country:ireland

  • L’analyse décapatante de l’actualité européenne par la presse irlandaise :

    Confirmation that the talks will be delayed until after the German federal elections will be seen as further evidence of the power Europe’s most populous nation now has over the rest of the EU, and moves Europe closer to the US political system which effectively shuts down ahead of presidential elections there.

    Ireland’s strategy for exiting the bailout is not the only item that has been apparently held up by the German political calendar.

    http://www.independent.ie/business/irish/bailout-exit-talks-delayed-by-german-poll-noonan-admits-29429401.html

  • Ireland: Bankers joke about their €7 billion bailout scam - World Socialist Web Site

    http://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2013/06/29/bank-j29.html

    Ireland: Bankers joke about their €7 billion bailout scam
    By Steve James
    29 June 2013

    Transcripts released this week by the Irish Independent record conversations in 2008 between leading Irish bank executives, joking about how they had scammed billions of euros to bail out the now-defunct Anglo-Irish Bank.

    The conversations provide an insight into the reckless, sneering cynicism of the ruling elite as they proceeded to swindle the working people to the tune of trillions of euros.

    #irlande #crise_bancaire #spéculation #dette #cynisme

  • Gypsies, Roma, Travellers: An Animated History

    Europe is home to 10–12 million Roma and Travellers, yet many Europeans are unable to answer the basic question, “Who are the Roma?” Even fewer can answer questions about their history.

    It is a complex and highly contested narrative, partly because the “Roma” are not a single, homogeneous group of people. They can include Romanichals in England; Kalé in Wales and Finland; Travellers in Ireland (who are not Roma), Scotland, Sweden, and Norway; Manouche from France; Gitano from Spain; Sinti from Germany, Poland, Austria and Italy; Ashakli from Kosovo; Egyptians from Albania; Beyash from Croatia; Romanlar from Turkey; Domari from Palestine and Egypt; Lom from Armenia and many others. It is also partly because many of these groups have differing narratives of their history and ethnogenesis (their origins as an ethnic group).

    The Roma do not follow a single faith, but are Catholic Manouche, Mercheros and Sinti; Muslim Ashkali and Romanlar; Pentecostal Kalderash and Lovari; Protestant Travellers; Anglican Gypsies; and Baptist Roma. There are variations in practises associated with birth, marriages and death, yet also linked cultures that display subtle but distinctive patterns or, as a Roma preacher once described it, “many stars scattered in the sight of God.”

    Yet there is much that is shared between different groups of Roma. Roma have a common lexicon in differing dialects of Rromanës, the Romani language. There are common notions around cleanliness codes and behaviours regarding what is Rromano (to behave with dignity and respect as a Roma person) and what can be seen as part of Rromanipé or the “Romani world view.”

    Roma groups often have similar occupations, drawing upon traditions of peripatetic and mobile economies that exploit niche markets, such as peddling and trading certain livestock (horses, dogs, and small birds). Roma artisans have also made livings from repairing items deemed “uneconomic” to mend, such as pocket watches, tea-pots and porcelain dishes—the originators of what is now described as the circular economy. Many Roma, Gypsies, and Travellers are engaged in recycling and have been for centuries, long before major environmental concerns. We were also healers and herbalists for the “country people.”

    Mobility has, for many Roma, been part and parcel of identity. It’s “not all waggons and horses” though and Roma have been engaged with agriculture (as they still are in many places), artisan skills and automobiles trading, road repairs and roofing. Metal work of all kinds has always been part of the Roma economy, as has craft production (baskets and bamboo furniture, knives’ handles, carved and decorated waggons, fairground signs). Many groups’ names actually stem from occupations—the Balkan Sepetçiler are basket-makers (from the Turkish term for woven baskets) and represent a commercial skill that was used as the basis for organizing taxable communities in the past. Diversity in and amongst Roma groups has its origins in occupational identity, as much as in any other distinctions of culture.

    What “binds” or unites the communities in all this rich diversity? The idea of a common heritage of exclusion certainly contributes to the sense of shared “pasts”—the notion of always being the “outsider”, the “other.” There are connections too in the languages; the important words for water, bread, road, blessings, luck, greetings and farewells can be common to Rromanës dialects. Terms for horses, tools, numbers and others are sometimes close enough in many cases that one Roma person can “trade” them with another—a favourite game in many communities, as language holds the “key” to our past in its core and “loan words”, gathered over time and migration routes. Language experts have identified these commonalities and drawn from this heritage to illuminate this shared past and heritage.

