
Martin and Harris to attend British-Irish Council summit
Taoiseach Micheál Martin and Tánaiste Simon Harris will attend the 43rd summit meeting of the British-Irish Council (BIC), which is being hosted by the Northern Ireland Executive.
The summit will be attended by political leaders from the BIC's eight member administrations and will focus on the theme of 'The role of AI in Reform and Transformation'.
Last night, Mr Harris held substantial discussions with the Northern Secretary Hilary Benn on the issue of legacy as part of ongoing intensive efforts to find an agreement between the Irish and UK governments.
Mr Harris will hold bilateral meetings with the North's First and deputy First Ministers and the Scottish First Minister, as well as taking part in the summit plenary meeting.
The BIC was established in December 1999, following the Good Friday Agreement of 1998, to "promote the harmonious and mutually beneficial development of the totality of relationships among the peoples of these islands".
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Irish Examiner
17 minutes ago
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Irish rap trio Kneecap have named the legal team which will defend band member Liam Óg Ó hAnnaidh against a terror charge. Rapper O hAnnaidh, who performs under the name Mo Chara, will be represented by a team that includes Gareth Peirce, solicitor for WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange during his fight against US extradition, and Rosalind Comyn, who has represented Extinction Rebellion protesters in court. The 27-year-old was charged by postal requisition over the alleged display of a Hezbollah flag at a gig at the O2 Forum in Kentish Town, north London, in November last year. His legal team also includes Darragh Mackin from Phoenix Law, Brenda Campbell KC, Jude Bunting KC and Blinne Ní Ghrálaigh KC. Mr Mackin was the solicitor for Sarah Ewart, whose successful legal challenge helped to usher in the decriminalisation of abortion in Northern Ireland, while Ms Campbell was the defence barrister in the collapsed case against Seamus Daly, who was accused of murdering people in the IRA bomb attack in Omagh in 1998. Mr Bunting acted for non-profit company Liberty in the Stansted 15's successful conviction appeal after they broke into Stansted Airport to stop a plane deporting people to Africa, which was a case Ms Ní Ghrálaigh also worked on. In an Instagram post the group said: 'The British establishment is conducting a campaign against Kneecap which is to be fought in Westminster Magistrates Court… We are ready for this fight. We are proud to have such a strong legal team with us.' In May, the Metropolitan Police said Kneecap were being investigated by counter-terrorism police after videos emerged allegedly showing the band calling for the deaths of MPs and shouting 'up Hamas, up Hezbollah'. They apologised to the families of murdered MPs but said footage of the incident had been 'exploited and weaponised'. They also said they have 'never supported' Hamas or Hezbollah, which are banned in the UK. In 2024, the band released an eponymous film starring Oscar-nominated actor Michael Fassbender which is a fictionalised retelling of how the band came together and follows the Belfast group on their mission to save their mother tongue through music. Formed in 2017, the group, made up of Ó hAnnaidh, Naoise Ó Caireallain and JJ O Dochartaigh, are known for their provocative lyrics and merchandise as well as their championing of the Irish language. Their best-known tracks include Get Your Brits Out, Better Way To Live, featuring Grian Chatten from Fontaines DC, and 3Cag. Ó hAnnaidh is due to appear at Westminster Magistrates' Court on June 18. His lawyers have been approached for comment.


