Mayor subjected to online 'campaign of disinformation'
The leader of the SDLP has condemned a "deliberate campaign of disinformation and smearing" directed towards the mayor of Derry City and Strabane.
Speaking on Wednesday, Claire Hanna said online abuse of Lilian Seenoi Barr in recent weeks had both "implied and very direct racist undertones".
Hanna said the abuse comes after a man was jailed last month for posting abusive messages online toward Seenoi Barr.
Seenoi Barr, who was born in Kenya and became the first black mayor in Northern Ireland last year, said the past week has been "deeply distressing".
She said she has reported the abuse to police and reassessed her security.
In a statement, police said they received a report on 24 February in relation to online posts and commentary.
"Enquiries are ongoing, and will continue to be reviewed to identify any potential offences," the police said.
Derry City and Strabane area commander Ch Supt Gillian Kearney said the police will "continue to work with and support the mayor to ensure she feels safe in her workplace".
"To that end, we are working with Derry City and Strabane District Council to provide reassurance," the senior officer added.
Lilian Seenoi Barr and Claire Hanna, flanked by party colleagues, addressed a press conference in Derry's Guildhall on Wednesday.
"The past week has been deeply distressing seeing lies, disinformation and malicious attacks spread about me, simply because of my firm and reasoned commitment to fighting racism and injustice in our society," Seenoi Barr said.
"I want to be very clear, I will not be deterred by name-calling, the smearing of my character and certainly not by online attacks by those who offer nothing constructive to society."
The mayor said she has also been humbled by the support that she has received in the wake of "malicious smearing and lies".
She said the attacks are "rooted in prejudice" and believes she has been targeted because of her ethnicity and background.
"I am a Maasai woman and a Derry Girl," she said.
Seenoi Barr said she is proud to call Derry her home and that the abuse she has received will not deter her from her carrying out her duties as mayor.
"Whether people like it or not I have earned my position as mayor of Derry City and Strabane District Council," she said.
Seenoi Barr said such online attacks can deter people from ethnic minority backgrounds aspiring to hold public office "if serious action is not taken".
"This is a city I am proud to represent and proud to call my home - it will not stand for division or racism."
In a statement, Ch Supt Kearney said any abuse, harassment or criminality directed at our elected representatives "is totally unacceptable and will be thoroughly investigated".
"We will continue to do all we can to ensure that our elected representatives are supported, and they can undertake their role free from abuse, harassment and intimidation," she added.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
6 hours ago
- Yahoo
Calls for public inquiry over one of Europe's largest illegal dumps
Some politicians and environmental activists are calling for a public inquiry after two men were jailed last week for their roles in one of Europe's largest illegal dumps outside Londonderry. The judge at Londonderry Crown Court said they had "acted deliberately" and been "entirely motivated by financial gain". The contaminated Mobuoy dump consists of two parcels of land - the City Industrial Waste (CIW) site and the Campsie Sand and Gravel (CSG) site. It is thought to cover more than 100 acres of land or the size of about 70 football pitches. Environmental activist Dean Blackwood said there should be a public inquiry. Mr Blackwood, a director at Faughan Anglers and principal planner for the Department of Environment up until 2013, said there was a "bubbling lake of toxic waste and no proper remediation work started". "Not only were big holes allowed to be dug up for this waste to be deposited, they were allowed to be dug outside any regulations," Mr Blackwood told BBC Radio Foyle's North West Today programme, from the site at Campsie. "The failure of the authorities to act in a proper manner really calls into question the effectiveness of our government departments to regulate and protect the environment," Mr Blackwood said. "This environmental crime has been described as unprecedented in the UK so you would have expected an unprecedented sentence." The Social Democratic and Labour Party (SDLP) MLA Mark H Durkan is to ask the Public Prosecution Service (PPS) to review the sentences. He said the men had "profited to the tune of over £40m by illegal dumping waste right beside our city's main drinking water supply". "It's clear they were only interested in their own profits and cared not one bit about the risk this posed to public health or the surrounding environment," he added. Durkan said the impact was being felt in the area "with the A6 road project being delayed as a result with a knock on effect on the North West's economy". "We are now looking at a bill of up to £700m to clean up this site at a time when the public purse is under significant pressure," he added. He reiterated his party's call for a full public inquiry, adding that progress and investment was needed to make the site safe. The Northern Ireland Assembly passed a motion for a public inquiry into illegal waste disposal in March 2014. But in response to a question from the Green Party in 2020, the then Agriculture and Environment Minister Edwin Poots ruled one out. The DUP MP for East Londonderry, Gregory Campbell, believes the sentences handed down were "very lenient" considering the "scale of this." Speaking to BBC Radio Foyle's North West Today programme on Monday, Campbell said that a public inquiry was a potential route to consider, but he had concerns over the potential cost. "That is going to come at significant cost, and the clean-up is going to come at a much more significant cost," Campbell said. "If anyone thinks that Stormont has a budget that will be able to accommodate that [a public inquiry], then I really think they need a wake-up call - that is just not going to happen. "We are going to have to go to [the UK] Treasury and say: 'This is of a scale far beyond the Stormont budget,' if we are talking about a public inquiry and a massive clean-up that could cost hundreds of millions of pounds within an already