Yearly Archives: 2017

 Crowd at Queen Mary'sSpeakers from l-r Ailbhe Smyth, Dr Leah Desmond, Fiona de Londres, Emma Campbell and Ann Furedi

From left: Queen Mary’s University last night:  Speakers from left  Ailbhe Smyth, Dr Leah Desmond, Fiona de Londres, Emma Campbell and Ann Furedi

Queen Mary’s University, London.

More than 300 people attended an event to to support the campaign to make abortion legal in Ireland and Northern Ireland.

Laura O’Neill, of the London Irish Abortion Rights Campaign, writes

We heard from several speakers, who detailed a number of legal cases, including the prosecution of a woman for helping her 15-year-old daughter access abortion pills online.
A Belfast Court has granted leave for a judicial review, but if convicted the mother faces up to 10 years in prison.

Details of the case drew gasps from the audience, which was mainly made up of Irish ex-pats:

Emma Campbell from the Alliance for Choice told the crowd that the current laws are especially unfair on poorer women, who cannot afford to travel for an abortion.

Ann Furedi from the British Pregnancy Advisory Service, an organisation which helps women access abortion, echoed her sentiments.

We stand with our sisters in Northern Ireland and the Republic. Women in Ireland need abortion for the same reasons as women in Britain.

She called for the law in Northern Ireland to be brought in line with the rest of the UK so women living in Newcastle, County Down have the same access as women in Newcastle on Tyne”.

Ailbhe Smyth from the Coalition to Repeal the Eighth Amendment based in the Republic of Ireland said she was heartened by the “huge crowd” who attended.

She told the audience that she believed a constitutional referendum on the Eighth Amendment would take place in the Republic within the next 18 months.
“The ban against abortion is dangerous and fatal in some cases. It’s great to see a social movement around this. I believe this is a fight we can win,” she added.

Ms Smyth also expressed concerns over the implications that Brexit could have on the 3,600 women, who are forced to leave Ireland to access abortion services every year.

What will happen to these women if border or immigration controls come in? We simply don’t know if women will be able to travel freely. Media reports suggest that this vitally important issue wasn’t discussed when An Taoiseach Enda Kenny met British Prime Minister, Theresa May, in Dublin last Monday….

The Eighth Amendment is a profound source of discrimination and national shame for Ireland and we are calling on our young Irish diaspora to support its repeal. These are young women and men who want – and expect – to return to an Ireland that is just, committed to equality, and where women have the right to make our own reproductive decisions.”

The London Irish Abortion Rights Campaign

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Dancing with Stars judges, from left: Julian Benson, Loraine Barry and Brian Redmond

More dancing?

You asking?

Via RTÉ:

Dancing with the Stars judges Julian Benson, Loraine Barry and Brian Redmond will be testing host Ryan Tubridy’s twinkle toes with a few key moves. They’ll be giving viewers the lowdown on the celebs impressing the most and who is still very far from getting 10s….

….Derval O’Rourke will be popping in for a chat about life since she stepped off the track and she’ll be giving us her view on the ongoing problem with doping in athletics…

Sligo artist Arlene McPadden’s work brings a whole new twist to taxidermy. She’ll be introducing viewers to the fine art of “rogue taxidermy“, the creation of sculptures using the traditional method of preserving animal’s bodies through taxidermy…..

*places telly on Ebay*

The Late Late Show On RTÊ One at 9.35pm

Pic: RTÉ

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Lerloonsfuzzy bits & bytes

What you may need to know…

01. Lerloons is a 23-year-old producer based between Galway and Dublin, specialising in lo-fi and ambient, flitting between samplers, synths, and old tape recorders.

02. Debut long-player GOODNIGHT was released in 2015, followed by last year’s full-length 24. Both are available for streaming and download via Bandcamp.

03. Streaming above is newest composition _m4ster-s1ave.ase, released yesterday via their Soundcloud.

04. They’ve also been busy working on soundtracks, yesterday releasing work done for brands at the Milano Fashion Film Festival.

Thoughts: In all of the comfort and familiarity of shards of chiptunes and ambience lies the uncertainty and discord of them falling apart, a line which Lerloons treads lightly.

Lerloons

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Australian math-rock blog Fecking Bahamas, a long-term supporter of all manner of awkwardly-timed, noisy, proggy rock ‘n’ roll, has produced the fifth installment in its ongoing series of country/region-specific compilations. Number five? Ireland.

Behold, twenty-one tracks of homegrown noisemaking past, present and future, accompanied by artwork from New York-resident Limrocker Shane Harrington, and includes YMLT featurees CHANCER, Yonen, and Ganglions, as well as veterans like And So I Watch You From Afar, Ten Past Seven, The Redneck Manifesto. Also bundled in are contributions from defunct outfits like the sadly-missed Adebisi Shank.

More info and other compilations are available from the site, including a world-map of math-rock.

Fecking Bahamas

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Yesterday.

The Joint Committee on Transport, Tourism and Sport continued with their hearings on strategies and governance of sport in Ireland with Sports minister Shane Ross and junior sports minister Patrick O’Donovan.

Mr Ross, while replying to a question asked by Social Democrats TD Catherine Murphy, was interrupted by Mr O’Donovan to correct the record of events and throw former chairman John O’Mahony under a bus in relation to the decision on foot legal advice not to bring FAI CEO John Delaney in to face direct questioning regarding that  €5m ‘Henry handball’ compensation payment.

Good times.

Watch in full here.

Shane Ross wants FAI to fully implement 2002 Genesis report (Irish Times)