logo
Naming sporting event after IRA leader is obscene

Naming sporting event after IRA leader is obscene

Times3 days ago
Imagine the outcry if a youth football tournament in England were named after one of the London Bridge terrorists. Or if a community sports facility in Manchester bore the name of the Arena bomber. It would rightly be condemned as grotesque, inflammatory and utterly incompatible with the values of a decent society. And yet in Northern Ireland, we are expected once again to swallow the farce of honouring IRA terrorists under the guise of 'commemoration'.
The latest insult comes in the form of a Gaelic Athletic Association (GAA) youth tournament named after Joe Cahill, one of the founding figures of the Provisional IRA, whose record includes gun-running from Libya and lifelong justification of armed violence.
Cahill was a convicted terrorist whose career spanned decades of bloodshed. He was unapologetic about the IRA's campaign of bombings and killings, which left thousands dead and many more lives shattered. Naming a 'Joe Cahill Gaelic Competition' for under 12s is obscene.
Worse still, this act of glorification is happening at a time when the UK government is preparing to pour £50 million of taxpayers' money into the redevelopment of Casement Park, the GAA's flagship stadium in Belfast.
Public money should never be used to prop up organisations that celebrate terrorism. It sends a damaging signal to victims, to wider society and to young people learning history through the prism of sport. How can we say we are building a shared future when one section of that future is lionising men who tried to destroy the very notion of peaceful democracy?
This is not about cultural expression or historical memory, it is about rewriting the past to sanctify those who waged war against the people of Northern Ireland, both Catholic and Protestant. It is about embedding the message that political violence is not only excusable but honourable. For years now, Sinn Féin has walked this morally repugnant line, from honouring hunger strikers to naming playgrounds and GAA events after known terrorists. It is part of a calculated political strategy: to cloak murder in martyrdom and to push their narrative unchallenged into the mainstream.
If the GAA wants to be a truly inclusive sporting body, it must reject the impulse to lionise gunmen, no matter how prominent they were within republican folklore, and stand with the victims of terror. And the UK government must stop pretending that these issues are separate from its financial support. You cannot fund an organisation with one hand and ignore its moral failures with the other. £50 million buys responsibility, not silence.
Baroness Foster of Aghadrumsee is a non-affiliated peer
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Faslane protest planned to make calls to end nuclear weapons
Faslane protest planned to make calls to end nuclear weapons

The National

time4 hours ago

  • The National

Faslane protest planned to make calls to end nuclear weapons

More than 100 people are set to gather outside HM Naval Base Clyde in a peace vigil led by representatives of Scotland's largest Christian churches on Saturday, August 2. It will mark the 80th anniversary of the atomic bombs being dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki in Japan during World War II. It is estimated that 140,000 people in Hiroshima were killed and at least 74,000 people died in Nagasaki in August 1945, leading to the Japanese government surrendering on September 2 of that year, ending the war. READ MORE: Join our in-person event in Glasgow with Peter Oborne on Gaza The "No To Nuclear Weapons" gathering at the South Gate of the naval base on Maidstone Road from 10.30am to 12pm is being organised by Justice and Peace Scotland. Most Rev William Nolan, Catholic Archbishop of Glasgow and Bishop-President of Justice and Peace Scotland, Rt Rev Rosie Frew, Moderator of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland, and Most Rev Mark Strange, Primus of the Scottish Episcopal Church, are leading the event. They will be joined by representatives from the Quakers, the Iona Community, the United Reformed Church and more than 100 people of faith who will stand in solidarity to "renew a shared commitment to the common good and the flourishing of creation". The groups say they will come together for "prayer and reflection on the immorality of possessing nuclear weapons at a time when conflicts in the Middle East and Eastern Europe are ongoing". The current generation of such warheads – held by nine nations – is understood to be 80 times more powerful than those dropped in Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Archbishop William Nolan said: 'The phrase 'never again' gained much currency 80 years ago. 'But the actions of nuclear powers, including our own, run contrary to that. 'As the late Pope Benedict articulated, the very concept of nuclear deterrence has instead fuelled an arms race as those on opposing sides keep seeking to outdo the other. 'We have seen this in the replacement for Trident. Deterrence itself, therefore, has increased insecurity and does nothing to build up trust which is necessary to encourage disarmament and build up peace.' HM Naval Base Clyde is home to the Royal Navy's four Vanguard-class submarines – HMS Vanguard, Vengeance, Victorious and Vigilant – which each carry Trident 2 D5 nuclear missiles. READ MORE: Israel kill 37 in Gaza as US special envoy Steve Witkoff visits aid sites Described as Britain's nuclear deterrent and ultimate defence, they can be fired at targets up to 4000 miles away. Rev Rosie Frew said: 'On the 80th anniversary of the atomic bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, it seems right to stand with other Christians saying 'No' to nuclear weapons and 'Yes' to peace. 'My hope and prayer is to live in a world without war or the threat of war, a world without the threat of the deployment of nuclear weapons. 'I know opinion is very divided on holding nuclear weapons but I don't believe anyone would ever wish them to be deployed, both those who will gather outside and those who serve in HM Naval Base Clyde. 'The Church of Scotland stands in solidarity with all those who work at Faslane in the service of the United Kingdom, while praying for peace in a world where there is no threat of nuclear weapons ever being used.'

