2007.

So there you have it. It just remains to see what exactly Ian Paisley has to say for himself at 10:35pm on BBC1 Northern Ireland. Paisley: Genesis to Revelation. Episode 2. Ian Paisley has been one of the most controversial political figures of the 20th century. From firebrand preacher to hard line politician and ultimately Northern Ireland’s first minister, he has lived a life in the public eye.

In this two-part series, Eamonn Mallie challenges Ian Paisley on his role in Northern Ireland’s troubled past and reveals the dramatic circumstances of his departure from politics and public life. Expect to hear Eamonn on a number of radio current affairs programmes this morning talking about the programme.

According to the Irish News front page, Ian Paisley is claiming that the DUP betrayed him and he alleges that senior party figures plotted his downfall as leader.