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Ireland joins group of European countries in condemning Israel occupation plan for Gaza

Ireland joins group of European countries in condemning Israel occupation plan for Gaza

Irish Times3 days ago
Ireland has joined a group of European countries to issue a letter strongly condemning
Israel
's plan to
expand its military operations in Gaza
, describing the plans as potentially constituting 'a flagrant violation of international law and international humanitarian law'.
Tanaiste and Minister for Foreign Affairs
Simon Harris
, along with the foreign ministers of Spain, Norway, Iceland and Luxembourg, is among the signatories to the letter.
The letter says that the countries 'strongly condemn the recent announcement of the intensification of the occupation and the military offensive, including in Gaza city.'
'This decision will only deepen the humanitarian crisis and further endanger the remaining hostages' lives. This operation will lead to an unacceptable high toll of deaths and the forced displacement of nearly one million Palestinian civilians,' it says.
READ MORE
'We firmly reject any demographic or territorial changes in the Occupied Palestinian Territory. Actions in this regard constitute a flagrant violation of international law and international humanitarian law,' it adds.
Last week the Israeli prime minister
Binyamin Netanyahu
said that Israel's security cabinet, a small group of senior ministers, had
decided to seize Gaza City
, expanding military operations in the devastated Palestinian territory despite widespread public opposition and warnings from the military the move could endanger Israeli hostages held by Hamas.
In a statement, Mr Harris said:
'I strongly urge the Israeli government to reconsider the decision taken yesterday to escalate its offensive in Gaza. Israel's actions are confounding the international community. Any expansion of military operations can only deepen the already catastrophic humanitarian situation in Gaza, leading to further displacement of the civilian population. The exhausted people of Gaza continue to face the prospect of famine. The time for a ceasefire and hostage release deal is long overdue. I call again for Hamas to release all hostages immediately.
'I reiterate Ireland's unwavering commitment to the vision of the two-State solution where two democratic States, Israel and Palestine, live side by side in peace within secure and recognised borders, consistent with international law and relevant UN resolutions, and in this regard stress the importance of unifying the Gaza Strip with the West Bank under the Palestinian Authority.'
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Letters to the Editor, August 13th: On  Gaza atrocities, Ukraine, small SUVs, and protecting your bike
Letters to the Editor, August 13th: On  Gaza atrocities, Ukraine, small SUVs, and protecting your bike

Irish Times

timean hour ago

  • Irish Times

Letters to the Editor, August 13th: On Gaza atrocities, Ukraine, small SUVs, and protecting your bike

