logo
O'Neill defends attendance at Bobby Sands memorial event

O'Neill defends attendance at Bobby Sands memorial event

Yahoo08-05-2025

First Minister Michelle O'Neill has defended her decision to attend the unveiling of a statue of IRA hunger striker Bobby Sands.
The Sinn Féin vice president said it demonstrated her pledge to be a "first minister for all" because she attended a VE Day event afterwards.
"A first minister for all looks like exactly what Sunday looked like for me," she said.
The Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) had criticised O'Neill's visit to the statue of the former MP in the Twinbrook area of west Belfast.
The monument is being investigated by Belfast City Council as it was erected without planning permission.
Mr Sands died aged 27 during the 1981 hunger strike, in which 10 republican paramilitary prisoners starved themselves to death.
It was part of a protest in which they sought to be recognised as political prisoners during Northern Ireland's violent conflict known as the Troubles.
The statue was unveiled to mark 44 years since his death.
Speaking on Thursday, O'Neill told UTV News she was "very honoured" to visit the statue.
"Bobby Sands is a huge figure, a huge iconic figure in terms of republicans here in Ireland, but also in terms of the whole historical political journey that we have been on," O'Neill said.
"The hunger strikes marked a pivotal time in our history. So I was very honoured to be there and to be part of the ceremony on Sunday."
She said she attended the Bobby Sands unveiling and then "I went on to attend the service at St Anne's Cathedral to mark the end of World War II".
"That's a first minister for all in actually demonstrating in actions that I will fulfil that promise."
On Tuesday in the Northern Ireland Assembly, the DUP's deputy leader said Bobby Sands was "not a freedom fighter" but a "member of a brutal terrorist organisation".
Michelle McIlveen added: "To honour his legacy is to reopen the wounds of the past."
She said the "first minister's attendance in Twinbrook on Sunday was a wilful decision to reopen that hurt".
Meanwhile, the Northern Ireland Housing Executive has said the statue was erected on its land "without our permission".
"We can confirm a new memorial was placed on our land in the Twinbrook area of west Belfast," the housing body said in a statement to the BBC's Nolan Show.
"This was done without our permission or knowledge and we are currently looking into the situation."
It comes after Belfast City Council earlier this week said planning approval is "normally required for outdoor public artworks including sculptures and statues that are being installed on a long-term or permanent basis".
"As the council has not received a planning application for this statue to date, it is investigating the matter and cannot comment further at this time," it added.
A Sinn Féin spokesman said the issue was "a matter for the organising committee".
The Bobby Sands Trust said it "was not involved" in the statue plans but it would "doubt if anyone locally would object".
Bobby Sands statue investigated by council planners

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

More federal workers are flooding the job market, with worsening prospects
More federal workers are flooding the job market, with worsening prospects

