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Showing posts with label Northern Ireland. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Northern Ireland. Show all posts

Saturday, February 3, 2024

European Politics > Dramatic Change in Government of Northern Ireland

 

In historic first, nationalist Michelle O'Neill

to lead Northern Ireland

By Mike Heuer
   
Sinn Fein leader Michelle O'Neill is shown at the Northern Ireland Assembly in Belfast, Northern Ireland, on Saturday, when she was named the first nationalist first minister in the 100-year history of the body. Photo by Mark Marlow/EPA-EFE
Sinn Fein leader Michelle O'Neill is shown at the Northern Ireland Assembly in Belfast, Northern Ireland, on Saturday, when she was named the first nationalist first minister in the 100-year history of the body. Photo by Mark Marlow/EPA-EFE

Feb. 3 (UPI) -- Sinn Fein deputy leader Michelle O'Neill on Saturday become the first nationalist to ever lead Northern Ireland's devolved government following a power-sharing agreement reached by rival factions.

O'Neill is the first nationalist first minister in the 100-year history of the Northern Ireland's Assembly. The Democratic Unionist Party's Emma Little-Pengelly will serve as deputy first minister and Edwin Poots as the assembly speaker.

The Assembly met for the first time in two years on Saturday to swear in O'Neill and Little-Pengelly in their respective leadership positions and elected Poots as speaker.

"While the last few weeks and months have focused on restoring the Assembly and the Executive, the hard work now begins in earnest," Republic of Ireland Foreign Minister Micheal Martin said in a post on X. "Northern Ireland faces a number of real challenges. An executive working collectively -- and prioritizing real, everyday needs over questions of identity -- can meet these challenges."

It's the first time the Assembly convened since DUP members two years ago protested Britain's post-Brexit trade agreements and stopped the Assembly from convening several times since then.

Sinn Fein and the DUP agreed to share power on Wednesday after nationalist party won the most seats in the May 2022 Assembly election, while the DUP is the largest unionist party.

The parties also reached an agreement on trade rules for the first time since Britain exited the European Union in 2020.



Wednesday, October 23, 2019

Northern Ireland Morality Lurches Hard Left - Whether It Wants To Or Not

Same-sex marriage, abortion now legal in Northern Ireland
By Clyde Hughes

Pro-life demonstrators stand outside the Supreme Court in Central London in 2018. New laws legalizing abortion and same-sex marriage started in Northern Ireland Tuesday. Photo by Will Oliver/EPA-EFE

(UPI) -- A last-ditch effort by the Democratic Unionist Party to block British government reforms on same-sex marriage and abortion failed Monday, allowing both to become legal in Northern Ireland for the first time on Tuesday.

The new laws, which went into effect at midnight, ended the practice of women from Northern Ireland traveling to England to get abortions. Activists said they expect the first same-sex marriage to happen there around Valentine's Day 2020.

"This is a hugely significant moment and the beginning of a new era for Northern Ireland, one in which we're free from oppressive laws that have policed our bodies and healthcare," Grainne Teggart, Amnesty International's Northern Ireland campaign manager, said in a statement.

"No longer will those experiencing crisis pregnancy, who need to access abortion, feel they need to conceal what they're going through. Finally, our human rights are being brought into the 21st century. This will end the suffering of so many people," Teggart continued.

Not to mention the lives of thousands of babies!

DUP leadership, though, vowed to keep fighting the laws. Party leader Arlene Foster said she will examine "every possible legal option" to stop the measures.

"Until this moment, until this day in Northern Ireland, the safest place for an unborn child was in the sanctuary of its mother's womb," Jim Allister of the Traditional Unionist Voice, which also supported blocking the measures. "Sadly (now) the most dangerous place for some unborn will be in the mother's womb because the wanton decision can be taken to kill them."

Sinn Fein Party deputy leader Michelle O'Neill, though, called the last-second effort to block the new laws "pointless."

"Sinn Fein welcomes the end of the denial of the right of our LGBT brothers and sisters to marry the person they love," O'Neill said. "Sinn Fein also welcomes the end of the archaic law criminalizing women."

No wonder the secular violence has settled down in Northern Ireland, very few people believe in God anymore, nor do they fear Him. That might seem like a good thing at first glance, but in the final analysis, it will be disastrous. Turning your back on God is always disastrous eventually.



