Category Archives: Misc

Any excuse

Also any reason.

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The Irish Mail on Sunday at the weekend

You may recall a post from yesterday about Fine Gael’s Brian Walsh.

It explained that, if the former TD’s application for early retirement – on grounds of ill health – was granted, he could start to receive his pension now, instead of waiting until he is 66.

This is despite Mr Walsh, who didn’t contest the general election, previously promising that he wouldn’t draw down the pension before he reached 66.

Well.

The Irish Mail on Sunday reported at the weekend that Mr Walsh has already been granted permission.

John Lee and Valerie Hanley reported:

The Oireachtas this week refused to say if the early retirement on grounds of ill health pension had been granted. But a source this weekend confirmed that it had.

Ordinarily, the former TD would be entitled to a pension at 66 years of age, calculated on the basis of his service. As he has served five years, this would amount to around €900 a month.

Under the early retirement scheme, as well as getting his pension 23 years early, he has been credited with ‘notional service’. This is based on the assumption that, but for his retirement due to illness, he would have won at least one more election. As a result, he will receive 10 years’ service – that’s around €1,800 month. Over 23 years this amounts to a pension fund worth about €500,000.

There you go now.

Previously: The 43-Year-Old Pensioner

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ImléFún Orm

Here’s what you may need to know…

01. Decent Irish(-language) hip-hop brought to you by Imlé, a Gaelgeoir collective of musicians and creatives led by Raidió na Life/Wild Promises man Cian MacCárthaigh, and flanked by numerous guests and collaborators, including, on this track, Gaelgeoir wordsmith MC Muipéad.

02. Part of a resurgence of the mother tongue in Irish independent/contemporary music, it seems: as well as appearing on The Gloaming‘s reconstructed versions of trad standards, an Gaeilge can be heard these days in the works of bands like West Cork black-metallers Corr Mhóna, as well as via various compilation/rearrangement projects over the past few years.

03. Imlé formally kicked off last May at Féile na Bealtaine, and swiftly followed up with the launch of their debut single Pádraig. They’ve since appeared at Electric Picnic’s Puball Gaeilge stage. Not just dealing in hip-hop, either, as you may gather from listening to Pádraig, their work explores the contemporary music landscape.

04. 2016 looks to be a busy year for the boys, as they launch their debut full-length later this year, via Irish-language gatekeepers Gael Linn. Production comes from The Frames/Ham Sandwich desk-man Karl Odlum.

Verdict: Ceol den scoth. More contemporary music as Gaeilge, please (suggestions are more than welcome in the comments), and ways to put it into the curriculum, while we’re at it.

Imlé

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A notice on the Symphysiotomy Payment Scheme website

You may recall how last year Marie O’Connor, of Survivors of Symphysiotomy, spoke about the group’s grievances in relation to the symphysiotomy redress scheme.

She explained that the scheme demanded survivors to produce ‘objective evidence of women’s injuries’ – including receipts for incontinence pads or prescriptions for anti-depressants going back 50 to 60 years.

Further to this, it’s emerged that the Symphysiotomy Payment Scheme is “happy to shred” the women’s records and supporting documents to prove they had a symphysiotomy.

In response, a number of academics and medical experts wrote the following letter in yesterday’s Irish Times…

The Symphysiotomy Payment Scheme announced on its website this week that it will be “happy” to shred records, if applicants are so minded, or in the alternative, return them.

The UN Human Rights Committee expressed concern that symphysiotomy was performed in Ireland without patient consent from 1944-1987, and cited Article 7 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, which prohibits torture, cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment and involuntary medical experimentation.

The committee ruled that Ireland should, inter alia, “initiate a prompt, independent and thorough investigation into cases of symphysiotomy” and “prosecute and punish the perpetrators, including medical personnel”.

Obstetric records that could potentially be destroyed may be some claimants’ only proof that they were subjected to the surgery. Many notes record the name of those who participated in these involuntary operations.

There is no guarantee that these records will be accessible in the future to investigators, researchers or even to claimants themselves. To shred these data after March 20th, as proposed, is therefore to destroy material that will be needed in any future inquiry (or research) into symphysiotomy.

Survivors are continuing to press for an inquiry with the Irish Human Rights and Equality Commission. A further submission has been made by them to the UN Human Rights Council under the Universal Periodic Review, a framework under which Ireland will be assessed in May of this year, and a complaint to the UN Committee Against Torture is due for examination in 2017.

Informed consent is also an issue. Applicants who do not seek the return of their obstetric records are not being informed that they may not be retrievable from their hospitals of origin.

Indeed, the Department of Health has recently given public assurances to the contrary, stating that “medical records cannot be lost by any action of the scheme”. Hospital data storage limitations suggest that this is not the case.

We urge Judge Harding Clark to reconsider her decision and return all records to all applicants by post, as per the scheme’s terms of reference.

Dr Sarah-Anne Buckley,
Department of History,
NUIG;

Dr Fiona Buckley,
Department of Government,
UCC;

Prof Linda Connolly,
Institute for Social Science
in the 21st Century, UCC;

Prof Mary Donnelly,
School of Law, UCC;

Mairead Enright,
Law School,
University of Kent;

Dr Noelle Higgins,
Department of Law,
Maynooth University;

Mark Kelly,
Executive Director,
Irish Councilfor Civil Liberties;

Prof Kathleen Lynch,
Equality Studies, UCD;

Fred Logue,
Solicitor;

Dr Jo Murphy-Lawless,
School of Nursing
and Midwifery, TCD;

Prof Joan Lalor,
School of Nursing
and Midwifery, TCD;

Prof Patricia Lundy,
School of Sociology and Applied Social Studies, University of Ulster;

Prof Louise Kenny,
Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology
CUMH;

Prof Irene Lynch Fannon,
School of Law, UCC;

Dr Mary McAuliffe,
School of Social Policy,
Social Work and Social Justice, UCD;

Dr Joan McCarthy,
School of Nursing and Midwifery, UCC;

Dr Claire McGing,
Department of Geography,
Maynooth University;

Dr Jacqueline Morrissey,
Historian;

Daragh O’Brien,
Katherine O’Keeffe,
Data specialists,
Castlebridge Associates;

Marie O’Connor,
Chairwoman,
Survivors of Symphysiotomy.

Shredding symphysiotomy records (Irish Times letters page, March 7, 2016)

Previously: ‘Prove It, Prove It, Prove It’

Pic: Symphysiotomy Payment Scheme