
Unfinished Empire: Russian Imperialism in Ukraine and the Near Abroad by Donnacha Ó Beacháin; and Putin's Sledgehammer by Candace Rondeaux
Unfinished Empire: Russian Imperialism in Ukraine and the Near Abroad
Author
:
Donnacha Ó Beacháin
ISBN-13
:
978-1788218016
Publisher
:
Agenda Publishing
Guideline Price
:
£24.99
Putin's Sledgehammer: The Wagner Group and Russia's Collapse into Mercenary Chaos
Author
:
Candace Rondeaux
ISBN-13
:
978-1541703063
Publisher
:
Public Affairs
Guideline Price
:
£28
The ruthlessness of
Russia
's full-scale invasion of Ukraine, its disregard for the lives of
Ukrainian
civilians and the appalling slaughter of innocents in towns such as Irpin and Bucha have led many to believe in the inherent evil of Russia, Russians and all things Russian. Donnacha Ó Beacháin, professor of politics at
Dublin City University
, pursues this view relentlessly in Unfinished Empire. He puts forward indisputable material to support his views and goes back through Russian history to make this case but eschews references that may exonerate some Russians from guilt.
In Putin's Sledgehammer the journalist and academic Prof Candace Rondeaux of Arizona State University concentrates on the odious exploits of Russia's private military companies, especially Wagner and its rival Redut, in Ukraine and elsewhere. Her story is more nuanced than Ó Beacháin's Manichaean version and tells us of non-Russian as well as ethnic-Russian involvement in atrocities.
In one excerpt Rondeaux points out an Irish connection when the military supplies of Redut were paid for by the oligarch Oleg Deripaska, owner of the Aughinish Aluminum plant in Co Limerick; a stark reminder of the international tentacles of
Vladimir Putin
's allies.
After the Tsarist empire came to its bloody end, most of its territory was inherited by the Bolsheviks who fought their way to victory in the even bloodier Russian civil war and established the Soviet Union in 1922. In Unfinished Empire, Ó Beacháin leads us from there through the territorial ambitions of Stalin, his heirs and successors, with a brief pause for the hectic and corrupt reign of Boris Yeltsin, followed by Putin's current Ukrainian bloodbath.
READ MORE
The conclusion he comes to, and it is shared by many of Russia's neighbours, is that Moscow is determined to reconstitute the Soviet Union in territory, if not in ideology, through force of arms in the Baltics and Poland, in the Caucasus and even in the steppes of central Asia.
But there are strong reasons to believe that Russia does not now, and may never, have the military capacity to fulfil these ambitions.
Most Russians may support the so-called special military operation in Ukraine. Some may support the reconquest of former colonies but most simply have rallied to the flag on being insistently told by a craven media that their country is under threat not only from Ukrainians but from 'the West'.
Others should know better and I know two of them. Dmitry Trenin's defection from the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace to the pro-war ranks came as a shock, though when we last met over lunch in Dublin he spoke of his annoyance at a growing Russophobia in the West. Volodya Alexandrov, a charming man who was the Moscow office manager of a leading western newspaper
, has to my great surprise taken to posting his support for the war on social media.
[
The Folly of Realism: How the West Deceived Itself about Russia and Betrayed Ukraine by Alexander Vindman – An unsparing critique of US 'crisis management' policy
Opens in new window
]
On the other hand I know many Russians who oppose the conflict in particular and Putin's policies in general. Some of them have fled to the West. One was killed when reporting the earlier Ukrainian conflict and another, my friend and colleague Yuri Petrovich Shchekochikhin, died a horrible death from poisoning at the hands of the Russian State.
Had Ó Beacháin taken the time to mention the many decent Russians who have risked their lives in opposition to state power through the centuries and had he pointed out that many of his Russian imperialists were not Russians, his book might have given the impression of balanced research rather than polemic.
He correctly describes the racism of many Russians towards the 'lesser breeds' of their former empire and towards foreigners in general. I have witnessed the continuous harassment of central Asian and Caucasian workers in Moscow by the police who immediately pounce on those with a darker-than-Russian complexion. One of my neighbours was a frequent victim but shocked the cops when he showed his passport; Michael Slackman, then of Newsday, is now the international editor of the New York Times.