Irish Examiner
17 minutes ago
- Irish Examiner
Mick Clifford: We must take our Tricolour back from those who sow hate and intolerance
The poor Tricolour. When will it ever make its way home to the people of Ireland? Last Saturday in Cork, there was a rally organised by far-right activists or, as they might style themselves, nationalists. Their agenda, to the extent that they have one, is focused on making Ireland poor again. They apparently want the country to revert to a time when nobody would come near the place because it was, as Gay Byrne once noted, banjaxed. The defining image of their march was the prominence of the Tricolour in various forms. These people were claiming to represent the State, its origins, and all that has flowed from it. Last Saturday's rally in Cork was organised by far-right activists — or, as they might style themselves, nationalists — who apparently want the country to revert to a time when nobody would come near the place. Picture: Larry Cummins Ahead of the march, a few lads were selling cheap Tricolours. The plan was obviously to display as much green, white, and orange as possible, identifying marchers with some mystical notion of what the flag might represent. An identical scenario was played out last month ahead of a march organised by the same elements in Dublin. They started at the Garden of Remembrance, and marched down O'Connell St, past the GPO, the cradle of the nation, waving the national flag as if they possess a direct political lineage to the men and women of 1916, who fought and died for an inclusive Republic. The anti-immigration protest in Dublin on April 26 was again cloaked in the Tricolour as if the rally represented the ideals of the men and women who died for Irish freedom in 1916. Picture: Conor Ó Mearáin/PA Together, these two marches, or shows of strength as the organisers might have it, demonstrate the extent to which the Tricolour has once again been misappropriated. For instance, Eoin English's report in Thursday's Irish Examiner about threats made to bar staff in the wake of last Saturday's march, referred to the prominence of the flags. Bar owner Benny McCabe told Eoin that he had left instructions that 'nobody would be refused for carrying an Irish flag'. Entirely correctly, the businessman assumed the Tricolour was now an integral part of the paraphernalia attaching to these elements. Our flag linked to exclusion and hate It was obvious at the general election last November: As one commentator noted, the places that the Tricolour was flown prominently during the 2020 election tended to be strongholds of Sinn Féin. But at the 2024 election, the flying of the flag suggested allegiance to the new form of nationalism current, that of intolerance, exclusion, and hate, with particular emphasis on despising immigrants. At the moment, the display of the Tricolour outside a home, a vehicle, or other property is to invite identification with far-right elements. Such an identification may well be mistaken. An independent-minded person, proud of their nation's record in helping the world's most downtrodden, or acting as agents of peace, may well decide to plant the national flag in their front garden. That is an act of a strong and independent mind. But unless the flag-bearer is willing to sit out in the garden and explain in detail to passers-by the premise for the display, an assumption will be made that they subscribe to the ugly strain of nationalism. We've been here before Of course, we have been here before. Throughout the 1970s and 1980s, another ugly form of nationalism had somehow misappropriated the flag. At that time, it was associated with the Provisional IRA and its political wing. By extension, and by deed, this pitched the flag as a prop in a campaign of violence designed to terrorise Protestants into a United Ireland. Thomas Francis Meagher first raised the Tricolour in Waterford in 1848, the green white and orange signifying peace between Catholics and Protestants in Ireland. Image from 'Timeless Colours: Waterford' by Ian Hannigan Just as today's flag-carriers attempt to dehumanise children through the colour of their skin, so the Provos did likewise with all victims of its indiscriminate bombing, all targets of ethnic cleansing along the border. While they attempted to portray their nationalism as a struggle, in reality it subscribed to the standard ugly form of exclusion. Ironically, the Tricolour would have been a legitimate standard for those in the North, and across the island, who aspired to peacefully achieving a United Ireland. It was first flown in 1848 by Thomas Francis Meagher, who stated that the white was to signify a truce between Catholics and Protestants with the hope they can live together. That is an entirely legitimate aspiration and one that still persists today across the political spectrum. Republic of Ireland fans at the 1990 World Cup. The Tricolour was waved with joy and pride throughout Italia '90 at matches and back at home in Ireland. Picture: Billy Stickland/Inpho The 1990 World Cup was seen by many as the time when the flag began to come back to the people of Ireland as a whole. Roddy Doyle, who set his best-selling novel The Van in that frenzied summer of Italia '90, was of this opinion when reflecting on the time during the 30th anniversary. 