Tuesday, July 9, 2019

British MPs Legalize Same-Sex Marriage in Northern Ireland


By Sommer Brokaw

(UPI) -- Members of parliament voted Tuesday to legalize same-sex marriage in Northern Ireland.

British lawmakers in the House of Commons voted 383-73 to permit same-sex marriage, which will change the law, effective by Oct. 21, unless the Northern Irish government, which collapsed in 2017, has been re-established by that time and repeals the measure.

Labor MP Conor McGinn, an advocate for marriage equality, who championed the amendment, thanked the Love Equality campaign for making it possible.

"Having been let down so many times before, LGBT people in Northern Ireland can now look forward to enjoying the same rights as everyone else in the rest of the UK and on the island of Ireland," McGinn tweeted. "I hope to see the Northern Ireland Executive and Assembly restored and working," by Oct. 21 "so that they can take the decision to introduce equal marriage."

But if it "isn't functioning by then," McGinn added, "the LGBT community in Northern Ireland now know that Westminster will act to ensure equality and respect for all citizens, and finally give them the right to marry the person they love."

Lawmakers also voted 332-99 soon afterward to extend access to abortion in Northern Ireland through an amendment by Labor MP Stella Creasy.

Extension of both of these rights to Northern Ireland makes the country fall in line with the rest of the region.

The Republic of Ireland to the south legalized same-sex marriage in 2015 and legalized abortion during the first 12 weeks of pregnancy last year.

"Thank you for everyone who today stood up for equality in Northern Ireland -- whether for same-sex marriage or abortion, today we have said everyone in the UK deserves to be treated as an equal," Creasy tweeted. "There's a road to go yet but today a big step forward."

The changes were made through amendments to a government bill also tied to budgets and elections for the devolved assembly. The MPs said the government's argument that only the devolved Northern Irish government could make the changes was defunct because of it's political deadlock since 2017.

Northern Ireland, a part of the United Kingdom, has been without a functioning elected government since power sharing between the Democratic Unionist Party and Sinn Fein collapsed in January 2017.



Saturday, July 21, 2018

Corruption is Everywhere - But Northern Ireland's Ian Paisley?

DUP meets to discuss Paisley’s political future
after Sri Lankan holiday scandal

DUP MP Ian Paisley apologises to the House of Commons in London for failing to register two family holidays funded by the Sri Lankan government, which he previously estimated was worth £50,000. Photograph: PA Wire

Senior DUP personnel met today to discuss the political future of North Antrim MP Ian Paisley.

The party did not reveal the outcome of the meeting but said it may issue a statement on the matter early next week.

Mr Paisley made an emotional statement to the House of Commons this week, apologising for his failure to declare two luxury holidays that were paid for by the Sri Lankan government.

A parliamentary watchdog has called for the North Antrim MP to be suspended for 30 sitting days because he failed to declare the holidays, which were worth more than £50,000.

Another DUP MP, Sir Jeffrey Donaldson told the BBC today that his party was not going to take “a lynch mob approach”.

Speaking on the Today programme, Sir Jeffrey said Mr Paisley’s behaviour had been unacceptable.

However, he added: “Ian is entitled to have his case heard, he is entitled to fairness.

“We are a democratic party - the clue is in our name - and this matter has been referred to our party officers. They will consider the report prepared by the standards committee, they will consider what has happened and they will come to a decision.”

Sir Jeffrey said that Mr Paisley had apologised and acknowledged that what he had done was unacceptable.

In Belfast on Friday, Mrs May sidestepped questions about the impact the Commons suspension of Mr Paisley would have on future legislative Brexit battles she will face.

But she said the confidence and supply agreement with the DUP had allowed the Government to deliver “key decisions”. Mrs May said it was a “matter for Parliament” how it dealt with breaches of its rules.

Mr Paisley’s trips also included meeting with Sri Lankan governmental figures. The threshold for registering such hospitality in 2013 was around £660. He subsequently wrote a letter to the prime minister arguing on behalf of the Sri Lankan government. Mr Paisley has faced calls to resign his seat and there is a prospect of a by-election as a consequence of the sanction.

At times struggling to maintain his composure, Mr Paisley apologised to the House, to his colleagues in the DUP and to his constituents.