As for the non-Russian Russian imperialists, Catherine the Great, born Sophie von Anhalt-Zerbst, was 100 per cent German and Stalin, born Iosif Djugashvili, was 100 per cent Georgian. Sergei Kuzhugetovich Shoigu, accused of war crimes as Putin's defence minister, is from the Turkic Tuvan community in Siberia.
In many cases those non-Russian leaders of the Soviet Union favoured those from their home regions. Stalin, the Georgian, looked to the Caucasus for associates including Sergo Ordzhonikidze, a friend from Georgian revolutionary days; the great Soviet survivor Anastas Mikoyan from Armenia; and, most evil of all, the merciless killer and torturer Lavrenty Pavlovich Beria from Abkhazia.
As for Ukraine, Mikhail Zygar, in his book All the Kremlin's Men, writes: 'The 'Ukrainian Clans' inside the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union were traditionally the most powerful. They can be said to have ruled the Soviet Union for decades.'
Their main rivals were the clans from St Petersburg, whose successors are now in charge. Zygar's views are partially backed by Harvard's Ukrainian historian Serhii Plokhy, who has ranked the Ukrainian clans as the second most powerful Soviet political force.
In a rare reference to events in which Russians were the victims, Ó Beacháin touches on a matter in which I have a personal interest, when he deals with the series of apartment bombings in Moscow and elsewhere in 1992 which cost 300 lives. I took the opportunity to ask Putin directly about what happened. I could see him tense up immediately. His face reddened with anger as he blamed Chechen rebels for the killings.
It was when investigating these bombings as well as business corruption by former KGB officers that my colleague Yuri Shchekochikhin met his death by poisoning. He is buried near Boris Pasternak in the writers' cemetery at Peredelkino. I went to his grave with another friend, Andrei Mironov, who survived torture by the KGB and confinement in a Gulag prison. He had been arrested so often in the Putin era that most Moscow policemen knew him by name. Andrei supported Ukrainian independence, was an unquestioned admirer of the Maidan demonstrations but ironically lost his life when decapitated by a Ukrainian shell in 2014 near the eastern town of Sloviansk.
Ó Beacháin's conflation of Russia and the Soviet Union is particularly evident in dealing with the mass rape by Red Army soldiers of perhaps millions of women and girls. The historian Antony Beevor's vivid description of the barbaric fate of these women is quoted. But the Red Army included Ukrainians, Belarusans, central Asians and soldiers from the Caucasus as well as Russians.
Beevor's view that the frontline Soviet soldiers in Berlin, unlike those who came behind, often behaved with great kindness to German civilians is not deemed worthy of mention.
All in all, if one ignores the exceptions mentioned above, Ó Beacháin gives fair warning of the dangers posed by Putin and the possibly even greater dangers from some of his likely successors.
In Putin's Sledgehammer, Rondeaux concentrates on the abhorrent behaviour of Russia's mercenary forces in Ukraine and carefully distinguishes between these contract soldiers and the raw, barely-trained conscripts who found themselves in the front lines.
She goes on to deal with the rise and dramatic fall of the Wagner leader
Yevgeny Prigozhin
from petty criminal to celebrity chef who wined and dined George W Bush, Tony Blair, Jacques Chirac and Angela Merkel at the G8 summit in St Petersburg, his move from cookery, and cooking the books, to the sphere of private armies, his short-lived rebellion against the Kremlin and his death in a not-so-mysterious air crash.
[
Yevgeny Prigozhin obituary: From 'Putin's chef' to thorn in his side
Opens in new window
]
Rondeaux's academic research and old-fashioned journalistic doorstepping, delving into Wagner's involvement in the massacres of Ukrainian civilians in Bucha and Irpin, is a key section of the book. 'One telling sign,' she writes, 'that the Russian soldiers who stormed into Bucha that spring were no ordinary soldiers was a corpse, booby-trapped with explosives that was discovered after Ukrainian forces seized the town.' This was a vile Wagner trademark from its earlier campaigns in Libya, where Wagner, now sinisterly rebranded as Russia's 'Afrika Corps', supports rebel leader
Khalifa Haftar
.