    The notion of the historical journey, the narrative of “the long road of the Roma” over 1,000 years since leaving the Indian lands, is also strong in many Roma groups as a component of identity, with good evidence to support this. Just as not all Italians are descended from Romans and Etruscans, not all Roma groups are direct descendants of Hindus from the Punjab or Ganges basin. However, the point of the “imagined community” is not that it is literally a fiction, but rather that it is symbolically meaningful and has a purpose in bringing together individuals around common ideas of heritage and belonging to which broadly, we can subscribe. The Roma, in this sense are a people like any other, dispersed across many lands and territories over time and circumstance.

    The remarkable thing is that (as a famous historian of the Gypsies once noted), unlike many other peoples in this context, we have no one priesthood, no single holy book, no promised land to return to and yet we not only endure and survive, we truly live in the world. The need is to go beyond this and to flourish, to achieve equality and emancipation from poverty, exclusion and misery, to become full citizens in the lands we inhabit and to achieve the kind of potential that the creative genius of our existence so far, clearly suggests we can reach.

    www.opensocietyfoundations.org/voices/gypsies-roma-travellers-animated-history

    #Roms #migration #animation #histoire

  • Practical measures to reduce irregular migration

    This synthesis report summarises the main findings of the national reports for the EMN Study on Practical Measures to Reduce Irregular Migration undertaken by EMN national contact points from 22 Member States (Austria, Belgium, Czech Republic, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Ireland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, Netherlands, Poland, Slovak Republic, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, United Kingdom) plus Norway. The overall purpose of this study was to provide an overview of existing approaches, mechanisms and measures to reduce irregular migration in the EU and Norway. In particular, its aim is to inform policymakers and practitioners about the practical measures that have proved effective and proportionate in addressing the issue of irregular migration and to contextualise national policies and practices within the overall EU policy framework. A further aim was to present the available statistics and the methods of data collection used by Member States to estimate the irregular migrant population

    http://bookshop.europa.eu/en/practical-measures-to-reduce-irregular-migration-pbDR3012126

    #migration #réduire_migration_clandestine #Europe #Norvège #statistiques

  • How Amnesty has let down Bradley Manning
    http://electronicintifada.net/blogs/david/how-amnesty-has-let-down-bradley-manning

    Why is Amnesty applying different rules to the US than to Russia?

    My own interest in human rights was sparked by the protests over US foreign policy that occurred when Ronald Reagan visited Ireland in 1984 (I was 13 years old at the time). I first heard about Amnesty a year or two later and have supported the organization ever since.

    So it felt like a betrayal when I heard that Amnesty’s American office was headed for most of last year by Suzanne Nossel; before taking up that job she had been a deputy assistant secretary of state under Hillary Clinton. Under Nossel’s leadership, Amnesty whitewashed the invasion of Afghanistan by hosting a conference praising NATO’s “progress” in that country. The guest of “honor” at that event was Madeleine Albright, the secretary of state who declared that killing as many as 500,000 children in Iraq by depriving them of essential medicines was a price worth paying.

  • L’Irlande, paradis fiscal de création purement européenne, fait désormais l’objet d’une étude quasi-scientifique, sans doute pour en étendre le modèle à toute l’UE :

    The Financial Times is carrying an important and fascinating story about the tax haven of Ireland. It focuses on a particular issue which is dear to my heart, and the subject of a whole chapter of Treasure Islands.

    This is, at heart, a story about how small financial centres become entirely ‘captured’ by financial services interests, with the deliberate removal of democratic checks and balances and carte blanche given to financial services interests to write laws in secret.

    http://blogs.euobserver.com/shaxson/2013/05/02/the-capture-of-tax-haven-ireland-the-bankers-hedge-funds-got-virtu

    They met under the auspices of the “Clearing House”, a secretive group of financial industry executives, accountants and public servants formed in 1987 to promote Dublin as a financial hub.

