logo
Tánaiste says TDs should avoid party politics when talking about Israel's 'genocidal actions'

Tánaiste says TDs should avoid party politics when talking about Israel's 'genocidal actions'

The Journal22-05-2025

TÁNAISTE SIMON HARRIS has said members of the Dáil should not be divided along political lines when it comes to the 'genocidal actions' of Israel against the Paelestinian people in Gaza.
Speaking to RTÉ's Morning Ireland programme, Harris was asked about recent comments by Green Party leader Roderic O'Gorman regarding the government's approach to progressing the Occupied Territories Bill.
The government has faced consistent criticism for the length of time it has taken to bring the bill forward for legislative scrutiny.
The original form of the bill would have banned trade in goods and services with illegally occupied territories, most notably from Israeli settlements in Palestine, which are illegal under international law.
The government has blamed the delay on issues related to the constitutionality of the bill and the inclusion of services in the original version.
Earlier this month, O'Gorman said that when he was in government, legal advice submitted by the attorney general
made no mention of services being an issue
.
O'Gorman accused the current government of introducing issues related to services as an excuse for delaying passing the bill.
'It's a delaying tactic,' he said.
Today, Harris said: 'I don't understand why we have to divide along political lines on genocidal actions that are happening right now in Gaza.'
Harris' reference to Israels actions in Gaza being 'genocidal' marks a departure from the language used by government officials since the war in Gaza began. The government has, so far, avoided using that language.
'Nobody has a monopoly of concern,' he said.
Advertisement
'Nobody isn't disgusted, appalled and outraged. And I think it's about time everybody in Dáil Éireann puts their party jersey aside and pulls together here, and tries to take practical action. That's what the people of Ireland want.'
Harris is to bring a memo about the bill to cabinet today, after meeting with the author of the original bill, Senator Frances Black.
He said he hopes the bill will reach committee stage before the Dáil's summer recess in July.
'Warning shots'
Harris also addressed in incident in the West Bank in Palestine that occurred yesterday, when Israeli occupation forces fired in the direction of a delegation of EU diplomats, which included two Irish diplomats.
'There's absolutely no doubt in my mind that this is the latest in a trend of intimidatory behaviour by the Israeli Defence Forces,' Harris said.
When Harris visited Irish troops in Lebanon in March, an Israeli drone
hovered conspicuously overhead throughout
. Last week, Irish troops in Lebanon were targeted by a laser coming from the Israeli military,
which led the UN to lodge a formal complaint
.
The Israeli military apologised for yesterday's shooting and said its soldiers had fired 'warning shots'.
Harris dismissed that explanation, saying: 'Whether these are called warning shots or whatever nice words that the Israeli Defence Forces wish to try and put on it, they were still shots, and you do not fire shots at diplomats.'
Harris said the Israeli military (IDF) would have been aware that a diplomatic mission was visiting the Jenin refugee camp in the northern part of the occupied West Bank.
'It's a clear breach of law. It's a clear breach of the obligation that Israel has to protect diplomats,' he said.
He added that the Israeli response 'doesn't really show the IDF understanding the scale and the gravity of what they did towards diplomats from a number of countries yesterday, including from Ireland'.
Harris said he had been in touch with the EU's chief diplomat Kaja Kallas regarding the incident and that they have both called for an investigation.
'There must be accountability,' he said.
Readers like you are keeping these stories free for everyone...
A mix of advertising and supporting contributions helps keep paywalls away from valuable information like this article.
Over 5,000 readers like you have already stepped up and support us with a monthly payment or a once-off donation.
Learn More
Support The Journal

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

90-year-old Irish priest on streets of riot-torn LA to 'stand with' immigrants
90-year-old Irish priest on streets of riot-torn LA to 'stand with' immigrants