Rondeaux's evidence in this case has been supported by German military intelligence, which intercepted radio communications in Bucha and came to the conclusion that Wagner 'played the leading role' in the massacres.
In Irpin, the town's deputy mayor Angela Makeevka spoke to Rondeaux of the raw conscripts being replaced by a different type of soldier: 'There were Buryatis, Kadyrovtsi, Wagnerovtsi [ethnic Buryats from Siberia, Chechen troops loyal to the pro-Putin dictator Ramzan Kadyrov and Wagner mercenaries]. You could tell them apart because of the insignia they wore on their shoulders. They had better uniforms. They had better weapons and they had night-vision goggles. They carried themselves with more confidence.'
They also carried themselves with the utmost brutality and have continued to do so. Rondeaux combines vivid journalistic clarity and unbiased academic reflection in Putin's Sledgehammer. Her work is a welcome addition to the growing library on Putin's Russia.
Further reading
In
Putin: His Life and Times
(The Bodley Head, 2022) Philip Short details the rise of a mid-ranking KGB officer to the controller of Russia's vast nuclear arsenal. He also details the changing political and personal stances of a man once regarded as a much-needed agent of stability in the chaotic Russia of the 1990s. It is a daunting read of 854 pages but a necessary one for those determined to avoid superficial judgments.
Prof Serhii Plokhy of Harvard in
The Gates of Europe
(Penguin, 2015) provides a sympathetic and detailed history of his native land. He is, all the same, critical of hasty and declamatory statements from Ukrainian politicians in the excitement of the Maidan days that gave Russia and its supporters in the Donbas the excuse to break away from the rest of the country.
All the Kremlin's Men by Mikhail Zygar
(Public Affairs, 2016) is a Who's Who, often in their own words, of those who have served Vladimir Putin. It's a must-read in order to understand the mentality of those who have brought themselves into Kremlin's darkest recesses. Zygar, founder of the now defunct anti-regime TV Dozhd, has paid the price for his work. He lives in exile in Germany and has been sentenced to prison in his absence.
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Irish Times
2 hours ago
- Irish Times
Letters to the Editor, June 3rd: On Arts Council funding, disappearing fish and czars
Sir, – At the Public Accounts Committee (PAC) hearing on May 29th, Deputy Joanna Byrne of Sinn Féin made the observation that Arts Grant Funding (AGF) seems to disproportionately favour Dublin-based companies over regional arts initiatives. The Director of the Arts Council, Maureen Kennelly's response was to point to increased funding to arts centres throughout the State and the impressive number of touring weeks that companies like Irish National Opera (INO) undertake throughout the year. If I may say so, this is far from the full picture. Funding the running of arts centres is one thing but you only have to look at their programmes to see that there is a preponderance of commercial and community/amateur arts events over professional funded arts programming. READ MORE So the availability of regionally grown professional arts events and productions is key to addressing this programming imbalance. Parachuting in touring theatre and opera from Dublin, while occasionally welcome, contributes very little to the ecology of the regional arts. As a client of the Arts Council going back 40 years or more and encompassing my time as artistic director of Opera Theatre Company (a forerunner to INO) and artistic director of the Abbey, both Dublin-based companies, and latterly as a former director of the Theatre Royal, Waterford, it has long been my contention that properly resourcing regional professional arts initiatives and companies is an important way of ensuring the fair spatial distribution of arts funding. My views on this are well known at the Arts Council. Most recently I wrote to the director and chair with support from 20 of my colleagues to reiterate this point. Properly resourcing regional arts will allow professional artists to work and live – if only for part of the time – in the place of their choosing rather than necessarily gravitating to places of higher population for all of their work. As we know there is a broader societal trend of people moving away from large urban centres for a less expensive and better quality of life. By way of example, Four Rivers, a Wexford-based initiative, was funded by the Arts Council from 2021-2024 to prioritise working with southeast based artists, or artists with connections to the region. We foregrounded new and established work and engaged in partnerships – primarily with Wexford Arts Centre and the National Opera House – to provide professional theatre in the southeast. Our grant-in-aid was modest but welcome and by 2024 allowed us to produce three good quality productions annually. That year