stretched budget." Alderman Darren Guy, from the Ulster Unionist Party (UUP) said the sentencing "is far from adequate". "Like other parties, we would support calls for a full inquiry as we believe that there were more people involved in this crime than the two men now sentenced." "We believe it is much more important to call for the government and the Daera minister to now find the correct solutions and the funding to begin the massive clean-up of the contaminated Mobuoy site." Paul Doherty, 67, of Culmore Road, Derry, admitted seven charges between 2007 and 2013 relating to the contaminated Mobuoy dump at Campsie and was sentenced to one year in prison. Co-defendant Gerard Farmer, 56, of Westlake in Derry, pleaded guilty to three charges between 2011 and 2013 and was jailed for 21 months. The court was told on Friday that the amount of waste illegally disposed of could potentially have generated £30m for Doherty's company, Campsie Sand & Gravel Ltd. For Farmer's firm, City Industrial Waste Ltd, the potential sum was more than £13m. Prosecution lawyers said the case against Doherty and Farmer concerned about 636,000 tonnes of waste including construction and domestic waste. The court was told that no pollution has yet been detected in the river, but that ongoing monitoring will be required, at "significant" cost to the public purse. The £700m figure for the potential repair bill is contained in 2022/23 accounts from the Department of Agriculture, Environment and Rural Affairs (Daera) which were published in February 2024. They estimate a cost range of between £17m and £700m. Following sentencing on Friday, Agriculture Minister Andrew Muir described the Mobuoy dump scandal as a "sophisticated and deliberate environmental crime of unprecedented scale". He announced plans to launch a public consultation on a draft remediation strategy for the site. In a statement to BBC Radio Foyle, NI Water said: "Water undertake sampling and analysis for drinking water quality monitoring with samples taken at the water treatment works, the Service Reservoirs and at customer taps. "There have been no water quality breaches in the treated drinking water supplied from Carmoney water treatment works that have been related to the Mobuoy waste site." Financial journalist Paul Gosling told BBC News NI "it is also one of the most dire examples possible of regulatory failure by state bodies in Northern Ireland". "The outcome will be a massive financial burden for Northern Ireland that will be a blight on the capital and revenue budgets of government here for probably decades to come," he added. "People will be now asking does the sentence meet the gravity of the crime. The consequences will arguably be more severe for our society than for the perpetrators of the crime." Pair jailed over one of Europe's largest illegal dumps Minster rules out illegal dump public inquiry
Yahoo
6 days ago
- Yahoo
NI Secretary to meet with parties over how to deal with legacy
The Northern Ireland Secretary is set to hold a series of meetings with political leaders over fresh legislation to deal with the legacy of the Troubles. Hilary Benn will meet with the leaders of the four larger political parties which comprise the Stormont Executive in Belfast on Wednesday. He met with the SDLP on Tuesday. Speaking ahead of the meetings, Mr Benn emphasised that any new arrangements must have the confidence of bereaved families and of all communities. The previous government's contentious Legacy Act has been almost universally opposed by political parties and victims groups. It halted scores of cases going through the courts and inquests concerning the Troubles, and set up the Independent Commission for Reconciliation and Information Recovery (ICRIR). Mr Benn also reiterated that the Government will repeal and replace the Legacy Act. The ICRIR is expected to be retained. 'This UK Government is committed to (repealing and replacing) the previous government's Legacy Act and to ensuring we have a system that is capable of delivering for all families who are seeking answers around the loss of their loved ones,' he said. 'I am continuing to work with all of the Northern Ireland parties over what should be included in that legislation. 'It is important that new legacy arrangements are capable of commanding the confidence of families and of all communities.'
Yahoo
6 days ago
- Yahoo
Muir hits out at pollution plan 'misinformation'
Stormont's agriculture minister has hit out at what he has called "misinformation" over his department's plans to reduce water pollution which have faced criticism from some in the agri-food sector. Northern Ireland's long-overdue Nutrients Action Programme (NAP) for 2026-29 was published for consultation last month. Many of the proposals are linked to the Lough Neagh Action Plan. Some political parties and farming unions have argued the plans are out of touch with the reality of agriculture. But on Tuesday, Andrew Muir said they were draft proposals with final decisions yet to be taken. Speaking in the Assembly the minister also criticised as "disgraceful" recent commentary on social media about the issue. "I have seen misogynistic comments against officials in my department, there have been racist comments in relation to people that we are very, very fortunate to have working in our agri-food sector. "Not for a very long time have I seen such vile homophobic comments about myself. I am a gay man and I am proud to be a gay man and it has no relevance whatsoever to the Nutrients Action Programme nor my ability to do this job." The minister went on to say: "Some of the comments made towards me - I'm thick enough to be able to take that, it was shocking and I have not seen something like that since the 1990s, but some of the comments for example in terms of foreign nationals working in agri-food, I just thought that was beneath contempt and I think it's important we call this out here. "We can have a rational discussion around these things but we should not descend into that, and some of the comments against officials are wrong." The leader of the Opposition, SDLP assembly member Matthew O'Toole said it was "utterly disgusting" and the minister had the opposition's support in calling it out, while the DUP's Gary Middleton said the social media comments against the minister and his officials were unacceptable. Farmers say NI pollution proposals 'out of touch'