Sir, – The cynic in me cannot help but wonder why some people are only now finding the moral courage to speak out against the atrocities in Gaza. Starvation doesn't happen overnight. Complete siege-like conditions were imposed by Israel on October 9th, 2023, lasting until October 21st, with limited and totally inadequate supplies being allowed in thereafter. From March 2nd this year, a full blockade on everything was again imposed. It is not too difficult to predict the effects of withholding the essentials of life from an already malnourished and weakened population (whose agricultural land has also been destroyed) for five months. So why has it taken the evidential photos of skeletal children to evoke a reaction when the facts and logic already spoke for themselves? READ MORE Outrage has been expressed at the most recent killing of five Al Jazeera journalists, but their deaths were preceded by over 180 others. Why has every media report not included the reminder that Palestinian journalists were risking their lives daily in order to tell the world about what Israel refused to let foreign journalists in to see for themselves? Only now does Germany have scruples about arming Israel. The fact that as far back as November 2024 over 710 babies under one year had been killed in Israeli strikes didn't resonate as grotesque enough a statistic to provoke a crisis of conscience. For those whom German military aid has been involved in killing and wounding, the gesture is too late. Footage has been available since October 2023 of the systematic annihilation of the physical structures of the Strip. Is it the recent statistic that 70 per cent are uninhabitable and 25 per cent totally destroyed that affects politicians who now see 'war crime' written in these numbers and try to exculpate themselves by promising to recognise the state of Palestine? As if that will magic infrastructure back into being. We have all had access to the same knowledge for 22 months but some have chosen to not see and to not speak. Currently, the avalanche of those wanting to be seen to line up on what is now being perceived as 'the right side' can only be construed as that of people afraid that their shameful silence (or worse, overt support) has been exposed by the headlights of accountability and is a form of complicity in what will surely rank as one of the worst episodes in the history of the modern world. – Yours, etc, MARY MORAN, Shannon, Co Clare. Sir, – Following the brutal killing of five media workers from Al Jazeera, including the high profile and much loved journalist Anas Al Sharif, the hunting, targeting and assassination of Palestinian journalists by Israel in Gaza has been rightly condemned in the strongest terms around the world. However, many news outlets have been at pains to report these events accompanied by what appear to be official Israeli government statements or Israeli media quotes, presumably for 'balance'. Surely, for the sake of accuracy, when such material is quoted by the likes of RTÉ, the BBC, the Guardian and The Irish Times, it should be clearly noted that every single news item, quote and press report coming out of Israel is subject to strict military censorship. Perhaps they should add that Israel (often cited as the only democracy in the Middle East) ranks at 112 out of 180 in the RSF World Press Freedom Index for 2025 (just below Haiti at 111). I do question whether these news outlets would give the same credence and unquestioning respect to Haiti's official press statements as they do to those emanating from Tel Aviv. – Yours, etc, TRISH LAVELLE, Skibbereen Co Cork. Sir, – It amazes me that Germany, with its history before 1945, continues to support a country which is committing genocide, killing journalists and denying access to foreign journalists to report the truth in Gaza – while using every opportunity to starve and kill civilians. I thought that history was a learning process. – Yours, etc, ALASTAIR WHITE, Foxrock Manor, Dublin. Small SUV supporter Sir, – On two previous occasions I wrote to you outlining why I now drive a small SUV. At this stage I have had hip surgery on three occasions but I can honestly say that I can get into and out of the SUV without major pain and discomfort. That is the one reason why I drive this make of car. Why have you not printed a single letter in praise of the SUV? Balance and all that kind of thing, you know – Yours, etc, RICHARD ALLEN, Cummeen, Sligo. Sir, – SUVs are frequently referred to as off-road vehicles. In my experience, the only time most of them are off-road is when they are parked on and obstructing the footpath. – Yours, etc, BEN DUNDON, Kingswood Heights, Dublin 24. Bicycle theft Sir, – My strategy of temporarily pauperising the appearance of my relatively expensive bicycle by always tying a suitably threadbare plastic bag over the saddle before locking the two-wheeler on public streets seems to work. Not only have I enjoyed a lifetime of theft-free cycling, but even on the most inclement occasions I manage to arrive home with a bone-dry posterior. – Yours, etc, KIERAN FLYNN, Ballinasloe, Co Galway. Sir, – I see that William Smith (Letters, August 12th) has built a thief-proof bicycle. What a great idea – I think I'll steal it. – Yours, etc, RORY NOONAN, Dalkey, Co Dublin. Is this a record? Sir, – The current thread in the letters page reminds me of a letter decades back when a writer (whose name eludes me) described being in his garden and hearing the sound of Delius's On Hearing the First Cuckoo of Spring, sung by John McCormack, as it was carried on the wind from a location nearby. He wondered if it was a record? – Yours, etc, MICHAEL KEEGAN, Booterstown, Co Dublin. Sir, – Further to recent correspondence, I once had an Opel car that clocked up nigh on 300,000 miles during its lifespan. Is this a Rekord? – Yours, etc, PAUL DELANEY, Dalkey, Dublin. A deal for Ukraine Sir, – Geoffrey Roberts (Letters, August 12th) asserts that the great majority of Ukrainians want peace 'even if it means harsh compromises'. This is a simplistic interpretation of Ukrainian public opinion. Some polls, like Gallup, ask whether Ukraine should fight the war until victory or negotiate. Faced with these two stark options most Ukrainians do favour negotiation. The results are not as straightforward when Ukrainians are asked more detailed questions about conditions for a peace agreement. When asked about how peace should be achieved most Ukrainians are not keen on 'harsh compromises' at all. Most do not want Ukraine to give up any territory, even if that means the war continues. A vast majority – 74 per cent – will only accept a peace agreement if Ukraine is allowed to retain its sovereignty and its trajectory towards the EU and Nato. And if Ukraine receives either Western peacekeepers to guarantee against further Russian aggression or is armed to defend itself in the future. Instead of Volodymyr Zelenskiy and Europe falling in line with the US, as Roberts suggests, perhaps the US should fall in line with Ukrainian popular opinion that wants peace but with guarantees? Respecting what Ukrainians want would mean taking Ukrainian sovereignty and hopes seriously. It would mean respecting the victims of Vladimir Putin's war rather than rewarding the aggressor in the war in the vainglorious pursuit of a Nobel Prize. Such respect is unlikely to come from Putin and Donald Trump given Putin does not believe Ukraine to be a state and Trump's narcissism. It is vital, therefore, that Europe and Zelenskiy do not give in to any US attempt at imposing a peace. If there is to be a permanent peace Ukraine needs to be a party to the terms of that peace and its people's wishes taken into account. Ukraine should not a sacrificial lamb to Putin's regime and Trump's ego. – Yours, etc, NEIL ROBINSON, Professor of Comparative Politics, University of Limerick, Co Limerick. Sir, – Geoffrey Roberts is naive if he thinks a peace deal between Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin will save Ukraine from Russian domination. Putin has no interest in an independent sovereign Ukraine, even one with reduced territory. He doesn't even believe that Ukrainians are a separate people, only that they are deluded Russians led astray by western propaganda. Like Neville Chamberlain, Trump will surrender parts of Ukraine to Russia to appease Putin. If Putin is smart, he will wait a few years, rebuilding his strength, and after Trump leaves office, attack and capture the rest of Ukraine. Europe learned the hard lesson in the 1930s that appeasement doesn't stop wars, it encourages more of it. As a professor of history, you would think Mr Roberts would know that. – Yours, etc, JASON FITZHARRIS, Swords, Co Dublin. Cancelling India Day Sir, – I was very saddened to read about the cancellation of India Day in Dublin this year, on what would have been its 10th anniversary. More than a missed celebration of culture and inclusion, the event's cancellation is a grim reminder of the growing shadow of racism and online hate in Ireland. 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A letter from Michael O'Leary: ‘MetroLink is a mad, bad project'
A letter from Michael O'Leary: ‘MetroLink is a mad, bad project'