we increased our audiences to in excess of 90 per cent of capacity – the figures are available and audited – and yet the outcome of our Arts Council funding application for 2025 – with the same mix of work and priorities that were successfully funded from 2021-2024 – inexplicably went from €205,000 to zero. When we requested an explanation we were told that the award was 'very competitive' and other applications were 'more compelling'. Which really told us nothing. The momentum we had thus built up was, and is, in danger of being squandered. In developing a new strategy to replace Great Art Works, the Arts Council needs to be mindful of the development and sustaining of regional professional arts companies in theatre and other disciplines that are embedded in their communities and not only provide employment to artists but help provide the kind of programming to arts centres that is currently largely unavailable to them. – Yours, etc, BEN BARNES, New Ross, Co Wexford. Panda's eyes Sir, – I've just received an email from Panda (my 'chosen home recycling partner') informing me that from June 12th the company's collection trucks 'will photograph and identify misplaced items within your bins'. Presumably, all its customers have received similar notification. As a result of this initiative, can we expect to see a marked increase in the sale of heavy-duty, black refuse sacks – the type that a standard camera cannot see through? – Yours, etc, PAUL DELANEY, Dalkey. Investing in education Sir, – David McWilliams (' Ireland is making progress, one mortar board at a time,' Weekend, May 31st) writes that 'Education is the best way out of poverty. Education today is an investment in tomorrow'. I fully concur. Access to educational resources on computers improves the quality of education delivered and outcomes for students. This access is often not affordable for young people living below the poverty line. However, in Ireland, hundreds of thousands of computers are replaced every year but only a small percentage are assessed for reuse as a resource to enhance young people's education and their life prospects. They are instead recycled when, alternatively, if assessed for reuse they could have a valuable social impact in improving young people's education. It is time for the Government to urge commercial and public sector organisations to consider the reusability of retired IT assets as an education resource instead of merely choosing the less environmentally friendly option of recycling. – Yours, etc, MARK FOX, Dublin 18. Striking a czar note Sir, – One of the more amusing aspects of current debates is the proliferation of the term 'czar', a rather curious moniker in this day and age. There are suggestions that Dublin could do with a 'night czar' while plans are afoot to entrust Ireland's accommodation problem to a 'housing czar', no less. Perhaps anybody seriously considering applying for the thankless task of tackling and solving the housing issue would do well to reflect on the fate which through the ages has befallen people who have borne the title of 'czar' in its myriad linguistic variations. Julius Caesar came to a sticky end in Rome, Kaiser Wilhelm II was forced to abdicate and flee into a very comfortable exile, while his first World War ally, Kaiser Karl I of Austria-Hungary, was banished to a considerably less comfortable sojourn far from home. Their joint foe on the Eastern Front, Tsar Nicholas II of Russia, was assassinated, together with all his family and servants, in a cellar in the Urals and, during a later conflict, Tsar Boris III of Bulgaria may have died further to an Adolf Hitler-inspired plot using a sophisticated method of poisoning. Touch wood that, if and when a lady or gentleman is duly appointed to do battle with the housing dragon, the title bestowed shall be neither 'Tsarina' nor 'Tsar' but the rather more utilitarian, if slightly less exotic, 'Director or Head of Housing'. And, when the time comes, the good wishes of all shall be with anybody brave enough to get into the saddle and ride off into battle. – Yours, etc, STEPHEN O'SULLIVAN, Paris, France. Sir. – I have to agree with Graham Doyle, secretary general at the Department of Housing, a housing tsar is not required. What would be more appropriate is a High King of Housing in Ireland who could rule rather than reign over a new house building kingdom. – Yours, etc, DERMOT O'ROURKE, Lucan, Dublin. Ireland and Israeli bonds Sir, – Notwithstanding the Irish Government's recent defeat of a Private Members' Bill attempting to block the trade in Israeli bonds facilitated through the Central Bank of Ireland (CBI), that institution has been remiss when reviewing the previous Israeli prospectus and must now insist that any future prospectus be truly comprehensive. Since 2021, the CBI has approved our prospectuses to enable Israel to issue bonds within the EU. Gabriel Makhlouf, governor of CBI, has previously defended the approval of Israel's