Irish Daily Mirror

timean hour ago

  • Irish Daily Mirror

90-year-old Irish priest on streets of riot-torn LA to 'stand with' immigrants

A 90-year-old Irish priest has told how he took to the streets during riots in Los Angeles to "stand with" immigrant families. Fr Peter O'Reilly, who has been based in California for decades, was one of several clergymen and women who demonstrated against an ICE crackdown on illegals ordered by US President Donald Trump. The retired cleric, who is originally from Co Longford, said ministers from various faiths had originally planned to have a prayer vigil on the steps of LA's City Hall. He told RTE: "The meeting had been cancelled because of the fear of violence so I felt maybe the thing to do was maybe just mingle with the people and wearing my Roman collar, I thought that would be the best thing to do. "To bear witness. To say, 'we stand with you'. "The mood was serious. It was animated. People were talking to each other. Maybe about 15 yards away were the group who set up the barriers, street barriers, which I found out were to be used to protect them from the rubber bullets fired by the police. "They were firing them. I was not near the front, maybe 15 to 20 yards away. "The police were firing them maybe as a warning, do not riot. I had a feeling too because of what the mayor of Los Angeles had said, that this was not an insurrection. "This is a manufactured thing from Washington, to create confusion and bring about violence rather than peace. "With the Irish experience of being discriminated against for many years and knowing the discrimination here in this country against the Irish. I felt there was something personal about where I was, some of these communities and knowing how many of them were marginalised because of the colour of their skin. "These were hardworking family-oriented people, that we needed to stand with them and let them know we were with them and for them."

Carlow gunman disclosure set to lead to scrutiny of An Garda Síochána
Carlow gunman disclosure set to lead to scrutiny of An Garda Síochána