    “The bankers and hedge fund industry got virtually everything they asked for while the public got hit with a number of austerity measures”

  • Quelques estimations, variables, du nombre de « combattants » ou « jihadistes » européens en Syrie dans le Jerusalem Post. Ca varie de 140 à 600 pour certains, c’est à 500 pour quelques uns et à plus de 1000 pour d’autres :
    http://www.jpost.com/MiddleEast/Article.aspx?ID=311008&R=R1

    The UK, Ireland and France are the Western countries believed to have the most fighters in Syria, according to the report, which quotes EU anti-terror chief Gilles de Kerchove as saying that about 500 Muslims from Europe are fighting with the rebels.
    However, according to Soeren Kern, a senior fellow for the New York-based Gatestone Institute, and a longtime observer of Islam in Europe, more than 1,000 European Muslims are fighting in Syria. In an article for Gatestone in March titled “European Jihadists: The Latest Export,” he wrote that Syria “has replaced Afghanistan, Pakistan and Somalia as the main destination for militant Islamists seeking to obtain immediate combat experience with little or no official scrutiny.”

  • Irish unions support government austerity - World Socialist Web Site

    http://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2013/04/15/irel-a15.html

    Irish unions support government austerity
    By Jordan Shilton
    15 April 2013

    Having negotiated a further €1 billion (US$1.3 billion) cut in public sector pay with the Labour-Fine Gael coalition in February, Ireland’s trade unions are seeking to implement the agreement against strong resistance from public sector workers.

    #irlande #crise #austérité

  • Ireland teachers union brands Israel ’apartheid state,’ calls for boycott -
    Des syndicats irlandais pour le boycott d’Israël, Etat d’apartheid

    Haaretz Daily Newspaper

    http://www.haaretz.com/news/diplomacy-defense/ireland-teachers-union-brands-israel-apartheid-state-calls-for-boycott-1.51

    The Teachers Union of Ireland has adopted a resolution in support of an academic and cultural boycott of Israel, which the union called an “apartheid state.”

    The motion, passed unanimously on April 4 during the union’s annual congress, calls for “all members to cease all cultural and academic collaboration with Israel, including the exchange of scientists, students and academic personalities, as well as all cooperation in research programs,” according to a report on the website of the Center for Research of Globalization.

    #BDS #apartheid

  • Démission du président du Royal Collage of Surgeons in Ireland, Bahreïn campus à propos d’une conférence co-organisée avec MSF, finalement annulée .

    The Bahraini government’s official spokeswoman [Samira Rajab] has accused Prof Tom Collins, the president of the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland (RSCI) Bahrain campus, of “utter lies” after Prof Collins said he was resigning because a conference he helped organise on medical ethics failed to get a permit.

    Prof Collins informed staff and students at the weekend that he was stepping down in protest over the cancellation of the two-day event which was to examine “medical ethics and dilemmas in situations of political discord or violence” and was co-sponsored by medical charity Médecins Sans Frontières.

    http://www.irishtimes.com/news/health/college-of-surgeons-bahrain-head-quits-over-conference-permit-1.1338575

    “The view locally was that the timing was not right for the planned conference and therefore it has been deferred,” Prof Collins said.

    http://www.gulf-daily-news.com/NewsDetails.aspx?storyid=350115

    • D’après le pro-régime Gulf Daily News, une délégation du Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland vient présenter ses esxcuses au Royaume...

      high-profile delegation from the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland will arrive in Bahrain next week to apologise to officials for the practices of Professor Tom Collins, president of the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland-Medical University of Bahrain (RCSI-MUB), reports our sister paper Akhbar Al Khaleej.

      Prof Collins left Bahrain last night after being warned by the RCSI to leave the kingdom immediately.

      Earlier, he was officially informed that his contract would be terminated in June.

      He was told that his tenure would not be extended and that he had to return to Dublin before the expiry of his contract, sources said.

      Prof Collins’ replacement will be a renowned person who is sympathetic towards Bahrain and has contributed to establishing the university in the kingdom, the sources added.

      The RCSI’s action in the matter is out of its keenness to maintain good relations with Bahrain, the sources said.

      http://www.gulf-daily-news.com/NewsDetails.aspx?storyid=350334

  • The Cyprus experiment and the legitimisation of money laundering | New Europe
    http://www.neurope.eu/article/cyprus-experiment-and-legitimisation-money-laundering

    Chypre: un “mauvais” paradis fiscal puni par les “bons” paradis fiscaux ?