prospectus documentation stating that, as a competent authority of the EU Central Bank, the CBI must approve any prospectus for a bond issue that is clear, comprehensible, comprehensive and fulfils all necessary criteria as laid down in the annexes contained in legislation. However, the last prospectus provided by Israel was far from comprehensive in several of the sections that are key to the approval. For a bond prospectus to be approved, the issuer must provide a comprehensive list of risks that may impact investors' return on the bonds. Up to 2024, Israeli prospectuses have laid out various security, economic, wartime and political risks that might impact the state's ability (or desire) to repay investment in the bonds. In January 2024, the International Court of Justice (ICJ) found it plausible that Israel's acts could amount to genocide and issued six provisional measures, ordering Israel to take all measures within its power to prevent genocidal acts, including preventing and punishing incitement to genocide, ensuring aid and services reach Palestinians under siege in Gaza, and preserving evidence of crimes committed in Gaza. This interim statement from the ICJ issued a caution to the state of Israel that the court shall continue to evaluate the case against Israel and subsequently deliver its final decision. However, section 2 (Risks) of Israel's prospectus, approved by CBI in September 2024, made no mention of the risk of an adverse finding by the ICJ against Israel or the possibility of international sanctions against Israel based on evidence of the IDF's conduct in Gaza and the West Bank. For this reason, it could not be considered to contain a 'comprehensive' list of risks. In addition, section 8 'Use of Proceeds' contains only the following sentence: 'The net proceeds from the issue of the Bonds are intended to be used for the general financing purposes of the Issuer.' This bland formula was accepted by the CBI despite the sections entitled 'Description of the Issuer' and 'Recent Events' being full of references to Israel's 'war' efforts. The Israeli government may not wish to acknowledge that it is 'in the dock' before the ICJ, that the ICJ may find it guilty of committing genocide and that countries may consequently impose sanctions against Israel. Regardless of the ICJ's final decision, which may take years to arrive, any sovereign country or their private citizens may decide to boycott Israeli goods and services. That such risks may be embarrassing to Israel and may draw attention to its increasing isolation in international relations should be of no concern to the Central Bank of Ireland. These factors represent additional risks to investors in the bonds and should be present in any comprehensive prospectus relating to the bond issue. Israel's bond issue expires at the end of August and must be renewed in September. As a competent authority of the EU, the Central Bank of Ireland must insist that the prospectus be comprehensive, whether or not the bond issuer loses face through that completeness. It behoves Mr Makhlouf to ensure the CBI fulfils its responsibilities to the full. – Yours, etc, Cllr JOHN HURLEY, Social Democrat, Dún Laoghaire Rathdown County Council, Co Dublin. Sir, – I'm hoping the Taoiseach and Tánaiste will have read Mark O'Connell's excellent piece in Saturday's paper (' I walked through the fire all by myself'' – this is barbarism' , Opinion, May 31st). The rawness of the piece and how it exposes the complicit impotence of western governments to what is happening in Gaza is powerful. It holds in contrast the EU's rapid reaction to Russia's aggression in Ukraine to its paralysis at the Israeli genocide in Gaza. If our leaders really cared about international law and the future of a viable Palestinian state, they would be working day and night to enact the Occupied Territories Bill before the summer recess, and pushing others in the EU to do the same. – Yours, etc, BARRY WALSH, Blackrock, Cork. Biodiversity and housing Sir, – Paul O'Shea's excellent letter ( Letters, May 31st ) argues that as well as the issue of house-building, climate change still needs to be urgently addressed, such as by improving rural land use. Although new urban and suburban house planning and building address climate change in some ways, there is siloed thinking that excludes serious attention to how biodiversity could be improved while providing housing. Even a prescription for one fruit tree or bee-friendly plant per housing unit would help instead of acres of gravel and occasional token vegetation. – Yours, etc, TRICIA CUSACK, Co Wicklow. Disappearing mackerel Sir, – Katie Mellett reported on the collapse of whale-watching off the Cork coast ( 'It's an empty, lifeless sea: Whales leave Cork waters, putting watchers out of business,' May 29th ). Colm Barnes, an experienced fisherman, explained to her that almost all the whales have disappeared because their food source, sprat, are being