Miami Herald

time4 hours ago

  • Miami Herald

More federal workers are flooding the job market, with worsening prospects

After Matt Minich was fired from his job with the Food and Drug Administration in February, he did what many scientists have done for years after leaving public service. He looked for a position with a university. Minich, 38, was one of thousands swept up in the mass layoffs of probationary workers at the beginning of President Donald Trump's second administration. The shock of those early moves heralded more upheaval to come as the Department of Government Efficiency, led by tech billionaire Elon Musk, raced through agency after agency, slashing staff, freezing spending and ripping up government contracts. In March, about 45 minutes after Minich accepted a job as a scientist in the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health, the program lost its federal grant funding. Minich, who had worked on reducing the negative health impacts of tobacco use, observed that he had the special honor of 'being DOGE-ed twice.' 'I'm doubly not needed by the federal government,' he said in an interview. He is still hunting for work. And like hundreds of thousands of other former civil servants forced into an increasingly crowded job market, he is finding that drastic cuts to grants and contracts in academia, consulting and direct services mean even fewer opportunities are available. Some states that were hiring, another avenue for former federal government employees, have pulled back. So, too, have the private contractors typically seen as a landing place. The situation is expected to worsen as more layoffs are announced, voluntary departures mount and workers who were placed on administrative leave see the clock run out. With Musk's time in Washington now done, a fuller picture of just how completely he and Trump have upended the role of government is coming into view. Federal tax dollars underpin entire professions, directly and indirectly, and the cuts led by Musk's operation have left some workers with nowhere to go. In Washington, D.C., and the surrounding area, the disruption has the hallmarks of the collapse of an industrial cluster, not unlike the disappearance of manufacturing jobs in the upper Midwest during the 2000s. Except this time, it is moving at lightning speed. In January, just as Trump was taking office, the civilian federal workforce across the country had reached a post-World War II peak of 2.3 million, not including the Postal Service. Few agencies have publicly stated how many people have been fired or voluntarily resigned, but a rough count shows that federal agencies have lost some 135,000 to firings and voluntary resignation, with another 150,000 in planned reductions. Contracted and grant-funded workers -- which the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta estimated to be as many as 4.6 million people -- are harder to track in official data. The first contractor layoffs began in February with organizations that received funding from the U.S. Agency for International Development, like Chemonics and FHI360. As more grants and contracts that were under review across government are terminated, job cuts have gained steam. Booz Allen Hamilton, a consulting firm based in Northern Virginia that gets 98% of its revenue from the federal government, announced that it was cutting 7% of its 36,000-person staff. Even providers of Head Start, the low-income preschool program, have issued layoff notices because funding has been in doubt. While the national labor market remains stable, job loss is starting to become notable in the capital region. Unemployment rates in the District of Columbia and most of its surrounding counties have been on the rise since December. The number of people receiving unemployment insurance has been elevated in Virginia and D.C. over the past several months. Job postings in Washington have dropped across the board, according to the hiring platform Indeed, including in administrative assistance, human resources and accounting. Local government agencies around Washington are hosting dozens of hiring events, and most of them are packed. Elaine Chalmers of Woodbridge, Virginia, was among 750 people who attended a recent resource fair in Arlington, Virginia, just outside Washington. The event offered free consultation for updating resumes, as well as professional headshots and workshops, including one on managing personal finances during a transition in employment. It was the fourth one she attended in the month since she left the Agriculture Department, where she had worked for 20 years, most recently in the division that ensured equal access to grants for rural communities. She resigned to escape the stress and uncertainty created by new mandates, such as erasing words like 'equity' and 'diversity' from department communications. 'It just became almost a character question for myself,' said Chalmers, 53. 'I couldn't honorably stay.' Like many of the federal workers who chose to take a deferred resignation or early retirement, one of the tools the administration has used to shrink the workforce, she is on leave and will be paid through September. It is a relief, she said, because she is the sole caregiver for her mother and 15-year-old son. But the prospects do not look good. Chalmers said she expected to have to take a pay cut. She said she applied for more than 100 jobs in the week before the job fair and received several automated emails informing her that she did not get the position. For many government workers, career transitions can be especially daunting because their jobs are often extremely specific, performing functions that do not exist in the private sector. 'For a lot of them, it's almost like starting from scratch,' said Laura Moreno-Davis, a spokesperson for WorkSource Montgomery, a workforce agency for Montgomery County, Maryland, just outside D.C. 'If they really have a wealth of experience and knowledge, how can we best use that?' A new group formed by two former federal employees is trying to help people do that. 'How do you translate these skills that you've learned in the federal government that are so complex and seem to be so unique into something that can be communicated easily outside of the federal government?' said Julie Cerqueira, co-founder of the group, FedsForward. Cerqueira's partner, Karen Lee, said that people who worked in federal disaster recovery and resilience jobs, for example, had expertise that could easily transfer to private-sector work in contingency planning and supply chains. But it is not so simple for everyone. Chelsea Van Thof, 33, is a public health veterinarian who focused on diseases that spread from animals to humans, and humans to animals -- a niche job even in government. A few weeks after the inauguration, the contract she worked under at the State Department was placed on hold for a 90-day review and ultimately terminated. Van Thof immediately lost her health insurance and took on a housemate to cover her rent. Plans for the future changed, too, as she had been counting on public-sector loan forgiveness to pay off her $250,000 in veterinary school debt, a prospect that now seems increasingly remote. She sometimes feels as if she is sending resumes into a void. 'I was just thankful when I got a rejection because it meant they saw my application,' she said. Like others in the science field, including Minich, she is looking for jobs outside the country. And in the meantime, she helped form a support group of about 80 wildlife protection conservationists who are in similar predicaments. People working on government contracts are hit especially hard because they are not eligible for the deferred resignation plans available to federal employees and cannot look forward to their pensions. Todd Frank, of Westminster, Maryland, was given just a few minutes' notice before he was laid off as a technical writer on a contract with the Department of Homeland Security's science and technology directorate, helping get the appropriate gear out to military personnel in the field. Frank, 54, is now wrestling with whether to uproot his family to find a new job, which would come with steep trade-offs. His wife runs her own business -- a licensed day care out of their home. His teenage sons do not want to leave their high school, he said. Lately, he is looking at the family's budget for where to make cuts. 'Not being able to buy a suit for prom sounds like rich people problems, but you don't want to turn around and tell your kid, 'You can't do this,' or, 'You can't do that,'' Frank said. Several states had advertised their eagerness to hire people laid off by the federal government in the early days of federal cuts. In March, Gov. Josh Shapiro of Pennsylvania said the state would give hiring preference to former federal workers. Since then, the state government has received more than 7,300 applications from people who said they had federal experience, his office said, and so far, state agencies have hired 120 of them. But state jobs have gotten a lot more popular in recent months. Since March, former and current federal employees have sent in nearly 700 applications, California's human resources office said. Some states are having their own budget problems, in part brought on by uncertainty around the continuation of federal funding. Alaska, Massachusetts, Indiana, Louisiana and New Hampshire have implemented hiring freezes. Public health agencies in Ohio and Alaska have laid people off as grants were canceled. And a broad swath of universities have also paused new hires, including the University of California system, the University of Pennsylvania, and Emory University in Georgia. With the Trump administration's firings of scientists and grant cancellations from agencies including the National Science Foundation and the National Institutes of Health, science and consulting have been hit especially hard, according to Indeed. Companies and nonprofits that helped evaluate whether federal programs were working, like American Institutes for Research, have let go up to a quarter of their payroll. Paro Sen, a research scientist in Cincinnati, was laid off in May along with most of the people in her office at the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health. She worked on industrial hygiene, studying worker exposures that cause chronic health problems, and visited Washington in May with her union to talk to members of Congress about the need to restore these jobs to the federal government. 'This was my dream job that I have been ripped from,' she said in an interview. Sen and her colleagues work in such a specialized field that they are competing for very few available jobs, especially if they want to stay where they are. 'The job market right now is not amazing,' said Sen, 29. 'Cincinnati is not a very big city, and you've got, suddenly, some of the smartest people in this field all applying and competing for the exact same jobs at the same time.' This article originally appeared in The New York Times. Copyright 2025