    ...there are strong indications that the tax haven ‘holy war’ has a hidden agenda, that of channeling most transactions in a small number of traditional financial centres.

    When speaking about tax havens, it is useful to remember that the term is extremely large, and as many as fifty countries, including several EU members and the US, in some ways act as a tax shelter for international money. To give an example, both Ireland and the Netherlands are excellent places to set up a holding structure and to divert profits made from sales in other European countries. For Ireland, going under a bailout didn’t compromise its tax haven status.

    Then, comes London, the world’s prime offshore centre. A specialty of London is a structure known as LLP, or Limited Liability Partnership, a tax transparent partnership heavily used in international trade. In fact, it’s a three-stage structure, comprising the LLP itself, its shareholders (usually “pure” offshore companies, such as BVI international business companies), and its subsidiary, for example a Russian or Ukrainian company, depending on the place of trade.

    These LLP’s are among the main instruments of worldwide transfer pricing, resulting in billions of euros in tax losses for third countries…

    If we enlarge the scope of the analysis, and look beyond the EU, we must admit that the United States themselves are in some respect an excellent tax haven.

    Some States, such as Delaware and Montana made a specialty of setting up quickly and relatively anonymously so-called Limited Liability Companies (LLC’s), which are zero-tax structures if their owners are non-US residents and their activity is exclusively carried outside of the United States.

    A recent study by Professor Michael Findley of the University of Texas at Austin et al. has even concluded: “It is easier to obtain an untraceable shell company from incorporation services (not law firms) in the United States than in any other country save Kenya.”

    In this context, isn’t it really hypocritical for the Eurogroup to only ‘teach Cyprus a lesson’? Many think it is, and some even relate this ‘lesson’ to the fact that a large part of funds deposited in Cyprus’ banks (around €20 billion) are from Russia.

    Total funds parked in tax havens are estimated at €20 billion by ‘The Economist,’ and between €20 and €30 billion by the non-government organisation ‘Tax Justice Network;’ the obvious question is: why is “morality” only applied to Cyprus, which only accounts for 1% of such funds?

    Christos Kissas, PhD

  • The New York Times’s English problem — War in Context
    http://warincontext.org/2013/03/09/the-new-york-timess-english-problem

    (Just in case anyone suspects that my omission of the labeling of the Republic of Ireland from this graphic represents some kind of British prejudice — far from it. I wouldn’t want to insult the Irish by including them in a parsing of the meaning of British.)

    • Explaining to an American that England and Britain are not the same, can end up feeling like providing an unsolicited tutorial in quantum physics.

      Tandis qu’en France, c’est quand même beaucoup plus facile :

      Ben quoi, tout ça c’est des Anglais…

       :-D

      Heureusement, il y a le tournoi des Six Nations…

  • Irish government and trade unions deepen austerity measures - World Socialist Web Site

    http://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2013/03/04/irel-m04.html

    Irish government and trade unions deepen austerity measures
    By Jordan Shilton
    4 March 2013

    Ireland’s Fine Gael-Labour Party coalition have agreed a new three-year plan with the trade unions which will see another €1 billion (US$1.3 billion) eliminated from public spending.

    The agreement continues the no-strike Croke Park deal first accepted in 2010 and will run until 2016.

    #irlande #crise-bancaire #austérité

  • Irish debt deal means decades of austerity to cover bank bailout - World Socialist Web Site

    http://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2013/02/13/irel-f13.html

    Irish debt deal means decades of austerity to cover bank bailout
    By Jordan Shilton
    13 February 2013

    Ireland’s Fine Gael-Labour coalition announced an agreement with the European Central Bank (ECB) last week, ostensibly designed to remove the “promissory note” payments to bail out the failed Anglo Irish Bank.

    In reality, the debt reorganisation means that the Irish population will take on responsibility for paying an even greater proportion of bank debt, which will be extracted through decades of austerity.

    #irlande #crise-bancaire
    The debt restructuring agreement exchanged the yearly payment of €3.1 billion (US$4.2 billion) of “promissory notes” for long-term government bonds. The government had been due to make these payments over the next 10 years to the Irish Bank Resolution Corporation (IBRC)—the entity charged with managing the assets of the old Anglo Irish Bank.

