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Archive for the ‘Human Rights’ Category

Senator Bacik Calls for Debate on EU/IMF Deal, and for a Debate on the Plight of the Survivors of Magdalene Laundries

Wednesday, December 15th, 2010

Order of Business

Senator Ivana Bacik: I support the call by Senator Buttimer for a debate today on the IMF and EU deal. It is extraordinary that we are not debating it in this House, given that it is being debated in the other House and all around the country. The parameters of the deal are well known to everyone but there has been some excellent critiques of the deal and it is very important that this House would have an opportunity to critique it. Those of us who oppose it and have argued for a renegotiation of the terms of the deal need to be able to put on the record of the House our concerns and why we think a better deal can be obtained elsewhere and what is wrong with this deal. I refer to an excellent paper from Afri which critiques the deal and which states that not only does it diminish Irish democracy, which it clearly does, but it also locks Ireland into a deflationary neo-liberal economic policy regime. Alternatives have been put forward by respected economists and I have put those alternatives on the record of the House. However, we need an opportunity to debate the terms of the deal today. Listening to Senator MacSharry, it is extraordinary also to hear the Government still accusing the Opposition of talking down the economy when it has brought down the economy and brought in the IMF and the EU. It has diminished democracy and locked us into this deflationary spiral about which representatives of Afri spoke so eloquently. It is wrong of the Government to continue to accuse the Opposition of talking down the economy in some ridiculous sense.

 

I ask for a debate early in the next term on the plight of the survivors of the Magdalene laundries. It is a month since the Irish Human Rights Commission issued its report and we have still not received a coherent Government response to the very serious call for redress for the survivors of Magdalene institutions. They have had no official acknowledgement by the State of the terrible wrong done to them as it was done to the victims of so much abuse in different residential institutions.

Senator Bacik speaks on Need for Continued Funding for Mental Health Services, Zombie Banks, Climate Change Bill, and the Release of Aung Sang Suu Kyi

Wednesday, November 17th, 2010

Order of Business

Senator Ivana Bacik:  Like other colleagues, I will begin by expressing my condolences to the families and communities in counties Limerick and Cork for the terrible tragedies that have happened there. I echo the words of other Members who have spoken of the need to ensure the maintenance of funding for mental health services. This is without making any specific connection but all Members are conscious that this is an important priority.

On the economy, it is extraordinary to hear Members on the Government side speak of “bailout” in so many different ways. They have called it borrowing or a response to help us with the situation—–

 

Senator Jerry Buttimer: That is right.

—–but they will not use the word “bailout”. While listening to the Minister for Finance this morning, I noted that he danced around the issue. Unfortunately, it is time to embrace the reality that all Members deeply regret, which is that we have sold out our economic sovereignty for the sake of a few zombie banks. One should be clear that this does date back to the bank guarantee scheme of September 2008 and to the mistake made at that point to guarantee everything—–

 

Senator Jim Walsh:  What does the Senator think would have happened had we not done so?

 

An Cathaoirleach:  No interruptions. Questions to the Leader.

 

Senator Ivana Bacik:   —–and to shore up banks that are in effect zombie banks. We still are shoring them up and are paying this incredible price. This huffing and puffing and culture of denial from the Government must stop because it is clear to all in Ireland and internationally that we are about to be bailed out. This has been more or less implicitly accepted by Members on the Government side.

In addition, I seek clarification from the Leader with regard to the climate change Bill, the heads of which were to have been published yesterday. I am unsure, in the midst of all the other grim news, whether this was the case. I seek clarity on this point because they have been promised for so long.

While I welcome the release of Aung Sang Suu Kyi at the weekend in Burma, no Members believe this will mark any sort of real return to democracy for that country, especially as more than 2,000 political prisoners remain in custody there. A debate on this issue is needed and Members must think about the real suffering and sacrifices being made by the citizens of Burma.