Hegseth Uses D-Day as an Excuse for PT on His B-Day
Hegseth Uses D-Day as an Excuse for PT on His B-Day

Yahoo

time8 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Hegseth Uses D-Day as an Excuse for PT on His B-Day

Pete Hegseth didn't let the 81st anniversary of the D-Day landings in France stop him from indulging in a little birthday treat. Before the official commemorations honoring the day Allied forces stormed Nazi-occupied beaches, the defense secretary opted for a personal training (PT) session with service members on Omaha Beach. Hegseth, who turned 45 on Friday, posted a video on X showing himself leading a workout drill alongside multiple military personnel where they carried one of their own on a stretcher. 'I had the privilege of doing PT at Omaha Beach, where so many made the ultimate sacrifice for our freedoms,' Hegseth wrote. 'We will never forget D-DAY.' Unlike frequent uniformed cosplay enthusiast Kristi Noem, Hegseth does actually have some military experience to justify his workout. He served as an infantry officer in the Army National Guard with active-duty deployments in Iraq and Afghanistan. Whether that résumé alone was enough to justify his elevation to head of the Pentagon remains a hot debate. His confirmation hearing drew sharp criticism over his qualifications, not to mention a trail of damning allegations about his drinking and personal conduct. Friday's D-Day events marked the sacrifices of the thousands who died during the massive 1944 Allied assault on France's coast. The all out attack featuring the largest-ever armada of troops, troops, and planes played a pivotal role in turning the tide against the Nazis and liberating Europe in World War II. After his PT session, Hegseth delivered a speech at the Normandy American Cemetery in Colleville-sur-Mer. Hegseth paid his respects to those who died 81 years ago, as well as proclaim that the world is a 'better place when Europe and America are strong, free and independent.' 'Our nations together have endured a bond, intertwined by history, and we share this hallowed ground beneath our feet, dedicated and consecrated by the blood of our heroes,' Hegseth said. 'It is truly one of the honors of a lifetime to commemorate the sacrifices of D-Day and celebrate the freedoms of our two nations,' he added. 'God bless you all, and may God bless our warriors.'