  • Seeking Redress for a Mother’s Life in a Workhouse
    http://www.nytimes.com/2013/02/07/world/europe/seeking-redress-in-ireland-over-magdalene-laundry.html

    In 1995 they found their mother, Margaret Bullen, here in the Sean MacDermott Street Laundry — one of Ireland’s notorious Magdalene Laundries, or workhouses for girls — where she had toiled since 1967, six days a week, without pay. They were shocked by her appearance. “She was very disheveled and looked more than 20 years older than she was,” Ms. Long said. “She was 42, but we were looking at a pensioner’s face. It was hard work, poor nutrition and forced labor.”

    Ms. Long was among those present in the Irish Parliament on Tuesday as the government made public a 1,000-page report that concluded that there was “significant state involvement” in the incarceration of thousands of women and girls in a system of slave labor that continued until 1996. And she and her sister were among those disappointed when the Irish prime minister, Enda Kenny, failed to issue an official and unambiguous apology for the state’s role.

    #esclavage #irlande

  • In Ireland, Carbon Taxes Pay Off - NYTimes
    http://www.nytimes.com/2012/12/28/science/earth/in-ireland-carbon-taxes-pay-off.html

    Over the last three years, with its economy in tatters, Ireland embraced a novel strategy to help reduce its staggering deficit: charging households and businesses for the environmental damage they cause.

    (...) The government imposed taxes on most of the fossil fuels used by homes, offices, vehicles and farms, based on each fuel’s carbon dioxide emissions, a move that immediately drove up prices for oil, natural gas and kerosene. Household trash is weighed at the curb, and residents are billed for anything that is not being recycled.

    The Irish now pay purchase taxes on new cars and yearly registration fees that rise steeply in proportion to the vehicle’s emissions.

    Environmentally and economically, the new taxes have delivered results. (...)

    “We just set up a price signal that raised significant revenue and changed behavior. Now, we’re smashing through the environmental targets we set for ourselves.”

    By contrast, carbon taxes are viewed as politically toxic in the United States

    #cdp #environnement #impôt

  • 10,000 march in Dublin for woman who died after being denied abortion « MasterAdrian’s Weblog
    http://masteradrian.com/2012/11/20/10000-march-in-dublin-for-woman-who-died-after-being-denied-abortion

    10,000 march in Dublin for woman who died after being denied abortion
    11/19/2012 8:30am by John Aravosis 18 Comments Print

    In the run up to the US elections, I missed a story from Ireland of Savita Halappanavar, a 31 year old Irish dentist, who died on October 28 because a hospital refused her emergency request for an abortion to save her life.

    The 31-year-old, who was 17 weeks pregnant with her first child, died Oct. 28 one week after being hospitalized with severe pain at the start of a miscarriage. Her death, made public by her husband this week, has highlighted Ireland’s long struggle to come to grips with abortion.

    Doctors refused her requests to remove the fetus until its heartbeat stopped four days after her hospitalization. Hours later she became critically ill and her organs began to fail. She died three days later from blood poisoning. Her widower and activists say she could have survived, and the spread of infection been stopped, had the fetus been removed sooner.

    abortion rally dublin Savita Halappanavar

    Ten Thousand People Attended A Rally In Dublin In Memory Of Savita Halappanavar. Photo by William Murphy.

    Ten days earlier, Republican Congressman Joe Walsh (since defeated) spoke out against “life of the mother” exception to total abortion bans because, as Walsh put it, “modern technology” makes it so that the life of the mother is no longer ever in danger from a pregnancy.

    Walsh said he was against abortion “without exception,” including rape, incest and in cases in which the life or health of the mother was in jeopardy.

    Asked by reporters after the debate if he was saying that it’s never medically necessary to conduct an abortion to save the life of a mother, Walsh responded, “Absolutely.”

    “With modern technology and science, you can’t find one instance,” he said. “… There is no such exception as life of the mother, and as far as health of the mother, same thing.”

    Found one.