 

Senator Bacik Calls for Debates on Ombudsman Report, Seanad Reform, and Magdalen Laundries

Wednesday, November 10th, 2010

Order of Business

Senator Ivana Bacik:  I echo Senator Fitzgerald’s call for a debate today on the Ombudsman’s report published yesterday. The Ombudsman, Ms Emily O’Reilly, has raised serious issues about the potential exposure of the taxpayer given that compensation is sought in approximately 300 legal actions on the costs of private nursing home care. Those cases are being settled routinely. It is worrying that the Minister for Health and Children, Deputy Harney, has simply rejected the findings of the Ombudsman’s report. We need to hear from the Minister on the matter. I second Senator Fitzgerald’s amendment. I saw the “Prime Time” programme last night. It was an excellent investigation of the issues raised in the report. We need to debate the report in this House as a matter of urgency, especially given the economic circumstances, the great hardship for many families of elderly people in nursing homes and the great worry this report will have caused them.

I call on the Leader to provide not a debate on Seanad reform but a response and clarification on what will be the consequence of the loss by the Government of the votes last week on the Independent Senators’ motion on Seanad reform. Senator O’Toole raised the matter yesterday. He is correct to say there must be a consequence for the loss of those votes. In the High Court judgment last week on Senator Doherty’s action, legal shape was put on the abstract notion of democracy. The High Court said that it is not enough for the Government to pay lip service to the concept of democracy and to keep promising a by-election and that adequate representation would be provided for the people in Donegal, Waterford and Dublin South. The Government must go ahead and call the by-election. One can draw an analogy or comparison with the vote on Seanad reform. Where the Government loses a vote on a motion on Seanad reform, especially when it has been promising action in that regard since it was elected, and the Minister for the Environment, Heritage and Local Government, Deputy Gormley, made it a key promise of his when he became Minister, we need clarification from the Government on what it is going to do in response to the loss of the vote and the passing of the motion on Seanad reform. Those of us in this House who have supported Seanad reform are anxious to see real action being taken by the Government on the matter.

I join others who called for a debate yesterday on the Magdalen laundries, survivors of those laundries and the need for redress. In the wake of yesterday’s Irish Human Rights Commission report, there is a real imperative that we would debate the issue today or very soon given that the survivors have been pressing for many months for redress and recognition by the State of the real injustice that was caused to them.

 

Senator Bacik calls for Information on Government’s Four Year Plan, and also Calls for Debate on Elections in Burma

Tuesday, November 9th, 2010

Order of Business

Senator Ivana Bacik:  How can the Opposition possibly agree when it does not have the information it needs to decide whether it can agree? I am concerned that Irish borrowing costs are at a record high on international markets. It is urgent, therefore, that we know what are the terms of the four-year plan, yet the Government has decided to delay publishing it until after the by-election in County Donegal. This does not seem to be a way to achieve political consensus, as Commissioner Rehn stated. It does not seem to be the case that we are being given the information we need in a timely fashion in order that we can consider it and discuss it with the Government. The Government needs to actively promote consensus, not to take political potshots at the Opposition.

Will the Leader arrange a debate on the elections in Burma? Since the sham elections took place at the weekend, we have seen worrying reports of thousands of refugees fleeing into Thailand. The likely outcome of the election is that the military regime will continue to be propped up. Aung San Suu Kyi and other Opposition leaders remain under arrest and in detention. We need to have a debate on the very serious political situation that is unravelling in Burma.

 

Senator Bacik Welcomes Debate on Roscommon Abuse Report

Thursday, October 28th, 2010

Order of Business

Senator Ivana Bacik: I, too, welcome the debate on the Roscommon abuse report. Like others, I am appalled and saddened by the terrible failures of the State it discloses. It does not bear thinking about that for 25 years, from when the family concerned first came to the attention of social services in 1989 to 2004 when the HSE finally took some of the children into care, these six children were subjected to such horrific abuse. I know we all feel that way.

Senator McDonald is correct that it is not just that there were failures during that lengthy period by individual social workers or the health care system but also that there was a failure by the political system to provide the legal and constitutional framework within which this family would have been treated differently and within which, as Senator Alex White stated, there would have been a different threshold for intervention. The children’s rights referendum is essential because it would provide that different culture or legal or constitutional framework within which social workers and the HSE would be able to operate and intervene at a different and earlier stage to prevent this type of appalling abuse from happening.