D-Day veterans gather in Normandy to mark 81st anniversary of pivotal WWII moment
D-Day veterans gather in Normandy to mark 81st anniversary of pivotal WWII moment

New York Post

time10 hours ago

  • New York Post

D-Day veterans gather in Normandy to mark 81st anniversary of pivotal WWII moment

COLLEVILLE-SUR-MER, France — Veterans gathered Friday in Normandy to mark the 81st anniversary of the D-Day landings — a pivotal moment of World War II that eventually led to the collapse of Adolf Hitler's regime. Along the coastline and near the D-Day landing beaches, tens of thousands of onlookers attended the commemorations, which included parachute jumps, flyovers, remembrance ceremonies, parades, and historical reenactments. Many were there to cheer the ever-dwindling number of surviving veterans in their late 90s and older. 7 Attendees share a laugh with 102-year-old WWII and D-Day Landing US veteran Jake Larson, also known as 'Papa Jake', before the memorial ceremony. AFP via Getty Images All remembered the thousands who died. U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth commemorated the anniversary of the D-Day landings, in which American soldiers played a leading role, with veterans at the American Cemetery overlooking the shore in the village of Colleville-sur-Mer. French Minister for the Armed Forces Sébastien Lecornu told Hegseth that France knows what it owes to its American allies and the veterans who helped free Europe from the Nazis. 'We don't forget that our oldest allies were there in this grave moment of our history. I say it with deep respect in front of you, veterans, who incarnate this unique friendship between our two countries,' he said. Hegseth said France and the United States should be prepared to fight if danger arises again, and that 'good men are still needed to stand up.' 'Today the United States and France again rally together to confront such threats,' he said, without mentioning a specific enemy. 'Because we strive for peace, we must prepare for war and hopefully deter it.' 7 American reinforcements land on Omaha beach during the Normandy D-Day landings near Vierville sur Mer, France, on June 6, 1944. REUTERS 7 The first wave of troops at Normandy beach taking cover behind enemy obstacles in 1944. AP The June 6, 1944, D-Day invasion of Nazi-occupied France used the largest-ever armada of ships, troops, planes and vehicles to breach Hitler's defenses in western Europe. A total of 4,414 Allied troops were killed on D-Day itself. In the ensuing Battle of Normandy, 73,000 Allied forces were killed and 153,000 wounded. The battle — and especially Allied bombings of French villages and cities — killed around 20,000 French civilians between June and August 1944. 7 Larson meets attendees of the memorial celebration. AP 7 Military flyover at D-Day anniversary ceremony in Normandy June 6, 2025. AFP via Getty Images The exact number of German casualties is unknown, but historians estimate between 4,000 and 9,000 men were killed, wounded or missing during the D-Day invasion alone. Nearly 160,000 Allied troops landed on D-Day. Of those, 73,000 were from the U.S. and 83,000 from Britain and Canada. 7 Soldiers wading ashore from a landing craft on June 6th, 1944. AP 7 U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth wears socks showing the American flag during the ceremony. AP Forces from several other countries were also involved, including French troops fighting with Gen. Charles de Gaulle. The Allies faced around 50,000 German forces. More than 2 million Allied soldiers, sailors, pilots, medics and other people from a dozen countries were involved in the overall Operation Overlord, the battle to wrest western France from Nazi control that started on D-Day.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store