fished out by huge fishing vessels. We have been fishing for mackerel for 40 years on Kenmare Bay, a Special Area of Conservation. The mackerel have disappeared for the same reason. They feed on sprat, as you can see when you gut them. In recent years in winter, huge fishing vessels sweep the bay in pairs, with massive fine mesh nets held between them. It is obvious that they are contributing to destroying the mackerel fishery in the bay, affecting small-scale fishing which is important to locals and visitors, doing untold damage there and beyond in the open sea. One other consequence has been the virtual disappearance of the magnificent gannets from the upper bay and it's likely that other diving birds have been affected. The well publicised and ongoing destruction of this special area has been tolerated for some years by the authorities, ignoring their stated commitment to conservation. For example, it has been highlighted by the UCC Green Campus Group and by the brilliant transition year students from Pobalscoil Inbhear Scéine, Kenmare, who have produced an informative and evocative video. We are delighted to learn that Minister of State for Fisheries and the Marine Michael Healy-Rae is taking up this matter. We hope he will listen especially carefully to the young people of Ireland who are telling us to ban industrial fishing from Irish inshore waters now. – Yours, etc, DAVID and JANET MCCONNELL, CATHERINE FAYEN, DAVE and CHERRIE LOWE, DAVID O'SULLIVAN, BRYAN MAYBURY, FIONA THORNTON, Co Kerry. Name change Sir, – My original surname was three letters long. I wished I'd had a longer one. On marriage, almost 50 years ago, my wish was granted. The difference is unbelievable! – Yours, etc, RUTH GILL, Birr, Co Offaly. Going grey Sir, – Is a grey squirrel not an old red squirrel? (Squirrel spotting, Letters, June 2nd ). – Yours, etc, EUGENE TANNAM, Dublin.


Irish Examiner
2 hours ago
- Irish Examiner
Irish Examiner view: Right's win in Poland will impact EU
The tiny margin of the victory for the hard right in Poland's presidential election is going to place a heavy strain on the government of Donald Tusk, but for the media to describe Karol Nawrocki as 'pro-Trump' is to miss the point. In all right versus left political battles these days, every single one is judged on the similarity to, or popularity with, the current American president, irrespective of their actual policies. So it has been with Nawrocki, who did actually receive an endorsement from the White House, but whether or not that helped convince the notoriously fractious Polish electorate — he won by 50.89% to centrist candidate Rafal Trazskowski's 49.11% — is doubtful. Rather, it was the former's boxer and revisionist historian's position on issues such as abortion, the restoration of the independence of the Polish judiciary, migration, climate issues, and Ukraine's accession to the EU that saw him home. For the 42-year-old, who has never before held public office, his ascension to the presidency marks a huge upheaval in domestic politics, which will also be keenly felt in Brussels. It marks the beginning of a worrying time in which he could use his powers of veto to destabilise an already jittery Tusk coalition government. Backed by the Law and Justice (PiS) party, which was only ousted from power in 2023, his victory will be touted as a full-scale repudiation of the Tusk government's progressive and reformist agenda and it is expected his term will be far more aggressive than that of his fellow PiS-backed predecessor, Andrzej Duda, who only selectively vetoed legislation. It is expected Nawrocki will be more aggressive and systematic. With the ultimate aim of undermining Tusk and his colleagues before the next general election in 2027, Nawrocki will also aim to complicate the EU's united pro-Ukraine stance and his country's relationship with fellow Nato members and their collective shift away from dependence on the US. His was not a 'pro-Trump' victory, but is nevertheless one which will impact greatly on Warsaw and across the wider expanses of Europe and further afield. Room to improve The Irish hotel sector is a hugely valuable element in our vibrant and ever-expanding tourism reach — not to mention the wider economy — and it is perfectly right to add its muscle to a Europe-wide lawsuit against online booking services which overinflate commission rates. Across Europe, hotels have banded together to seek 'substantial financial compensation' from following a European Court of Justice (ECJ) ruling that the platform's so-called parity clauses breeched EU competition law. Their legal action maintains that the contested clauses in the contracts they had to sign effectively prevented them from offering lower prices or better availability through other channels and other online platforms. The collective legal case is being supported by the European hospitality association and some 25 national hotel associations across Europe, including the Irish