Other Members referred to the Kilkenny incest report and the Sophia McColgan case. Many brave individuals, young adults, who were abused as children have come forward in order that this would not happen to other children. We owe it to them to ensure we change the framework to ensure this does not occur again. I urge the Government to set a date for the holding of the referendum. There has been much debate and work done on the wording. We are all agreed that it is essential the rights of the child come before the rights of the marital family. Unfortunately, there is undue deference in our Constitution to the rights of the marital family, enabling the type of sinister intervention we saw in this case to have occurred by a right wing organisation. That, too, must be investigated.

I welcome the Leader’s announcement yesterday that a debate on prisons will take place in the House next week. That debate will provide us with an opportunity to discuss reducing our over-reliance on prisons and, as a result, saving money at a time when that is important in terms of the Exchequer.

 

 

Senator Bacik welcomes Debate on Israeli Bombardment of Aid Ships

Tuesday, June 1st, 2010

Order of Business

 

Senator Ivana Bacik: I add my voice to those who have welcomed the fact that there will be a debate on the Israeli bombardment of the aid ship. It is timely that we will have a debate tomorrow night because we have all… {interruptions}

 

Senator Ivana Bacik: I welcome the fact that we will have that debate tomorrow night. It is important that we debate what happened on the aid ship. It is another appalling outrage on the part of the Israeli forces. Many of us who were highly critical of their actions in the bombardment of Gaza and the invasion of Lebanon are shocked to see that this is happening yet again. As Senator Ó Murchú said, Israel is acting with great arrogance and, apparently, with impunity. It is welcome, however, to hear the Minister for Foreign Affairs employing strong rhetoric in his criticism of the Israeli actions but more than rhetoric is needed. We, not only in Ireland but also in the West, need to be seen to be taking action against Israel to ensure the Israeli forces can no longer act with this sort of arrogance and impunity and in breach of international laws, as they have often done. We need to question Israel’s place in the OECD. If Israel is to take this sort of action in breach of international law, invading ships owned by other countries, with other countries’ nationals on board, in international waters and killing people on board those ships, we must look again at Israel’s status as a member of organisations such as the OECD and as a favoured trading nation with the EU. We must be seen to take action and we also need…

 

An Cathaoirleach: The Leader has agreed to holding a debate tomorrow on this issue .

Members should confine themselves to questions to the Leader.

 

Senator Ivana Bacik: That debate must also look at the US relationship with Israel

 

An Cathaoirleach: The Senator’s time is up.

 

Senator Ivana Bacik:which is an important component of Israel’s arrogance.

 

Senator Bacik Welcome’s Minister’s Acceptance of Bill Criminalising Female genital Mutilation

Wednesday, April 21st, 2010

STATEMENT BY SENATOR IVANA BACIK

Labour Party Seanad Spokesperson on Justice, Equality and Law Reform
21st April 2010

BACIK WELCOMES MINISTER’S ACCEPTANCE OF BILL CRIMINALISING FEMALE GENITAL MUTILATION

 

Today, Wednesday 21st April, Senator Ivana Bacik will be introducing a Bill to prohibit Female Genital Mutilation in the Seanad during the Labour Party’s private members’ time.

In her response to the Labour bill, last night the Minister for Health and Children indicated that she is working on the development of a legal framework for the explicit prohibition of the practice of Female Genital Mutilation, and has indicated that the Labour bill may be read a second time in 12 months time.

Senator Bacik today welcomed the response from the Minister for Health and Children, but said she could not accept the delay of the bill for another year, saying:

“Female Genital Mutilation (FGM) is a practice which violates the human rights of girls and women, and causes long term physiological, sexual and psychological effects. It can cause death and has serious and permanent health implications.

“The Women’s Health Council, the HSE, and a whole range of NGOs have been involved on a Steering Group already to develop a national plan of action for Ireland to address FGM. Legislation to ban FGM was first passed in the UK in 1985.

“In the Dáil, Liz McManus TD introduced a bill to prohibit FGM in 2001, and last year Jan O’Sullivan TD also published similar legislation. We urgently need a law specifically criminalising this barbaric practice which has destroyed the lives of so many girls and women world-wide. I welcome the Minister’s commitment to address this issue, but there has already been a great deal of work done on developing a legal framework, and delaying the introduction of this legislation by another year is unacceptable.”