“I take my duties as a Member of Parliament seriously. I believe that I conduct myself with colleagues with integrity and openness, which is why I have such remorse about the matter, as I believe it goes against the grain of who I am, especially how it is portrayed,” he said.

“It is to my constituents, who have sent me here since 2010, that I make the profoundest of all apologies. They have honoured me with unwavering support to be their voice and I hope that they will continue to have that confidence in me in the future.”

Denied

When the Daily Telegraph broke the story of Mr Paisley’s holidays in Sri Lanka, where he was accompanied by his family, he initially denied the reports and threatened to sue the newspaper.

The holidays included business-class air travel, accommodation at first-class hotels, helicopter trips and visits to tourist attractions for Mr Paisley and his family.

Mr Paisley said that mistakes made by those in public life were amplified and that they ought to be.

“That is the nature of the job that all of us do and all of us understand that. However, I believe in a politics and in politicians who can admit to human frailty, who can apologise, mean it, and move on, because that is what real life is all about,” he said.

“It is often said that it is how we respond to these challenges in our lives that defines who and what we are, and defines our character and demonstrates to us where the true source of our personal strength rests. The 8th-century (BC) prophet Isaiah said, ‘You were angry with me, that anger has turned away, you comfort me.’ I hope to learn that lesson.”

The Commons Standards Committee on Wednesday outlined the sanction for Mr Paisley, son of late DUP founder the Rev Ian Paisley, saying he had committed “serious misconduct” and his actions “were of a nature to bring the House of Commons into disrepute”.

Mr Paisley’s potential suspension would start in September if MPs approve it.

Members who are suspended from the Commons for more than 10 days are open to a recall petition. A by-election would be triggered if 10 per cent of the electorate in Mr Paisley’s North Antrim constituency sign that petition.– PA

Stormont, NI

Tuesday, May 1, 2018

‘Support Gay Marriage’: Cake Row Case to be Heard at UK Supreme Court

War on Christianity - Faith and Rights in N Ireland

© Mario Anzuoni / Reuters

A Northern Irish bakery found to have discriminated for its refusal to make a wedding cake for a same-sex couple with the slogan “support gay marriage,” will have its appeal heard in the UK’s Supreme Court in Belfast today.

Daniel and Amy McArthur’s Ashers Bakery has twice been found to have discriminated on the basis of sexual orientation for refusing a cake order made by gay activist Gareth Lee in 2014. The McArthurs have said they cancelled the order because the cake’s message conflicted with their religious beliefs as evangelical Christians.

Gareth Lee had wanted to celebrate International Day Against Homophobia, which was to take place on the same day as his wedding, with the pro-gay marriage message on the cake. Same-sex marriage is a devolved issue for the UK, which Northern Ireland has not legally recognized – unlike the rest of the British Isles.

Describing how he felt at being refused his wedding cake order, Lee told the initial hearing in 2015 that it made him “feel I’m not worthy, a lesser person and to me that was wrong.”

Arriving at court today before the hearing, the McArthurs insisted that it has never been about the person, but rather “always been about the message,” the BBC reports.

Daniel McArthur told reporters: “We didn’t say no because of the customer; we’d served him before, we’d serve him again. It was because of the message. But some people want the law to make us support something with which we disagree.”

The case appears to be a clash over faith, freedom, and rights. A 2016 judgement handed down by Northern Ireland’s lord chief justice, Sir Declan Morgan, said that the ‘appellants’ [the McArthurs] should not “provide a service that only reflects their own political or religious message in relation to sexual orientation.”

Why should that not be their choice? Why should they be forced to offend God so as not to offend gays? Sir Declan Morgan obviously doesn't believe in God, at least, not a real God or he couldn't have made such an asinine ruling. 

What a remarkable transition we have made from a moral society to a just society. We've made it of no account to offend the living God Who created us and Who suffered and died for us and Who will stand in judgment over us. But instead it is a criminal offence to offend someone who offends God by their actions and their rejection of His warnings.

