Category Archives: Misc

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The Guardian trawled through 70 million comments and found that, of the newspaper’s 10 most abused writers – in the comments section – eight were women and two were black men.

The 10 writers who received the least abuse were all men.

Further to this, Una Mullally wrote about the matter in today’s Irish Times

Una writes:

The vitriol that women and minorities experience online is anecdotally obvious, but now we have the data. Perhaps finally, news organisations will wake up to how the scale and scales of abuse are tipped towards women and minorities.

The bigger picture also calls into question the value of comment sections at all. Whatever the motivations for the Guardian study, what it shows is something any journalist who is not male, straight, white, or all three already knew, but that was often undermined by their male, straight, white, peers.

Women get more flack because they are female. That doesn’t mean that male journalists never get abuse, but the motivation for that abuse is different.

Gendered abuse or criticism is not as obvious as “I hate this article because you’re a woman”. It is more insidious than that. Male journalists are often criticised for the opinions they hold, whereas women are often criticised just for holding opinions.

…Where is the value in making potential comment posters and readers angry and annoyed when they go below the line? The authors of articles are not the only victims of abuse, but also other comment posters who go up against the most domineering comment posters.

Comment sections as they currently exist have failed. Instead of fostering intelligent debate, they are taken over by ranters and ravers. Instead of adding value for the reader, they detract from the reading experience.

Instead of representing alternative points of view, they are specifically hateful of women and minorities. In an industry obsessed with what its readership wants, the tail has ended up wagging the dog.

FIGHT!

Una Mullally: No Comment (Irish Times)

The dark side of Guardian comments (The Guardian)

goldendiscs

Golden Discs

Sinead writes:

Golden Discs, the biggest and longest running record store chain in Ireland, celebrates Record Store Day TOMORROW, with live performances in ten stores nationwide.

Record Store Day celebrates the unique culture of independently owned record shops and has become one of the biggest annual events on the music calendar.

Vinyl sales are bucking the trend, and at Golden Discs sales are up over 300% year on year. 11 of the 13 Golden Discs stores now stock vinyl with an ever increasing choice on offer for vinyl fans.

With a Golden Discs Vinyl Club Loyalty Card every €10 spent earns a sticker, with 10 stickers earning a €20 discount on the next vinyl purchase. Unique in Ireland, this incentive is very popular with vinyl fans…

Steepletone

…To celebrate, we are giving away a Red Steepltone Discgo turntable (as above) to a Broadsheet reader.

The winner will also receive FIVE of Golden Discs’ bestselling vinyl [Hozier/Hozier; Amy Winehouse/Back To Black; Guardians Of The Galaxy Awesome Mix Vol 1; Bob Marley/Legend and Walking on Cars/Everything This Way] to start/restart or enhance your collection.

To enter, just complete this sentence:

‘My first ever vinyl record purchase was___________________________’

Lines MUST close at 4.50pm MIDNIGHT

Golden Discs

dott

Dott- Heroes

Anna writes:

We are giving away a free download of our cover of Heroes by David Bowie for Record Store Day 2016 and ahead of our performance at An Evening of David Bowie in The Cracker Factory, NY on April 29th.
Dott moved from Ireland to Toronto, Canada this year and have evolved into a two-piece band. They have been experimenting with drum loops and home-recordings which will very soon culminate in the release of new material. New songs and US Tour dates to be announced very soon….

Dott (Facebook)

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David Smith complains about what he calls ridiculously intrusive “haitches” in the pronunciation of taoiseach and tánaiste on the airwaves. These are both Irish words, and in the Irish language, the letters D and T, if followed by a broad vowel (a, o, u) are pronounced as if they were followed by the letter “h”. For convenience, I call them “soft” Ds and Ts. So the broadcasters are right – it should be “thaoiseach” and “thánaiste”.

And while I’m at it, “Fine”, as in Fine Gael, is also an Irish word, and is pronounced “finna”, and not “fine”, to rhyme with “wine”. Enda Kenny gets it right. Do his supporters not hear the difference?

Doireann Ní Bhriain,
Rathmines,
Dublin 6.

Finally.

Vowels – softy does it (Irish Times letters)

Pic: Laura Hutton

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Further to RTÉ2’s launch of the Generation What survey for 18 to 34-year-olds across 12 European countries earlier this week…

Gareth Naughton writes:

We have already had a phenomenal response with more than 13,000 people participating on generation-what.ie and the numbers continue to grow.

The survey is already throwing up some very interesting results though it should be stressed that it is constantly evolving as more and more people respond to it.

Those who wish can complete the survey here

Previously: Oh God Y

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Norwegian lawyer Sofie Railo (left) gives sweets to children through the fence of VIAL, the closed detention facility on Chios island, Greece, where around 1,000 people are detained

You may recall how, on April 4, when the first deportations following the EU/Turkey deal took place, the UN claimed 13 of the 202 people deported hadn’t been given the opportunity to seek asylum.

It was reported that the police officers on Chios island ‘forgot’ the 13 Afghan and Congolese asylum seekers and that there was ‘administrative chaos’ on the island.

It’s since been reported that those 13 people are now being detained in a detention centre in north-western Turkey – built with EU money – and that they will be deported to their home countries.

The Turkish government refused to allow both the UN high commissioner for refugees and The Guardian meet with these 13 people.

Further to this, Human Rights Watch released a new report yesterday, after it gained access to the detention camps VIAL and Moria, on the islands of Chios and Lesbos respectively – where around 4,000 people are being detained in total.

It visited the two camps between April 3 to 9 and found that, of those interviewed by HRW, none had been given a detention order or were informed about the reason for their detention – even though, under Greek and international law, all detainees, including asylum seekers, must be be informed, in a language they understand, of the reasons for their detention and their rights.