ENDS.

Senator Bacik Welcome’s Minister’s Commitment to Ban Female Genital Mutilation

Wednesday, April 21st, 2010

STATEMENT FROM SENATOR IVANA BACIK

Labour Party Seanad Spokesperson on Justice
Wednesday, 21 April 2010

BACIK WELCOMES MINISTER’S COMMITMENT ON A LAW TO BAN FEMALE GENITAL MUTILATION

 

On Wednesday 21st April, Senator Ivana Bacik introduced the Female Genital Mutilation Bill 2010 on behalf of the Labour Party during private members’ time.

Speaking in the Seanad at the conclusion of the debate, Senator Bacik welcomed the support from the Minister for Health and Children for the principle of legislation to ban FGM.

She further welcomed the firm commitment given by the Minister for Health during the debate to publish the heads of a bill to prohibit FGM within three months, before the Seanad rises for the summer recess in July.

Senator Bacik also welcomed the Minister’s indication that she would publish the bill itself within six months, and thanked colleagues from both sides of the Seanad for their support for the Labour Bill, the Female Genital Mutilation Bill 2010.

She also paid tribute to the commitment of the many NGOs and state agencies which had worked on developing Ireland’s National Plan of Action to address Female Genital Mutilation.

 

ENDS

Senator Bacik to Introduce Bill Criminalising Female Genital Mutilation

Monday, April 19th, 2010

STATEMENT BY SENATOR IVANA BACIK

Labour Party Seanad Spokesperson on Justice
Monday, 19 April 2010

BACIK TO INTRODUCE BILL CRIMINALISING FEMALE GENITAL MUTILATION

Senator Ivana Bacik will be introducing a Bill to prohibit female genital mutilation in the Seanad during the Labour Party’s private members’ time on Wednesday 21st April.

“Female genital mutilation (FGM) is practised in some Middle Eastern countries and in Africa. Although sometimes referred to as ‘female circumcision’, it is far more drastic and damaging than male circumcision. It can involve different forms of mutilation, and beyond the obvious initial pain that it causes, it has long term physiological, sexual and psychological effects upon girls and women. It can cause death and has serious and permanent health implications.

“FGM is considered to be a violation of women’s human rights in international law. If practised in Ireland, it would constitute assault under existing criminal law. However other countries including the UK have passed legislation specifically criminalising FGM, because there are concerns that the ‘consent’ defence to the crime of assault might prevent a successful prosecution.

“The Women’s Health Council and a whole range of NGOs working in Ireland have already recommended legislation to ban FGM, as has been passed in the UK. In the Dáil, Liz McManus TD introduced a bill to prohibit FGM in 2001,and last year Jan O’Sullivan TD also published similar legislation, but there has never been a debate on the need for this important piece of legislation specifically criminalising a barbaric practice which has destroyed the lives of so many girls and women world-wide.”

ENDS.

Report by Commission of Investigation into Catholic Archdiocese of Dublin: Statements.

Thursday, December 3rd, 2009

Report by Commission of Investigation into Catholic Archdiocese of Dublin: Statements.     

Senator Ivana Bacik: I welcome the publication of the Murphy report, which at last shines a light into a dark corner of our recent history. The report examined the period between 1975 and 2004 and its recommendations refer to ongoing issues of which we must take account. I commend Ms Justice Yvonne Murphy and her commission on the report’s excellence and clarity of language. I am glad we have the opportunity to debate the report’s findings, which have already been subject to intense debate.

As the Minister of State noted, the first reaction of anyone reading the report is revulsion at the appalling abuses perpetrated against children by priests who were in a position of trust and moral authority. As with the Ryan report, I found it very distressing to read about the litany of brutal abuse. I pay particular tribute to the survivors of abuse for their bravery in coming forward to the commission. The public interventions from Andrew Madden, Marie Collins and Colm O’Gorman were the catalyst for exposing the abuses and preventing their recurrence. However, the commission acknowledged that many victims or survivors could not be identified.