...and if He condemned the cities of Sodom and Gomorrah to destruction by reducing them to ashes, having made them an example to those who would live ungodly lives thereafter; - 2 Peter 2:6

...just as Sodom and Gomorrah and the cities around them, since they in the same way as these indulged in gross immorality and went after strange flesh, are exhibited as an example in undergoing the punishment of eternal fire. - Jude 1:7

Five supreme court justices will hear the McArthurs’ appeal in Belfast: the president, Lady Hale, the deputy president, Lord Mance, Lady Black, Lord Hodge, and Lord Kerr. It’s the first week that the UK Supreme Court has sat in Northern Ireland.



Tuesday, February 9, 2016

Northern Ireland Joins the Insanity of Abortion Rights

High Court abortion judgment in North is reflection of changing attitudes
Judge’s ruling adds momentum to recognition of women’s reproductive autonomy
Siobhán Mullally, Irish Times

David Ford: to appeal judgment. Photograph: Arthur Allison.
The Belfast High Court judgment on access to abortion in the North has rightly been described as historic. The outcome of the case taken by the Northern Ireland Human Rights Commission is to be welcomed, particularly given the neglect of women’s rights and gender equality in the North over several decades.

Both the Minister for Justice, David Ford, and the Attorney General, John Larkin, have indicated that they are appealing the High Court’s judgment.

The judgment is a striking one, not only in the challenge it poses for the European Court of Human Rights but, more widely, in the attention it gives to the specific issue of women’s reproductive autonomy in seeking to balance contested rights claims on abortion.

Specifically, on the right to travel to England to secure access to an abortion, Mr Justice Mark Horner noted that it does not protect morals to export a problem to another jurisdiction and then turn a blind eye.

It was precisely this possibility to travel to another jurisdiction that contributed in no small part to the European Court of Human Rights concluding, in A, B and C v Ireland, that the interference with the rights of two of the applicants, A and B, did not ultimately lead to a violation of Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights, protecting the right to private life.

This finding of the court has attracted widespread criticism. It is difficult to imagine that a court would, in other circumstances, find that the freedom to travel to a neighbouring country was relevant to determining the proportionality of a state’s interference with a protected human right (in this case a woman’s right to private life).

The discriminatory impact of Ireland’s abortion laws on women who are unable to travel has been repeatedly criticised by UN bodies, marking a sharp contrast with the position taken by the European Court of Human Rights to date.

One law for the rich

As Mr Justice Horner said, the restriction on access to abortion “bites on the impoverished but not the wealthy”, meaning there is one law for the rich and another for the poor. As he also noted, the European consensus points to the need to extend the right to abortion on both sides of the Border.
Northern Ireland’s abortion regime is more restrictive than Poland’s but less restrictive than in the Republic. The only other European states with comparably restrictive regimes are Andorra, San Marino and Malta.

What impact the Northern Ireland High Court’s judgment will have on this jurisdiction has been the subject of much debate. Whether it will prompt legal or political change is uncertain, but there can be no doubt that it adds momentum to the recognition of women’s reproductive autonomy as central to the lexicon of human rights – women’s rights as human rights, to repeat the mantra of the Beijing World Conference on Women 21 years on.

The judgment of a court in the North is, of course, not binding in this jurisdiction. Equally, the European Court of Human Rights is not bound to follow its findings on the scope of Article 8 of the convention’s protection of private life. But it cannot be denied that the reasoning of the High Court, particularly on a woman’s right to autonomy and the repeated denial of that right, is significant.
Mr Justice Horner noted Northern Irish law places a disproportionate burden on victims of sexual crimes. A woman who is pregnant following rape, the judge said, is “merely a receptacle to carry the child of a rapist”, her personal autonomy “vilely and heinously invaded”. The blanket ban on abortion in such circumstances, even when the victim of rape is a child herself, can, he said, “never be said to be proportionate”. Such clarity in a court judgment on this island, on the contested subject of women’s reproductive autonomy, is rare.

Central to the conclusions of the European Court of Human Rights in the A, B and C case was the finding the current abortion regime reflected the profound moral views of the Irish people. The court found insufficient evidence the views of the majority had changed significantly since the 1983 referendum supporting the Eighth Amendment to the Constitution. Recent opinion polls, however, challenge that conclusion.

Changing views

The Horner judgment, and the willingness of the Northern Irish Human Rights Commission to take this case, point also to significantly changing views in the North. In 2008, the commission reported the issue of terminations was one of the most contested in its consultations on a bill of rights. It went on to note that there was “no clear widely accepted international standard in respect of the underlying issues”. The commission’s practice, and indeed international human rights law, have evolved significantly since 2008.