HRW also found that those detained on Chios didn’t know they could challenge their detention and had no effective access to lawyers while, as of April 9, there were too few interpreters at the camp.

It also reports:

On Chios, only one case officer from the Greek asylum service is reviewing asylum claims; as of April 8, he had processed 9 of 1,206 cases of people who had expressed the desire to apply for asylum in Greece. Three more officers are scheduled to arrive at the end of May. The lack of interpreters requires the use of interpretation services over the phone from Athens.

Five officers from the European Asylum Support Office (EASO) are supposed to arrive on Chios on April 18. Their role, under the EU-Turkey deal, is to conduct preliminary reviews to determine whether asylum applications are inadmissible because the person had or could have applied for protection in Turkey.”

Meanwhile,

Sofie Railo is a Norwegian lawyer who recently returned home from volunteering on Chios island during the Easter holidays, with A Drop In The Ocean (Dråpen i Havet).

She writes…

“Balloon, balloon, caramella, caramella, shokram [‘thank you’ in Arabic].”

The children are bombarding me with their hopeful voices. In the background, I think I hear something else. Is someone singing? Well, I can’t think about that now. I have to focus on the children as their little fingers push desperately towards me through a brand new fence – topped with barbed wire.

It’s Easter and, instead of having Easter eggs, I have a shopping bag full of chocolate and sweets. I don’t feel like the Easter Bunny but I do hope to see even one child smile through the fence, so I keep on giving out one chocolate here, one lollipop there.

Then someone pulls my arm.

“You have to stop, the police are coming,” one of the other volunteers says. I turn around and see 10 riot police with helmets, shields, batons and more lining up behind us. And the sound of what I originally thought was singing grows louder.

It becomes apparent that the sound is actually that of twenty young men marching through the camp, calling for “freedom”. Fear settles across the children’s faces.

This is my first time in VIAL, the closed detention facility on Chios island.

When I came to Chios to volunteer I expected to work on the beaches and assist people as they arrived terrified, wet and cold, yet happy to be alive.

But during my first week I spent most of my time in the open camps of Tabakika, the port, Daphite, and Souda handing out breakfast, playing with the children, and talking with their parents.

Then, all of a sudden, I found myself passing food through the barbed wire-topped fence in the prison camp that is VIAL.

More than 1,200 people were locked up in Vial when I was there, most of them refugees fleeing war, bombing, arrest and terror. There are of course some economic migrants among them, too.

But the only ‘crime’ they committed – leading to their detention in Vial – was to enter Greece on a small rubber dinghy from Turkey after March 20, the deadline date set down in the EU/Turkey deal.

Of the 1,200 people, more than 400 were children, the youngest of whom was only 10 days old.

Greece had less than 48 hours to prepare for the implementation of the EU/Turkey deal which, from March 20, is supposed to see all refugees who arrive in Greece from Turkey detained until they are registered, given the possibility to seek asylum and had their application processed.

But Greece was unable to prepare for such an administrative change in such a short time.

Within two to three days of the March 20 deadline, more than 1,200 people arrived on Chios alone and the only reason the number wasn’t higher was because of bad weather.

Over the next few days more people arrived and, suddenly, more than 1,700 people were locked up in a camp built as a registration camp for a maximum of 1,000 people.

These 1,700 people were detained with hardly any information about what was going to happen to them. The authorities serve one meal a day, sometimes only boiled potatoes, and, at least for the first few days, they didn’t have enough food for everybody. They still don’t have enough water to give out and have no baby milk or diapers.

The second time I went to VIAL, we came to deliver dinner with a volunteer soup kitchen run by a group of Basque people. No guards came to open the gates for us so we decided to make two lines and handed out cups of soup and bread from the car down through the fence where the refugees detained helped us hand it out.

Three times a day volunteers from all over the world came together to make sure the people detained had food. Our presence became even more important when the big organisations such as the UNHCR, Norwegian Refugee Council, Red Cross, Doctors Without Borders, and more, pulled out as a way of protesting against the conditions of the detention camps, not only on Chios, but on all the major islands in the Aegean Sea.

Inside the camp, tension grew amongst those detained because of a lack of food and water, a lack of sleeping space, a dire lack of basic hygiene and, more importantly, a lack of information about what was going to happen to them, an explanation for why they were detained, or how long they had to stay for – all prompting protests, and fights breaking out between different groups of refugees.

The situation become so bad that families, scared, nervous and fearful of what was going to happen, tore down the fences and left the camp with more than 400 people walking down to the main harbour of Chios, deciding that they and their children would be safer sleeping rough than inside VIAL.

And me?

At the end of stint, I just walked into the local airport, flashed my passport and was back home in the northern end of Europe within 7.5 hours.

I left Greece feeling Europe has lost its basic values of human rights. I support efforts to stop smugglers, and to find other ways to let refugees that actually need protection have a safe way to apply for asylum. 

But this attempt failed because of the process and hasty implementation. When the EU decides to lock people up in prison camps, the EU must at least make sure those inside have covered the basic needs – food, water, medicine and baby milk.

It’s scary to think it only took 3.5 years to go from being the winner of the Nobel Peace Prize to failing to uphold the most basic of human rights – something which supposedly led the EU to win this prestigious reward.

Is the ‘advancement of human rights’ no longer valuable in Europe?

The second thing I learned on my flight home was that 7.5 hours is not enough time to figure out what would actually have been the right answer to questions such as: “If I hurt myself, do you think they will let me go to a European hospital?”

But, despite all my feelings of sadness, anger and disappointment over the way Europe is treating these people, there is one thing I will never forget: the smiles and the waves from the children every time they saw our cars driving towards the camp VIAL.

Read the report in full here

Previously: Soulless Asylum

Meanwhile, On Chios