More than 100 to attend peace vigil at Faslane naval base
More than 100 to attend peace vigil at Faslane naval base

Glasgow Times

time6 hours ago

  • Glasgow Times

More than 100 to attend peace vigil at Faslane naval base

The event will take place outside HM Naval Base on the Clyde (Faslane) at the south gate on Maidstone Road from 10.30am to 12pm on Saturday, August 2. It will mark the 80th anniversary of the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in Japan during the Second World War. Read more: 'Large helicopters' to take over skies in army exercise The gathering is organised by Justice and Peace Scotland and led by senior figures from Scotland's three largest Christian churches. Participants will include the Most Rev William Nolan, Catholic Archbishop of Glasgow and Bishop-president of Justice and Peace Scotland; Rt Rev Rosie Frew, moderator of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland; and the Most Rev Mark Strange, primus of the Scottish Episcopal Church. They will be joined by representatives from the Quakers, the Iona Community, the United Reformed Church and other faith groups. The event will include prayers and reflection on the 'immorality of possessing nuclear weapons' amid ongoing conflicts in the Middle East and Eastern Europe. Organisers warn the risk posed by the UK's 'soon-to-be upgraded and expanded' nuclear arsenal is greater than in recent memory. Archbishop Nolan said: 'The phrase 'never again' gained much currency 80 years ago. 'But the actions of nuclear powers, including our own, run contrary to that. 'As the late Pope Benedict articulated, the very concept of a nuclear deterrence has instead fuelled an arms race as those on opposing sides keep seeking to outdo the other. 'We have seen this in the replacement for Trident. 'Deterrence itself, therefore, has increased insecurity and does nothing to build up trust which is necessary to encourage disarmament and build up peace.' HM Naval Base Clyde, located on the Gare Loch near Helensburgh, is home to the Royal Navy's four Vanguard-class submarines, which carry [[Trident]] 2 D5 nuclear missiles. These weapons are estimated to be 80 times more powerful than those dropped on Japan in 1945. Read more: Army veteran credits Paisley support centre with helping him rebuild confidence Rt Rev Rosie Frew said: 'On the 80th anniversary of the atomic bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, it seems right to stand with other Christians saying no to nuclear weapons and yes to peace. 'My hope and prayer is to live in a world without war or the threat of war, a world without the threat of the deployment of nuclear weapons. 'I know opinion is very divided on holding nuclear weapons but I don't believe anyone would ever wish them to be deployed, both those who will gather outside and those who serve in HM Naval Base Clyde. 'The Church of Scotland stands in solidarity with all those who work at Faslane in the service of the United Kingdom, while praying for peace in a world where there is no threat of nuclear weapons ever being used.'

Politicians attend funeral of ‘inspiring leader' Norman Tebbit
Politicians attend funeral of ‘inspiring leader' Norman Tebbit

Powys County Times

timea day ago

  • Powys County Times

Politicians attend funeral of ‘inspiring leader' Norman Tebbit

Tory former Cabinet minister Lord Norman Tebbit will be remembered as a 'giant' and an 'inspiring leader', the friend who gave the eulogy at his funeral said. The service, at St Edmundsbury Cathedral in Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk where Lord Tebbit had lived, was attended by a cast of politicians including former Conservative MP and novelist Jeffrey Archer and his wife Mary. Former Tory MP Neil Hamilton and his wife Christine, former leader of the House of Commons Jacob Rees-Mogg and former deputy prime minister Therese Coffey were also present. Conservative grandee Lord Tebbit, who was one of Margaret Thatcher's closest political allies, died on July 7 aged 94. Tory peer and author Lord Michael Dobbs, who gave the eulogy at Thursday's service, described Lord Tebbit as 'a giant, an inspiring leader'. Former leader of the Conservative Party Iain Duncan Smith, who gave a reading from William Shakespeare's Hamlet, said afterwards that the service was 'glorious'. 'It was a glorious service and rather befitting for Norman, Norman Tebbit, who quite often was understated but never missed an argument,' said Sir Iain. He said the reading he was asked to read, from act one, scene three of Hamlet, 'could not have been more certainly Norman in every respect'. 'He was clear, he was himself from the word go, he didn't change his values throughout the whole of his time,' he said. 'He was a tough competitor but the beauty of it that came out was he had a real soft heart and was kind and had many friends on all sides of the house. 'He was my mentor throughout the early part of my political career.' Lord Archer said afterwards that the service was 'beautiful' and that Lord Tebbit 'was above all loyal, loyalty was his passion'. Lord Tebbit was injured in an IRA bombing during the Conservative Party conference in Brighton in 1984, which left his wife, Margaret, paralysed from the neck down. He served as employment secretary, taking on the trade unions, and as chairman of the Conservative Party from 1985 to 1987 he helped Mrs Thatcher secure her third general election victory. He also served as trade secretary and had a reputation as a political bruiser. After the 1987 election success he left his post as Tory chairman to help care for Margaret, who died in 2020. He left the Commons in 1992 and became a member of the House of Lords. His son William said his father died 'peacefully at home'. Lord Tebbit's coffin arrived at the cathedral in a black hearse driven at walking pace, with family members following behind on foot. Church bells rang as air cadets formed a guard of honour at the cathedral door and the coffin, covered with flowers, was carried inside. Lord Tebbit's children William, Alison and John each took turns to share reflections of their father, who Alison described as 'uncompromising' and 'loyal', also possessing humour and a 'sense of fun'. The service, also attended by Sir Graham Brady, Tory MP Mark Francois, Lord Deben and Labour MP for Bury St Edmunds Peter Prinsley, ended with the RAF March as the recessional music as people filed out.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store