Hotels Federation. More than 900 Irish hotels and guest houses are eligible to join an action which covers the period from 2004 to 2024. In seeking compensation for significant financial harm due to inflated levels of commission charged, the sector is finally challenging what it sees as unfair business practices. And so it should. The tourism industry is going through an unprecedented period of uncertainty due to world political and economic insecurity. Thus, profitability margins are thinner. For it to be hectored out of vital margins by booking firms is unacceptable, and that is what the ECJ judgment found. Compensation levels will be decided in the coming months in a court in Amsterdam, where is headquartered. It is always the case that any unacceptable business practices should be questioned, in whatever sector they occur, but in this instance the hotels have proven the validity of their case and now await rightful compensation. It is to be hoped they get it. Peddling hatred We all know that those far-right agitators, who attempt to stir up hatred and division in their countries and communities across the globe, pay little heed to the veracity of the fact-less claims they make in their attempts to sow dissent and fear. In the wake of the deadly shooting in a Carlow shopping centre on Sunday, far-right activists such as Derek Blighe dug into their predictable playbook to misrepresent the facts of the incident and inject into the local community a parable of retribution and vengeance. Seeing their best interests served by stoking hatred and disaffection with the status quo — as well as stirring up racial tensions — these people and their grimy ideals use tragedy to weaponise shock and fear to their own ends. They mine people's insecurities pitilessly. Their attempts to bend truth for the sole purpose of fracturing opinion and separating reason from reality is as commonplace as it is unwelcome. It is deeply unhelpful, too, for those authorities upon whom the wider community place their faith to defend our society in a modern and splintered world. The claims they make — in this case asserting that the gunman killed as many as seven innocent people, including a nine-year-old girl — are aimed solely at widening existing fissures and open misguided terror in local communities. Theirs is a deadly game with potentially appalling repercussions — they play it with blithe wilfulness and a craven interest only in festering rancour and hatred. They know the consequences of their vile actions on the wider society and do not care about the wellbeing of the communities they swear to defend. They themselves are the enemies of society, not its protectors, as they so vehemently claim. Their opportunism is not only deceitful and ugly, it is very dangerous. Read More Irish Examiner view: Reaching outward is in the Irish nature


The Irish Sun
4 hours ago
- The Irish Sun
Greenpeace activists swipe Emmanuel Macron waxwork from Paris's Grevin Museum before using it in anti-Russia protest
A WAX figure of French president Emmanuel Macron was yesterday stolen by Greenpeace activists — then used in an anti-Russia protest. The £35,000 depiction of the 47-year-old head of state has often been compared to a 3 Activists placed the wax figure of the French President in front of the Russian embassy, urging France to halt gas and fertiliser imports from Moscow Credit: Reuters 3 When it was created in 2018, even museum staff admitted the Macron waxwork did not look much like Mr Macron Credit: AFP Two women and a man disguised as staff took the £35,000 model from They placed the figure in front of the Russian embassy, urging France to halt gas and fertiliser imports from Moscow. Greenpeace's Jean-Francois Julliard said: 'France is playing a double game. "Macron embodies this. He supports Ukraine but encourages French firms to continue trading with Russia.' READ MORE WORLD NEWS When it was created in 2018, even museum staff admitted the Macron waxwork did not look much like Mr Macron. Grevin's director, Yves Delhommeau, said: 'A tense and anguished face, a frozen statue that doesn't live, this is not beautiful, it is something that just doesn't work.' Mr Delhommeau said President Macron did not meet with them in order to scan his face, so sculptors were forced to work with pictures of the 40-year-old. Others went online to ridicule the model, saying it was one of the worst depictions of a public figure ever made. Most read in The Sun The Grevin Museum is often compared to London in 1835 by the French sculptor Marie Tussaud. Like the British version, Grevin displays the waxworks of numerous famous figures from around the world. Little Mix waxworks unveiled at Madame Tussauds Both museums are massive tourist attractions, with hundreds of thousands of visitors enjoying the waxworks every year. 3 A wax figure of French president Emmanuel Macron was yesterday stolen by Greenpeace activists — then used in an anti-Russia protest Credit: AFP