Irish Times

time2 hours ago

  • Irish Times

Carlow gunman disclosure set to lead to scrutiny of An Garda Síochána

It was Drew Harris 's last appearance before the Oireachtas Justice Committee before his retirement. In between well-wishes for his contribution to policing over a long career – including from Sinn Féin's chair Matt Carthy – there was some close questioning and a political edge to it. The most dramatic came from Labour TD Alan Kelly, who disclosed that Evan Fitzgerald, the young man who fired shots in a shopping centre in Carlow before turning his shotgun on himself, had been supplied with guns and ammunition by undercover gardaí . As Pat Leahy and Conor Lally report, it was confirmed by the Commissioner that Fitzgerald (22) was supplied with the guns by gardaí under what is called a 'controlled delivery'. The gardaí then arrested and charged him with possession of firearms and ammunition offences. It was some disclosure. Such are the time limits on the questioning – because there are so many committees in the 34th Dáil there are strict restrictions – Harris didn't actually manage to respond to the question posed by Kelly. READ MORE A little later, however, Michael McDowell came back to the specific question and Harris said that controlled deliveries were frequently used in drugs and firearms cases. The matter has been referred to Fiosrú, the policing ombudsman, but has now a public and political dimension. It's certain that down the line, the Garda will come under political and public scrutiny for the deployment of this tactic. As Kelly later told The Irish Times: 'What he was doing was wrong, but where is the proportionality in the actions of An Garda Síochána? When undercover gardaí met this young man, followed him and knew who they were dealing with, did they not assess the level of threat differently and look at alternative interventions? 'They knew they were not dealing with dissidents or organised crime gangs but a young man with some issues. They have effectively said the same and even agreed to his bail, so obviously they didn't believe he was a huge threat.' Payback time (or more pay time) for former ministers and senior civil servants There was a bit of surprise when it was announced on Tuesday that Minister for Public Expenditure Jack Chambers was holding a media conference in relation to the National Shared Services Office (NSSO), a classic back-office State agency that doesn't exactly draw news headlines. But as Cormac McQuinn reports, errors in handling pension payments have resulted in a situation where Government ministers and as many as 13,000 retired civil servants could either owe money or be owed money because of miscalculations in relation to their pension contributions. 'This cohort of former civil servants were in work-share arrangements and, while not all are necessarily affected, their pensions are to be checked for underpayments,' writes McQuinn. 'There is also an issue in relation to the pensions of 30 retired senior civil servants and one of them could owe as much as €280,000 as a result of NSSO errors.' It is believed most current Government ministers will owe money to the State, though some may be due some money back. The highest overpayment may be in the region of €30,000. Ministerial Pressure Zones There was a time when the political pressure zone only surrounded the Minister for Housing but this week it has extended nationwide, as it were, to the whole of Government. Not only did the Minister James Browne have a testing day trying to explain the changes he has introduced to rent pressure zones (RPZs), the issue dominated Leaders' Questions. There was a snarly back and forth all day between the Government and Opposition parties over the changes, with some very thorny prose being used (see best reads below). Extending the RPZ from the current 111 local election areas to all 166 was simple to explain. It was the future arrangements for tenants – especially existing ones – that came under scrutiny and, by extension, put the Government under the cosh. Browne was explaining all day and living up to the Karl Rove dictum that when you are doing that, you are losing. Under the new classification, a landlord who owns three properties or less is a 'mom and pop' landlord. That became an issue. The distinction between new accommodation coming on stream and existing accommodation also became an issue. The Opposition pounded the Government all day on whether existing tenants in RPZ zones would see changes to the increase limits after six years, like new tenancies that begin from March 2026. 'The rights of existing tenants will not change' became the mantra of all Government people during the day. In other words, RPZ rules would continue for them ad infinitum. However, it did not succeed in convincing. The Smaller the Party the Bigger the Split Wow. We did not see that coming. People Before Profit coming under attack from within for becoming too mainstream. A group of some 30 activists have left the party over concerns it would enter a future Government with Sinn Féin . It's not over the concerns the likes of Simon Harris or Micheál Martin would have. It's because Sinn Féin is essentially an establishment party, they say. The group's best known politician is Dublin City Council member Madeleine Johansson. In a statement, it said a Sinn Féin-led government would 'coalesce with the establishment and leave untouched the real government, the permanent government – the State bureaucracy, army chiefs and head of Guards'. Ronan McGreevy has the full story on this latest split among the micro parties of the far-left . Best reads Miriam Lord has the full welly on the back and forth over the RPZ changes yesterday including some choice name-dropping by the Taoiseach. Ellen Coyne, our newest colleague on the political team, covered the press conference on Gaza on Tuesday, hosted by Senator Frances Black and others. She reports that the Independent Senator said a 'groundbreaking' case against Airbnb will set a precedent for legal action against any Irish companies with links to illegal Israeli settlements. Black said similar cases will continue to be taken until the Government includes services in the upcoming Occupied Territories Bill . Gordon Deegan writes that Michael Healy-Rae's family property company has posted €842,000 in profit over two years. Playbook Dáil Wed, Jun 11th 09.00: Topical Issues 10.00: Private Members' Business (Social Democrats): Motion re Ending the Central Bank's facilitation of the sale of Israel Bonds 12.00: Leaders' Questions. 12.34: Other Members' Questions 17.02: Government Business: Mental Health Bill 2024 – Committee Stage 21.02: Deferred Divisions 21.32: Dáil adjourns Seanad 10.30: Commencement Matters 11.30: Order of Business 13.00: Government Business: Supports for Survivors of Residential Institutional Abuse Bill 2024 – Second Stage 15.30: Private Members' Business: Child Trafficking and Child Sexual Exploitation Material (Amendment) Bill 2022 – Committee Stage 17.30: Seanad adjourns Committees 09.30: Transport Driving Test and NCT Delays The NCT will say it has reduced the waiting time for tests from 27 weeks to 20 weeks and that one of the causes of the delays were a 60 per cent upsurge in driving test applications. 09.45: Health Issues relating to the priorities and concerns in the context of the Mental Health Bill 2024 10.45: Social Protecion Engagement with Minister for Social Protection Dara Calleary 12.30: Arts, Media and Communications Committee Matters relating to the termination of the Arts Council Grant Management IT system. Pat Leahy has details of the opening statement , which deeply regrets the decision by Minister for Arts Patrick O'Donovan not to renew the contract of director Maureen Kennelly over the handling of a controversial ICT project. 12.30: Further and Higher Education Engagement with Minister for Further and Higher Education James Lawless. 15.30: Finance, Public Expenditure Israeli Bond Programme 15.30: Agriculture Examination of the impacts of the Veterinary Medicinal Products, Medicated Feed and Fertilisers Regulation Act 2023

Anja Murray: Radical changes required to let the oceans recover
Anja Murray: Radical changes required to let the oceans recover