The commission has indicated it will challenge the appeals brought by both the Department of Justice and the Attorney General and will re-introduce all of the original grounds brought before the High Court, namely, access to a termination of pregnancy in circumstances of serious malformation of foetus (including fatal foetal abnormality), rape or incest. Commenting on the appeals, Chief Commissioner Les Allamby, noted that the commission was seeking to secure legal reform, “so that the human rights of women and girls are protected when facing these difficult decisions.”

Other developments on both sides of the Border have received less attention in this debate. The slow pace of reform and wavering political commitment have prompted a number of brave women and organisations to seek the support of UN human rights bodies in the struggle for change. A request to the UN Committee on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women to conduct an inquiry into NI abortion law was submitted by the Family Planning Association, the Northern Ireland Women’s European Platform, and Alliance for Choice. This request is still pending.

In this jurisdiction, two complaints are pending before the UN Human Rights Committee against Ireland, specifically on the prohibition of abortion in cases of fatal foetal abnormality.

Given the committee’s repeated criticisms of abortion law in Ireland, there is a strong possibility that Ireland will be found to be in violation of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. If this happens, as a matter of international law, the State has an obligation to bring its law into conformity with the covenant.

But the government of the day may decide not to, and international law depends very much on the political will of states to comply with their legal obligations, such is the continuing force of state sovereignty. However, in the face of repeated international condemnation, the State cannot continue to deny the inhumanity of our laws and the degradation of women’s bodies that underpins such laws.

 "The degradation of women’s bodies", are you serious. That is the 'insanity' that my title refers to; the idea that abortion is about women's bodies. Abortion is about babies. The degradation of their bodies is unspeakably horrible. 

Practicing birth control by killing the baby is as evil before the birth as it is after. Those who harbour the lie that it's about women's bodies or women's rights, have a lot to answer for.

Siobhán Mullally is professor of law at University College Cork and director of the Centre for Criminal Justice and Human Rights. She is joint editor of The Irish Yearbook of International Law (Hart Publishing, Oxford)

Tuesday, May 19, 2015

Another Win for Gay Lobby in War on Christians

Insanity rules Northern Ireland

A Christian bakery in Northern Ireland was on Tuesday found guilty of discrimination for refusing to bake a cake advocating gay marriage in a landmark legal case brought by local authorities.

Ashers Baking Company, which takes its name from an Old Testament figure, took the order but declined to make a cake with the bedroom-sharing characters Bert and Ernie from the US television show "Sesame Street".

"The defendants have unlawfully discriminated against the plaintiff on grounds of sexual discrimination," judge Isobel Brownlie told a packed courtroom in Belfast at the end of a high-profile inquiry.

"This is direct discrimination for which there can be no justification," the judge said.

Northern Ireland is the only part of the United Kingdom where same-sex marriage remains against the law. Gay marriage is a highly divisive issue in the province, where church attendances in both the Protestant and Catholic communities remain strong.

OK, help me think this through... Same-sex marriage is against the law, but refusing to decorate a cake supporting same-sex marriage is a criminal act for which there can be no justification! 
Am I the only one who thinks that's crazy?

The case comes ahead of an historic referendum on Friday that is expected to approve same-sex marriage in the traditionally Catholic Republic of Ireland, Northern Ireland's southern neighbour.

The lawsuit was brought by Northern Ireland's Equality Commission, which oversees the implementation of anti-discrimination laws, on behalf of an activist from the advocacy group Queer Space.

The cake was ordered for a private function to mark International Day Against Homophobia last year.

It was ordered deliberately from the Christian bakery with the full expectation that they would refuse to decorate the cake and would end up in court. 

Their object was to shut down the bakery chain, put 80 Christians out of work, and frighten every other Christian business in Northern Ireland into compromising their beliefs so Queers will feel less guilty about their sexuality being an abomination to God.

Ashers Bakery, which employs 80 people in Britain and Ireland, received financial backing in the case from the Christian Institute, a charity.

The row has prompted a proposal from some local politicians to include a "conscience clause" in Northern Ireland's anti-discrimination laws.