'It was the best of the luck that I had when I was writing the book that the World Cup took off and indeed the Provos owned the flag for a while but then in 1990 when people waved it to celebrate, that was big, and I think The Van captures that quite well,' he said. Team Ireland, led by flagbearers Shane Lowry and Sarah Lavin, taking part in the Paris Olympics opening ceremony last year. Picture: Stephen McCarthy/Sportsfile By the turn of the century, the flag was well and truly reclaimed. Sure, Sinn Féin was prone to roll it out for any bunfight, but their ostensible allegiance to peaceful means meant it wasn't to be sullied any more. All the way up to the last five years, the Tricolour was, to a large extent, back where it belonged. Even when Conor McGregor was in the early straits of his career it was possible to feel — go on, admit it — a sting of pride when he wrapped the flag around himself. The Irish women's relay team, Sophie Becker, Phil Healy, Rhasidat Adeleke, and Sharlene Mawdsley celebrate winning silver in the women's 4x400m relay final at the 2024 European Athletics Championships in Rome. Picture: Sam Barnes/Sportsfile Today, the sight of the man who would be president draped in the flag would be enough to make you want to jump up and declare 'not in my name'. That's where the national symbol resides now and its misappropriation is being perpetrated in an organised fashion. Those who have attached it to their agenda of hate are not representative of any coherent section of society. Ireland's Sarah Healy jumps for joy with the Tricolour as she celebrates winning gold in the women's 800m final at the European Athletics Indoor Championships 2025 in the Netherlands. Picture: Sam Barnes/Sportsfile At the last general election, none of their ilk were elected to the Dáil. Only a handful of councillors who march under the broad standard were elected to districts across the State last year. So, in any court of public opinion, they might well be indicted for misappropriation of a national symbol. It isn't totally lost. Of course, it will continue to be flown at official events and at Irish soccer matches in particular. Troops marching along O'Connell St during the Easter Rising centenary commemoration in Dublin in 2016. The Tricolour was at half mast throughout until The Last Post, when it was raised. File picture: Maxwell's There are plenty of occasions, not least during Amhrán na bhFiann during All-Ireland Final day, when turning to the flag can still induce a sense of pride in what we like to think of as the positives aspects of being Irish. There is also the possibility that it might be serving through its final years as the national flag. Abby and Robyn Ryan from Midleton in the Spike Island museum in Cork Harbour with an iconic photo of the Tricolour being raised over the island for the first time in 1938 after the 'Treaty port' was handed over to Ireland by British. Picture: Dan Linehan Should the project of uniting the island as one political entity reach fruition, the various symbols will be up for grabs, with the Tricolour most likely topping the agenda. In theory, the Tricolour would be the perfect flag of a United Ireland in terms of its original design and interpretation. But it has been through so much since, misappropriated in so many ways, it's unlikely that those who associate it with killing during the Troubles would be happy to salute it. In the meantime, while it remains the State's national flag, it would be nice to have it back.


RTÉ News
31 minutes ago
- RTÉ News
Kneecap's legal team for court battle to include Gerry Conlon lawyer
Irish rap trio Kneecap have named the legal team which will defend band member Liam Ó hAnnaidh against a terror charge. The rapper, who performs under the name Mo Chara, will be represented by a team that includes Gareth Peirce, solicitor for Gerry Conlon and the Guildford Four and WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange during his fight against US extradition, and Rosalind Comyn, who has represented Extinction Rebellion protesters in court. The 27-year-old was charged by postal requisition over the alleged display of a Hezbollah flag at a gig at the O2 Forum in Kentish Town, north London, in November last year. His legal team also includes Darragh Mackin from Phoenix Law, Brenda Campbell KC, Jude Bunting KC and Blinne Ní Ghrálaigh KC. Mr Mackin was the solicitor for Sarah Ewart, whose successful legal challenge helped to usher in the decriminalisation of abortion in Northern Ireland, while Ms Campbell was the defence barrister in the collapsed case against Seamus Daly, who was accused of murdering people in the IRA bomb attack in Omagh in 1998. Mr Bunting acted for non-profit company Liberty in the Stansted 15's successful conviction appeal after they broke into Stansted Airport to stop a plane deporting people to Africa, which was a case Ms Ní Ghrálaigh also worked on. In an Instagram post the group said: "The British establishment is conducting a campaign against Kneecap which is to be fought in Westminster Magistrates Court… We are ready for this fight. We are proud to have such a strong legal team with us." In May, the Metropolitan Police said Kneecap were being investigated by counter-terrorism police after videos emerged allegedly showing the band calling for the deaths of MPs and shouting "up Hamas, up Hezbollah". They apologised to the families of murdered MPs but said footage of the incident had been "exploited and weaponised". They also said they have "never supported" Hamas or Hezbollah, which are banned in the UK. In 2024, the band released an eponymous film starring Oscar-nominated actor Michael Fassbender which is a fictionalised retelling of how the band came together and follows the Belfast group on their mission to save their mother tongue through music. Formed in 2017, the group, made up of O hAnnaidh, Naoise Ó Cairealláin and J. J. Ó Dochartaigh, are known for their provocative lyrics and merchandise as well as their championing of the Irish language. Their best-known tracks include Get Your Brits Out and Better Way To Live, featuring Grian Chatten from Fontaines D.C., and 3Cag. O hAnnaidh is due to appear at Westminster Magistrates' Court on 18 June.