    As the AP story in the Post points out, abortion is banned in the Irish constitution (the same brilliant idea Republicans would like to try here). The Irish Supreme Court found twenty years ago that an abortion could be permitted to save the life of the mother, but Ireland’s politicians have refused to enact legislation defining when exactly a hospital can conduct an abortion, so they don’t. And women die.

    abortion dublin ireland rally

    Photo by William Murphy.

    And lest anyone doubt the Republican’s party’s extremism, the GOP called in their platform this year for the exact same rule of law on abortion that they have in Ireland – well, and even less, since the Republicans didn’t even mention the life of the mother:

    Even as the Republican establishment continued to call for Representative Todd Akin of Missouri to drop out of his Senate race because of his comments on rape and abortion, Republicans approved platform language on Tuesday calling for a constitutional amendment outlawing abortion with no explicit exceptions for cases of rape or incest.

    The anti-abortion plank, approved by the Republican platform committee Tuesday morning in Tampa, Fla., was similar to the planks Republicans have included in their recent party platforms, which also called for a constitutional ban on abortions.

  • Irish Foreign Minister plans to push for EU ban on settlement products
    Nov 09, 2012 11:06 am | Adam Horowitz

    Ireland will be taking over as President of the Council of the European Union at the beginning of 2013, and Haaretz reports it will use the position to push for an EU ban on settlement products:

    Ireland is planning to utilize its upcoming term as President of the Council of the European Union, which begins on January 1 2013, to advance efforts to achieve a joint decision between all 27 member states to ban products from West Bank Settlements.

    The Irish Minister for Foreign Affairs and Trade, Eamon Gilmore, revealed the plan in a letter to the chairman of the Irish parliament’s Joint Committee on Foreign Affairs and Trade (PDF).

    In a letter obtained by Haaretz, dated November 2, Gilmore wrote that during a meeting of EU foreign ministers in October, he declared that Ireland will give rise to discussions and support a comprehensive EU boycott of goods from settlements.

    In an interview with the Jerusalem Post Gilmore explains he supports the move on moral grounds:

    Ireland supports a ban on West Bank settlement products even though the European Union is unlikely to impose one, its Foreign Minister Eamon Gilmore stated.

    “Ireland would support a ban at EU level, and put it forward as an option the Council might consider,” Gilmore said.

    He wrote this opinion earlier this month in a letter to the Joint Committee on Foreign Affairs and Trade, the text of which was posted on the web Friday by the Israeli newspaper Haaretz.

    Gilmore said he supported a settlement products ban on moral, not legal grounds.

    He explained that while settlements were illegal under international law, the people that lived in them and the products they produced were not.

    “I believe there is a moral case for banning settlement products, and I agree it could have a symbolic,” Gilmore wrote.

    It would be consistent with EU values and positions to exclude settlement products from the EU, he wrote.

    Gilmore cautioned, however, that he didn’t fool himself into thinking that such a ban would make an economic impact.

    “I am somewhat concerned that attention is being focused excessively on the issue of settlement products, which form only one aspect, and a comparatively small one, of the problem. The key issue is settlements themselves and their relentless expansion,” he said.

  • Ireland supports a ban on settlem... JPost - Diplomacy & Politics
    http://www.jpost.com/DiplomacyAndPolitics/Article.aspx?id=291172

    Irish FM says his country would support, on moral grounds, EU ban of Israeli products manufactured across Green Line.
    Aerial view of Ariel settlement in West Bank Photo: Marc Israel Sellem/The Jerusalem Post

    Ireland supports a ban on West Bank settlement products even though the European Union is unlikely to impose one, its Foreign Minister Eamon Gilmore stated.

    “Ireland would support a ban at EU level, and put it forward as an option the Council might consider,” Gilmore said.

  • IMF urges “more clarity” on Ireland’s austerity plans

    Le FMI n’hésite pas à dire de lui même qu’il a profondément revu ses modes opératoires et que ce n’est plus le grand méchant loup qui étouffait les pays endettés.