Irish Examiner

time2 hours ago

  • Irish Examiner

Anja Murray: Radical changes required to let the oceans recover

Summertime is when many of us love taking time out by the seaside. Watching over the open expanse of ocean, feasting our eyes on stunning turquoise depths of each incoming wave, feeling the invigorating freshness of sea air. Walking along the shoreline we might watch and listen to terns, global migrants who breed on Irish coastlines during the summer months, feeding on small fish caught fresh from the surface of the sea, enthralling us with their elegance as they swoop and dive. We might immerse ourselves in the blue-green waters, exhilarating and energising mind and body with the joy of sea swimming. As conscious as we are of our island nation state, we are only vaguely aware that Ireland's marine territory spans more than 10 times our territorial land mass. We are also generally aware of our dependence on the sea for much of our wealth and resources, yet don't tend to consider just how much we impact the health of ocean ecosystems with our activities. For most of history, humans have rightly considered the oceans as being far too large for us to ever inflict much of an influence upon. Everything is ready in Nice, France, for the UN Ocean Conference. Starting Monday, world leaders, scientists and other civil society representatives from around the world will come together to share their perspectives and solutions to #SaveOurOcean. — United Nations (@UN) June 8, 2025 Yet over the past 50 years, it has become clear that human activities are causing life threatening harm to the fabric of ocean life. This is the subject of the third United Nations Ocean Conference that has been taking place this week in Nice, France. As international law and multilateral cooperation are being sorely tested and challenged on several fronts at present, the Ocean Conference is a vital opportunity for international governance and policy to prevail, with the task none other than charting a path to a liveable future for all of us. Oceans, and the life they contain, actively shape conditions for life on land. Marine plankton constitute as much as 90% of life in the open seas and maintain the balance of atmospheric gasses that sustains all the rest of us, including regulating climate by absorbing excess carbon dioxide, moving heat around the planet, and producing the oxygen that all other lifeforms depend on. Plankton of course are the basis of every marine food chain, their distribution and abundance tightly embroiled with the millions of species on both land and in water. Perhaps beginning with hunting whales, the largest animals on the planet, until many species were threatened with extinction, humans started to exert a significant impact on the health of marine ecosystems. Fishing has always taken place, and is not inherently bad for the ocean. But the combination of technological advancements, rapid growth in fleet size and massive subsidies for industrial fishing that have caused fish to be harvested faster than stocks can replenish. Overfishing is now officially recognised as the most significant driver of declines in ocean wildlife, pushing target and non-target populations to the brink of collapse. And lest we think that Ireland is innocent in this, we are one of the worst offenders when it comes to overfishing. On top of these pressures, the oceans have been absorbing excess carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, a process that has, until recently, been buffering and delaying the impacts of climate change, but has been causing acidification in marine waters. Ocean temperatures, specifically sea surface temperatures, have been soaring, with about a quarter of the world's oceans experiencing marine heat waves in 2024. Last summer's extreme marine heatwave off the coasts of Ireland raised sea temperatures by 5°C. There is another marine heatwave underway currently. It is hardly surprising that the ecological equilibrium of the world's oceans are wobbling toward a fall. And if that happens, we will all go down. All of this is to say that international cooperation to address the pressures and implement solutions is crucial. This is why the gathering of more than 50 heads of state this week in France, along with scientists, activists, and business executives, is a deeply hopeful event. While many have turned to scepticism about the potential of such UN conferences to chart international agreements that go far enough to be effective, it is worth remembering that international summits such as these are still the most viable way of collectively agreeing and implementing solutions to global problems. These processes are also the only opportunity that small island states have to influence global politics. The UN Ocean Conference has been working to develop international governance and mobilise financial resources for a suite of measures to protect the healthy functioning of the world's oceans. One of the key aspects of this is securing the ratification of the 'High Seas Treaty', a legally binding instrument to protect the high seas beyond national jurisdiction. A moratorium on deep-sea mining is also on the agenda. Many civil society groups across Ireland and internationally have also been focusing energy on the need for a scaling up of Marine Protected Areas (MPAs). Ireland has made progress in recent years, having increased the area of MPAs from less than 2.5% in 2022 to just over 9% by 2024, though still leaving a long way to go to achieve the EU Biodiversity Strategy target to protect at least 30% of the Irish Maritime Area by 2030. A swathe of marine biodiversity hotspots that are in urgent need of legal protection have been identified and proposed by the Fair Seas campaign, a coalition of civil society groups across Ireland. Another essential component of progressing the Irish MPA network is the long awaited Marine Protected Area Bill. The UN Ocean Conference puts much needed pressure on Ireland, as an island national, to progress long overdue national policy while simultaneously being part of the momentum for urgent multilateral action. Globally, the oceans are changing faster than any time since the ice age. This time, it is human activities that are the agents of the transformation. We, too, are capable of transformation, once we understand that radical change in human activities is the only way we can allow the oceans to recover. For this, the success of international cooperation is a prerequisite, a necessity for a viable future.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store