Category Archives: Misc

CiGpGgiXEAAOLHB

*scrapes tiny violin*

Pic via Sinead Hussey

Meanwhile,

CiGfXzeWMAAITkH

“sup?

Joan Burton 1989 election literature.

Via Alan Kinsella

Meanwhile…

90418188

Alan Kelly at government buildings this morning

Staying in Friday?

Gareth Naughton writes:

Alan Kelly, deputy leader of the Labour Party, will appear on The Late Late Show this Friday [RTÉ 1 at 9.35pm].The Tipperary TD will join Late Late host Ryan Tubridy for a wide-ranging interview about the Labour party’s disastrous general election as well as his views on Irish Water, the housing crisis and the new government. And we’ll be finding out where his own political ambitions lie now that Joan Burton has resigned as leader of the Labour Party…

*flings remote*

Untitled-1

Friday May 13: The Mighty Stef, Knoxville Morning, A Lazarus Soul @ Button Factory, Curved Street, Temple Bar, Dublin 2 (€18)

Nialler9 writes:

It’s the last hurrah for the Dublin’s The Mighty Stef as they celebrate the end of the band with one last hometown show on Friday night. Last year’s album The Year Of The Horse deserves more listeners and there’s still time. The band members will move on to other projects but this is the last gig from The Mighty Stef band after gigs in Derry and Belfast this week.

Nialler9’s Gig Guide, May 10-16 (Nialler9)

CiGaVIYWwAAS6Y-

NAMAwinelake tweetz:

How much worse did the housing crisis get in March? Don’t know because Simon Coveney is 10 days late publishing figures…

Meanwhile…

Screen Shot 2016-05-10 at 14.10.39

A Human Rights Watch video, which contains graphic content, about Syrian people being shot by Turkish border police

You may recall how last month, The Times reported how eight Syrians were shot at the Syrian-Turkey border by Turkish border police.

Further to this…

In a new report, Human Rights Watch writes:

During March and April 2016, Turkish border guards used violence against Syrian asylum seekers and smugglers, killing five people, including a child, and seriously injuring 14 others, according to victims, witnesses, and Syrian locals interviewed by Human Rights Watch. Turkey’s Foreign Affairs Ministry maintains the country has an “open-door policy” for Syrian refugees, despite building a new border wall.

“While senior Turkish officials claim they are welcoming Syrian refugees with open borders and open arms, their border guards are killing and beating them,” said Gerry Simpson, senior refugee researcher at Human Rights Watch. “Firing at traumatized men, women, and children fleeing fighting and indiscriminate warfare is truly appalling.”

…The hostilities continue to threaten Syrians already displaced by fighting. According to witnesses, at around 5 p.m. on May 5, three airstrikes hit the Kamuna camp sheltering 4,500 displaced Syrians near Sarmada in northern Idlib province, five kilometers from Turkey’s increasingly impenetrable border.

An independent humanitarian source in Turkey told Human Rights Watch that medics recovered 20 bodies, including two children, and that at least 37 people were injured, including 10 who lost one or more limbs and who were transferred to Turkey for medical care.

…Human Rights Watch interviewed victims and witnesses involved in seven incidents between the first week of March and April 17, in which Turkish border guards shot dead three asylum seekers (one man, one woman, and a 15-year-old boy) and one smuggler; beat to death one smuggler; shot and injured eight asylum seekers, including three children, aged 3, 5, and 9; and severely assaulted six asylum seekers.

Syrians living near the border also described the aftermaths of the shootings and beatings, including Turkish border guards firing at them as they tried to recover bodies at the border wall. One witness filmed a number of the dead and surviving victims and shared the videos with Human Rights Watch.

As of early April, Turkey had completed a third of its 911-kilometer rocket-resistant concrete wall along its border with Syria and was working to fortify the rest of its border.

Turkey is entitled to secure its border with Syria, but is obliged to respect the principle of non-refoulement, which prohibits rejecting asylum seekers at borders when that would expose them to the threat of persecution, torture, and threats to life and freedom.