Irish Times

time2 hours ago

  • Irish Times

A letter from Michael O'Leary: ‘MetroLink is a mad, bad project'

Sir, – Unbelievable!! Only an Irish Times columnist (with no known experience in transport) could waste her half-page column, slagging off Dermot Desmond and myself for criticising the Dublin MetroLink, without once mentioning the projected cost of approximately €20 billion!! Being criticised by Irish Times columnists is always a great compliment. In what crazy country could we seriously consider wasting approximately €20 billion of taxpayer money on a railway line, serving a narrow strip of the north Dublin population from Swords to St Stephen's Green, all of whom are well served currently by bus connections? The cost/benefit of this insanity has never been published, because it cannot be justified. Dermot Desmond's transport view should carry significant weight, given his very successful rescue, redevelopment and sale of London City Airport for approximately $1 billion in 2006. My own, (less?) humble view is based on almost 40 years' experience of growing, what is now the world's largest passenger airline. READ MORE But sadly we are both guilty of 'being rich', so therefore dismissed by The Irish Times 'experts', who know so much more about transport. I wouldn't quibble with a MetroLink from Swords to St Stephen's Green if it was free, but there are far better uses of taxpayer funds, than this white elephant. Muddled thinking, free of any cost/benefit analysis, such as that displayed by Justine McCarthy, is how you deliver a children's hospital (which should have cost €200 million) at a final cost of €2.5 billion and rising. My criticism of the MetroLink is based on the fact, that very few passengers at Dublin Airport will ever use it. It takes passengers into St Stephen's Green, so some small minority of inbound visitors might use it, but the vast majority of Irish originating passengers, who need to get to Dublin Airport early in the morning, or are travelling to/from outside the D2 / D4 area, won't use it. Dublin Airport is just 9km from the centre of the city, and is well served by competitively priced bus connections, which takes passengers to the city centre, and to points all over Ireland at low fares. These passengers won't switch to a €20 billion metro. Your columnist claims that I 'opposed the second terminal at Dublin Airport in 2010. I didn't. Dublin needed a second terminal l and I offered to build it on the North Apron for just €200 million, as Ryanair had proposed. I simply pointed out that the Dublin Airport Authority (DAA), wasted €2 billion, building Terminal 2 in the wrong place (a cul-de-sac) and with no ability to future expand. Now that the second runway has opened on the north apron, the chronic congestion in the T2 cul-de-sac bedevils the T2 airlines on a daily basis. I note Ms McCarthy failed to offer her opinion on the Dublin Airport second runway (a project which I also supported), yet which the airlines and our passengers are prevented from using, by a 2007 (Road Traffic) Planning restriction. We elected a new government last November which promised to remove this cap 'as soon as possible', which would enable the airlines at Dublin to grow traffic, new routes, tourism and jobs. Sadly, eight months later the Government has failed to take any action to scrap this cap. More inexcusable delay and inaction from our political class. To summarise, both I and Dermot Desmond believe, wasting €20 billion on a Dublin Airport metro, is an unjustifiable waste of scarce taxpayer funds. I object because the majority of Dublin Airport passengers won't ever use this vastly overpriced service. Dermot correctly suggests that Al and electric road transport will solve the problem at a fraction of this €20 billion over the next decade. The fact that an unqualified Irish Times columnist considers that 'two rich men' are wrong, only renews my faith that this MetroLink is a mad, bad project. Add some more buses to service the citizens of Swords, Ballymun, Collins Avenue, and Glasnevin, and The Irish Times could save Irish taxpayers (me included!) about €19.9 billion rather than squandering these funds, as we have on the world's most expensive, and least efficient, Children's Hospital. If the next time Ms McCarthy wants to offer an opinion on government transport projects, perhaps she could address the cost benefit of the project, rather than slagging off two successful – albeit opinionated – business people. We won't always be right, but we will be right, far more often than the misguided, anti-business Irish Times 'chatterati'. – Yours, etc, MICHAEL O'LEARY. Chief Executive, Ryanair, Dublin.

Appeal lodged in Lebanon over leniency of sentences in killing of Private Seán Rooney
Appeal lodged in Lebanon over leniency of sentences in killing of Private Seán Rooney

Irish Independent

time5 hours ago

  • Irish Independent

Appeal lodged in Lebanon over leniency of sentences in killing of Private Seán Rooney

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