All of us feel angry that for decades priests were allowed to perpetrate their appalling crimes with impunity. Other speakers have referred to the small proportion of abusers who were convicted. At best, the church turned a blind eye to their activities and at worst it facilitated them over several decades. We should condemn the failure of both church and State authorities to deal adequately with the horrific sexual abuses against children.

I will speak briefly about the findings of the report before addressing the lessons we have learned for the future. The number 46 is referred to frequently because that is the figure for the sample of priests investigated by the commission. However, the commission found that complaints were made against a total of 183 priests in the Dublin diocese. To the commission’s knowledge, complaints against the aforementioned 46 priests were made by approximately 320 children but as it could not be sure that it had information on all cases of abuse even that limited sample of priests may have abused other children. The chapter of the report dealing with the convicted serial sex abuser, William Carney, notes that while the commission knows about 32 complaints, there is clear evidence of additional cases. These are shocking figures. One priest admitted to abusing more than 100 children and another accepted that he had committed abuse on a fortnightly basis over a period of 25 years.

It is no wonder this volume of child sexual abuse by clergy was described by a church source as a tsunami of abuse and an earthquake hidden from view beneath the surface. However, the commission took care to point out that the abuse was not hidden from those in the know within the church. Sexual abuse allegations against clerics were known about for several decades before the church began to take appropriate action. The culture of cover up only began to break down when brave individuals began to come forward in the mid-1990s. The report set out a brief history of sexual abuse in the church. Sexual abuse against children has been a delict under canon law since time immemorial and a 2,000 year record of biblical, papal and Holy See statements reveals knowledge of clerical child sex abuse. In Ireland, Archbishop McQuaid dealt with allegations of child sex abuse against priests in the 1950s and 1960s. In 1987, the Archdiocese of Dublin took out insurance cover on compensation for claims even though it was officially in denial. It was not until 1995 that the archdiocese provided the names of priests against whom allegations were made by the Garda and it only established its child protection service in 2003. All the archbishops who served during the period covered by the report knew of the existence of complaints, as did many auxiliary bishops, officials and priests. The vast majority simply chose to turn a blind eye.

Key among the report’s findings is the culture of secrecy that prevailed within the Catholic church and its obsessive concern with avoiding scandal. The report states: “Complainants were often met with denial, arrogance and cover-up and with incompetence and incomprehension in some cases”. This response caused many more children to be abused, in some cases over several decades, not only in Ireland but also as far afield as Japan and Africa.

We need to make progress on three areas in particular if we are to ensure this abuse never happens again in any institution of State or church. As legislators, we need to identify and address gaps in the child protection legislation and the Constitution. The Minister described the legislative progress being made to ensure that soft information about suspicions of child abuse can be shared. However, he did not address the need to legislate for the mandatory reporting of child sex abuse. He referred to the offence created by the Criminal Justice Act 2006, section 176 of which provides that it is an offence to recklessly endanger a child by causing or permitting him or her to be left in a situation which creates a substantial risk of serious harm or sexual abuse. That is an important defence which I very much welcome but it relates only to risk subsequent to 2006. It is not aimed at non-disclosure where there is no longer a risk. There is a gap in our law where misprision of felony was abolished and the offence under the Offences against the State (Amendment) Act 1998, section 9 of which covers the withholding of information on serious offences, does not cover offences causing sexual injury. As a result, we are in the rather bizarre situation where it is an offence under emergency legislation for a teacher, for example, to fail to report to a garda his or her belief a child has been seriously assaulted in the home but it is not an offence for him or her to fail to report a suspicion that a child is being sexually abused. We need to review this. There does not seem to be a mechanism for prosecuting those whose turning of a blind eye or negligence caused the continuation of abuse of so many children.

We need to enshrine children’s rights in the Constitution from which they are notably absent. We need to ensure the HSE improves its record-keeping procedures. Chapter 6 of the report is particularly critical of the way in which it kept its files by reference to the name of the complainant rather than that of the abuser, thereby making it impossible to cross-reference and ensure it knew how many abusers there were. The Minister of State referred to the need to fill 270 social work posts to ensure implementation of HSE guidelines and child protection principles. That is very important. I am glad to see his commitment to this and promise of legislative backing for the Children First guidelines. We need to see this happen.