Turkey is also obliged to respect international norms on use of lethal force as well as the rights to life and bodily integrity, including the absolute prohibition on subjecting anyone to inhuman and degrading treatment.

…The violence against Syrian refugees, and Turkey’s refusal to allow them to cross the border, comes as the European Union has shut its own borders to asylum seekers.

In March, the EU concluded a controversial migration deal with Ankara to curb refugee and migration flows to Europe, committing €6 billion in aid to assist Syrians in Turkey, reinvigorating Turkey’s EU membership negotiations, and offering the prospect of visa-free travel for Turkish citizens.

The deal provides for Europe to return migrants, asylum seekers, and refugees, including Syrians, who reach Greece by boat, on the grounds that Turkey is a safe country for them.

The deal also commits the EU to work with Turkey to create areas inside Syria that will be “more safe.”

The EU shouldn’t just stand by and watch as Turkey uses live ammunition and rifle butts to stem the refugee flow,” said Simpson. “EU officials should recognize that their red light for refugees to enter the EU gives Turkey a green light to close its border, exacting a heavy price on war-ravaged asylum seekers with nowhere else to go.”

Meanwhile, in The Guardian, Patrick Kingsley reports:

Hundreds of non-Syrian asylum seekers deported under the EU-Turkey migration deal were not allowed to claim asylum in either Greece or Turkey, a group of European politicians has claimed.

After interviewing 40 of the deportees, the three MEPs have concluded that, despite EU promises, the deal with Turkey is not being enacted according to international law.

“All refugees interviewed told us they were not given the opportunity to ask for asylum, neither in Greece nor in Turkey,” Cornelia Ernst, Marina Albiol and Josu Juaristi said in a report released to journalists after they visited two detention centres in northern Turkey. “All said they did not know what will happen to them, and had received no information since they had arrived in Turkey.”

The trio are the first independent observers to corroborate the UN refugee agency’s earlier claims that some of the refugees were sent back to Turkey by mistake.

Turkey: Border Guards Kill and Injure Asylum Seekers (Human Rights Watch)

Non-Syrians denied asylum claims under EU-Turkey deal – MEPs (Patrick Kingsley, The Guardian)

Previously: One Love

Screen Shot 2016-05-10 at 13.36.37Screen Shot 2016-05-10 at 14.05.28 Screen Shot 2016-05-10 at 14.04.35

Daft rental report, published this morning

Anon writes:

On foot of the Daft Rental report being published this morning, there are again various representative bodies on the radio screaming for rent allowance to be increased.

I can tell you categorically that it has already been increased massively and this has undoubtedly had a knock-on effect on rental prices – it has driven them up even further. It has not in any way reduced the number of people who are homeless or becoming homeless, how could it?

The most recent jump happened between Christmas and now, single people are now being approved for accommodation up to €800 per month, it was at around €750 before Christmas. The official limit for a single person renting on their own is €550 per month in Dublin.

For single people this is reaching a tipping point where single people with jobs who would like to live on their own cannot compete in the market with those on rent allowance.

Hmmm.

FIGHT!

Average rent passes €1,000 for first time since 2008 (RTE)

Family-Day-2016_LeafAO9Z0451

‘sup?

Fancy a  free festival celebrating “the diversity of Irish families today” in  the heart of Dublin

Leaf-carrying tykes welcome.

Michelle Jordan writes:

Family Day Festival returns to Wolfe Tone Square [off Jervis Street, Dublin 1]  this Sunday May 15, from 11am to 5pm, for a fun-filled day of family entertainment in the heart of Dublin city.

Now in its sixth year, Family Day Festival, run by One Family – [Ireland’s organisation for people parenting alone, sharing parenting and separating] – takes place each year on the UN International Day of Families.

A jam-packed programme of activities including the creation of Ireland’s Biggest Family Tree.

Children will be encouraged to take pride in their family, whatever form it may take, by drawing their family portrait on a leaf template (available at link below]).

These leaves will be combined and displayed to create Ireland’s Biggest Family Tree.

Meanwhile, Watch people parenting alone share their family’s story in our short video, One Family Stories, and find out why we support one-parent families…

Family Day

Rollingnews