    Aujourd’hui le FMi exige de l’Irlande de clarifier ses intentions pour ce qui concerne les coupes (forcément drastiques) dans les dépenses de l’Etat pour les quatre prochaines années. Il s’agit de rembourser une dette (immense) laissée en héritage par une banque (évidemment crapule) aujourd’hui disparue. Petite précision : les emprunts n’étaient pas garantis par l’Etat. Ce qui n’empêche pas l’UE et le FMI d’exiger que le peuple irlandais rembourse...

    http://www.wsws.org/articles/2012/sep2012/irel-s13.shtml
    By Jordan Shilton

    13 September 2012

    The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has stepped up the pressure on the Fine Gael-Labour coalition in Dublin, demanding that it lay out detailed plans on how it will slash government spending over the next four years.

    The move came as the government was forced to announce €260 million in emergency cuts to the health care budget to comply with the bailout terms of the troika—the IMF, European Central Bank (ECB) and European Union (EU).

    The IMF, in its latest report on Ireland’s progress under the €85 billion programme the troika extended in 2010, criticised the government for not implementing deep enough cuts to welfare benefits, and urged the speedy adoption of a new property tax. The demands are in line with the approach being taken across Europe towards highly indebted states, with Greece and Spain in particular facing calls to deepen the attacks on the working class to bail out the banks.

    #irlande #banque #crise-financière #crise-bancaire #fmi #ue #crapules

  • #Urbanisme #Villes #Villefantômes #Phénomèneurbain

    Ireland Bulldozes Ghost Estate in Life After Real Estate Bubble - Bloomberg

    http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-07-19/ireland-bulldozes-ghost-estate-in-life-after-real-estate-bubble.html

    Ireland Bulldozes Ghost Estate in Life After Real Estate Bubble
    By Finbarr Flynn - Jul 20, 2012

    Ireland is opting for bulldozers rather than bankers as it starts to clear the legacy of the housing boom whose collapse brought the economy to its knees.

    Abandoned construction equipment sits outside unfinished homes on a stalled housing development in Longford in April 2012. Photographer: Aidan Crawley/Bloomberg

    About 1,850 housing developments, unfinished after the bubble burst in 2008, pockmark the Irish landscape, according to government figures. This week, Ireland’s National Asset Management Agency, the state agency set up in 2009 to purge banks of their most toxic commercial property loans, started the destruction of an apartment block for the first time.

  • European research chief warns that austerity is hitting science excellence : Nature
    http://blogs.nature.com/news/2012/07/european-research-chief-warns-that-austerity-is-hitting-science-excell

    The head of the European Research Council has warned that national austerity programmes threaten research excellence in Spain and Ireland, and expressed fears that both young and experienced researchers will abandon the countries as a result of public spending cuts.

    #recherche #austérité #europe

  • Cartographie Histoire Brésil

    Posted on Strange Map’s blog

    The Phantom Island of Brazil | Strange Maps | Big Think

    http://bigthink.com/strange-maps/572-the-phantom-island-of-brazil

    Frank Jacobs on July 3, 2012

    Map-readers knew about Brazil long before America was discovered; but they didn’t think of it as a giant country on a distant continent. Brazil, also known by the name Hy-Brasil [1], was a small, mist-shrouded island in the North Atlantic, not too far off Ireland’s west coast.

    Only, Hy-Brasil never existed. Shown here on a Mercator map dating from 1623, it was one of many phantom islands that haunted marine cartography, sometimes for centuries, before more accurate observational techniques (and ultimately satellite photography) eliminated them all.

  • Aggravation de la crise bancaire européenne, crainte en Irlande

    http://www.wsws.org/articles/2012/jun2012/irel-j11.shtml

    Deepening euro crisis increases fears over Ireland
    By Jordan Shilton
    11 June 2012

    Mounting turmoil across the euro zone, focusing on concerns over Spain’s ability to borrow on the financial markets and the threat of a Greek exit, has seen Ireland’s economic outlook worsen sharply.

    The government succeeded in securing backing for the European fiscal treaty on May 31. But the result had barely been announced before commentators expressed fresh doubts over Ireland’s ability to return to the financial markets.

    The crisis gripping Europe has temporarily put on hold plans to sell short-term treasury bills, in what would have been the first attempt to sell government debt in nearly two years. Bloomberg reported Thursday that the planned sale of up to €500 million (US$630 million) of 6-month and 12-month government debt would have to wait until after the Greek elections on June 17. The article optimistically predicted more “stability” in the markets in July, but as the downgrading of Spanish debt to one notch above junk status has shown, such hopes are anything but assured.