Leprechauns speak out!

Sunday, July 27, 2008

EU crisis in Ireland



French president to discuss EU crisis in Ireland
6 days ago

DUBLIN (AFP) — French President Nicolas Sarkozy heads to Dublin Monday to discuss the way forward after Ireland's shock rejection of a key European Union (EU) treaty, plunging the bloc into fresh turmoil.

Protests are expected during the flying visit, including talks with Prime Minister Brian Cowen as well as pro- and anti-Lisbon Treaty lobbyists, after Sarkozy sparked outrage by suggesting Ireland should vote again.

One group, the Campaign Against the EU Constitution, plans a "No Means No" demo outside government offices, while others demand that Sarkozy -- who holds the EU's rotating presidency -- accept the will of the Irish people.

Party leaders are also reportedly unhappy they have not been granted individual meetings with the French leader but instead invited to round-table talks at the French Embassy with lobby groups.

Sarkozy insists he is not coming to Ireland to tell the country what to do, but to "listen and understand" why a majority of its citizens voted against the treaty in a June 12 referendum.

Ireland was the only state to hold a referendum on the document, which has to be ratified by all countries in the bloc to take effect. France took over the six-month rotating presidency of the 27-member EU this month.

Eurosceptics in Ireland and elsewhere claim the Lisbon treaty is little more than a cosmetically-altered version of the doomed EU constitution torpedoed by French and Dutch voters in referendums in 2005.

The potential loss of sovereignty and control to Brussels, plus fears about changes to Irish totems like military neutrality and anti-abortion legislation, were also key campaigning factors for the "no" lobbyists.

Irish and French government officials have played down the significance of concrete developments arising from Monday's meetings.

But amid talk of a "two-tier Europe", Sarkozy has set a deadline of the end of this year to overcome the impasse, ahead of elections next year to the European Parliament.

To that end, the man credited with doing the most to secure the treaty's rejection in Ireland, millionaire businessman Declan Ganley, is looking to field more than 400 candidates at the vote, Britain's Sunday Telegraph said.

A vote for his lobby group Libertas would be a vote against the Lisbon Treaty, he said, predicting to the newspaper that the elections will be a "people's referendum" on the document.

Ganley, who says he supports a "strong, prosperous and democratically legitimate" Europe, has said that he will ask Sarkozy when he meets him Monday to "accept that the Irish people have rejected the Lisbon Treaty".

A spokeswoman for Sinn Fein, the only mainstream Irish political party to campaign against the treaty, echoed his views, telling AFP: "There can't be any re-run. A new treaty is required. He (Sarkozy) needs to listen to this..."

"The people of Europe want a better deal... The Lisbon treaty represents a bad deal for Ireland and the EU and the developing world and we believe a better deal is possible," she added.

Brendan Young, from the CAEUC coalition of mainly leftist groups, said he expected Sarkozy to put pressure on Taoiseach (prime minister) Cowen to hold a second vote, as Ireland did after rejecting a previous treaty.

But he added: "It will be very difficult for Cowen... to turn around and do a second referendum on a high turn out and a high 'no' vote... It will be very difficult for them (the government) to get it through."

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Friday, July 04, 2008

Irish news

Bunraty singers

Don't forget to check out www.irishchristians.ie. New events, jobs and accommodation are being added every day. Also our Christian directory for Ireland continues to expand into the most complete guide to the Christian church in Ireland.

Events coming up in the next few months

Abbey Arts Festival... X-Presso.
July 7, 2008

The Father Heart Conference
July 11, 2008

Kingdom Come Summer Conference
July 13, 2008

Worship Explosion 2008
August 3, 2008

Youth 2000 Summer Festival
August 14, 2008

Preaching the Gospel of Jesus Christ with Signs...
August 15, 2008

Ignite 2008
August 22, 2008

Church in Chains Conference
September 13, 2008

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Wednesday, July 02, 2008

"Godless Europe"



CARDINAL Sean Brady has issued an indirect rebuke to right-wing Catholic groups who campaigned in the Lisbon Treaty referendum against a "Godless Europe".

The cardinal was speaking yesterday in Belfast at the installation of the new Bishop of Down and Connor, Noel Treanor, who for three decades represented the Irish bishops at the EU institutions in Brussels.

Calling on Irish Catholics to recall Europe's Christian roots, Cardinal Brady quoted how Pope Benedict on the eve of the Irish poll described the Irish missionary monk, St Columbanus, as "one of the Fathers of Europe".

In a clear warning against Ireland becoming isolated from the rest of Europe, Cardinal Brady stressed that St Malachy, a former bishop of the diocese of Down and Connor, introduced the Cistercians and Augustinian monks as agents of monastic reform into the Irish Church.

This important development for the life of the Church at that time, Cardinal Brady added, showed that Ireland, as well as sending missionaries to Europe, also received help from Europe in times of need, in the form of new initiatives and new ideas.

"In these post-Lisbon Treaty referendum days, it could be salutary for all of us to reflect on that European help and to consider what help we might accept today."

Referring to Bishop Treanor's vast experience in Europe, Cardinal Brady highlighted how the new head of Ireland's second-largest diocese could play an influential role in connecting both Ireland and Europe and renewing their Christian roots.

Appointment

From Monaghan, Bishop Treanor (57) was secretary general of the Commission of the Bishops' Conference of the European Community (COMECE) before his appointment by Pope Benedict to succeed Bishop Patrick Walsh.

In his first public address, Bishop Treanor stressed the importance of Ireland's links with Europe.

"I spent almost two decades of my life working in the service of the Church in Europe, more precisely on an emergent interface between Church and that historic, unique and precious project which is the European Union," he said.

"These were happy, enriching and formative years. I saw at first hand how reconciliation between erstwhile enemies is possible and can be achieved."

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