As citizens, we must consider the need for accountability and the taking of responsibility. Members of the Catholic church must consider how the culture of secrecy and cover-up was allowed to develop. There may be issues of celibacy connected with women priests but that is a matter for church members. It is valid for us, as legislators, to consider the role of persons in authority in the church who also have important roles in civic structures. Where bishops, for example, have a significant role to play in the secular and civic institutions of the State, as patrons of national schools, politicians are entitled to say they should resign where they have been found guilty of inexcusable behaviour, in the cover-up of the activities of priests who abused, thereby facilitating the continuation of the abuse.

I note the commission’s reference to the very prominent role of the church in Irish life. In paragraph 1.90 it states it may be that the very prominent role that the church has played in Irish life is the very reason abuses by a minority of its members were allowed to go unchecked. A culture of deference persisted because of the prominent role the church played. We now see the remnants of this. The priests who were named as abusers filled roles that crossed between the church and the civic authorities. Two of those named as abusers - Ivan Payne being one of the most heinous - were chaplains at Our Lady’s Hospital for Sick Children in Crumlin. The bishops who were implicated by having known of and dealt badly with the abuse are patrons of national schools, 477 of which are in the archdiocese of Dublin.

We need to consider the bigger role the Catholic Church has played and continues to play in our civic institutions and need to move away from a situation where a church which operated above the civil law and its own Canon Law in which child sex abuse was always a crime retains its prominent and privileged role. As a secular state and with the Oireachtas as the parliamentary system in a democratic republic, we need to take responsibility for our civic institutions, particularly schools and hospitals. There is an enormous problem within the national school system. Over 3,000 of our 3,300 national schools are run by the Catholic church, although they are State-funded. Senator Norris spoke about the exemption granted in the equality legislation which enables schools to discriminate on the basis of preserving their ethos. It also allows schools to discriminate on the basis of religion when they accept children as pupils, which is another problem.

At a conference on Catholic primary education in contemporary Ireland held last May Bishop Donal Murray noted:

In the absence of a local alternative, parents may have no choice but to send their children to a Catholic school. This can cause difficulties for them and indeed for the school … If the family find the Catholic ethos of the school unacceptable, however, there does not seem to be any obvious solution … If withdrawal from religious instruction is not enough, then it seems that one would have to acknowledge that this kind of school is simply not suitable for that family.

Bishop Murray recognised and acknowledged that parents who did not wish their child to be brought up in the Catholic faith would have no alternative but to send their child to that Catholic school and that the child would be exposed to religious instruction throughout the school day. His admission that this means that “this kind of school is simply not suitable for that family” is extraordinary, yet it represents the truth that in this so-called republic we cannot offer children what the Constitution states we must offer them, the right to be educated in a way that is not in violation of the parents’ conscience and lawful preference. Article 44 enshrines the right of the child to attend a State-funded school without receiving religious instruction. We need to examine this much bigger issue because it relates to the culture of deference that has persisted for so long in which the Catholic church has held a privileged position in Irish society. From this position its members have operated with arrogance and contempt for the laws of the State and enabled known abusers in many cases to continue abusing, causing horrific damage to so many children for so long.

I welcome the Minister of State with special responsibility for children who has just come into the House.

The final chapter of the report makes for especially distressing reading. It describes the appalling impact the abuse had on the lives of so many of the children involved and their families. Of Marie Collins, one of the bravest of the victims, who came forward in a very lonely campaign to expose levels of abuse, it states: “After years spent trying to get her Church to deal openly and truthfully with the challenge posed to it by the scandal of child sexual abuse she has concluded that within the institutional Church there has been no change of heart, only a change of strategy”. Listening to bishops trying to cover and defend their positions and to the Taoiseach in refusing to condemn the contempt with which the Vatican treated the commission, one is struck by Marie Collins’ words. There may not have been a change of heart. I very much hope there has and that our State structures have changed from the culture of turning a blind eye and of blind obedience and loyalty to a church that was and is often rigid and unforgiving to those who transgressed its doctrines such as persons who used contraception, gay people and women who had abortions, yet took a very different approach to its own members who for so long were guilty of these most heinous crimes against children.