
Irish language signs ‘must be a part of our future' in Northern Ireland, says Michelle O'Neill
Sinn Fein's Stormont leader also said work on Casement Park in west Belfast must begin 'now', despite a funding shortfall in the tens of millions remaining.
There has also been much recent controversy over plans to install signage in Irish in Belfast's new transport hub, with unionists heavily opposed to the idea.
Ms O'Neill told republicans gathered at the final resting place of Tone, 'the father of Irish republicanism', that she was 'honoured to serve as First Minister for all, committed to power-sharing and to progress, and committed to representing all equally'.
'Acht na Gaeilge is now a reality and in the coming months the Irish Language Commissioner will be appointed,' she said.
'And in a fair and balanced way Irish language signs such as those in Grand Central Station must be part of our future.
'Additional funding was secured for Casement Park which creates renewed momentum. The work must now begin. This is a vital project not just for west Belfast, not just for the GAA, but for sports more widely in the north and across the island.
'A top class sporting stadium is a win for all. Sinn Féin is committed to investing in all sporting codes. Casement Park will be built.'
Ms O'Neill also said it was time to extend voting rights in Irish presidential elections to Irish citizens in Northern Ireland. The Assembly recently passed a Sinn Féin non-binding motion to do so, although the Aontú party in the Republic had already submitted a private member's bill on the same matter in Dublin.
Ms O'Neill said the vote in Stormont to extend the vote north of the border was 'something unthinkable only a short number of years ago'.
'But it is a sign of confidence in our future. A sign of things changing for the better,' she said.
'A similar motion will be debated in the Dáil this coming week.
'It is a decade since a bill was first passed in the Dáil, but it has been blocked by successive governments.
'Now is the time to act. Now is the time to extend voting rights to Irish citizens in the north.'
Ms O'Neill also condemned recent racially-motivated rioting in Ballymena, Portadown and elsewhere as 'raw, unadulterated racism, fuelled by sectarian, supremacist loyalism, involving, in many cases, paramilitary elements, much of which was mirroring ultra-right English nationalism'.
She also described the Northern Ireland government's Legacy Act as 'fundamentally flawed and it is a cynical piece of legislation' and called for an immediate public inquiry into the murder of GAA official Sean Brown, who was murdered by loyalists in 1997.
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Sunday World
3 hours ago
- Sunday World
‘We will beat British Government for second time in court' – Kneecap at largest ever gig
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Irish Times
4 hours ago
- Irish Times
Noraid: ‘They started to run it down from the early 1990s – They said I had an image as an IRA supporter'
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The first episode traces how 1920s anti-Treaty IRA men who quit, or fled, Ireland after the Civil War infused New York's Irish-American community with strong Republican feelings brought to life later with The Troubles. Remembering people such as Michael Flannery, who fought in 1916, John McDonagh says: 'Their hatred of the Free State knew no bounds. It was always, 'Free State', and 'bastards' wasn't long after it.' The second episode traces the impact of the 1981 hunger-strikes and Noraid-organised visits of Irish-Americans to Northern Ireland in the mid-1980s that radicalised opinion across Irish-America. Graphic for RTE documentary on Noraid It tracks, too, Sinn Féin's entry into the top strata of US politics, including White House visits – a process that was first pressed by Noraid calls for a Northern special envoy and a visa for then party leader Gerry Adams. 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Irish Examiner
5 hours ago
- Irish Examiner
Iran, Hezbollah, and the Kinahans in league to bring tonnes of cocaine through Ireland
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Picture: Dan Linehan Gardaí are also now investigating the two 'persons of interest' identified by gardaí as travelling to Castletownbere in West Cork and buying the Castlemore shipping vessel for some €300,0000, the money sent to Ireland from Dubai. When this fishing boat ran aground off the Wexford coast in September 2023, it precipitated the collapse of the major drug trafficking operation. The Castlemore was to collect cocaine from the MV Matthew off the Irish coast in September 2023. But its wifi malfunctioned, its engine failed, and it ran aground on a notorious sandbank in stormy seas. Its two crew members were rescued by helicopter before being arrested. On Friday, eight men were sentenced to a combined 129 years in prison for their role in the drug trafficking operation. They are Dutch national Cumali Ozgen, 49, who was said to be the 'eyes and ears' of the cartel on board the MV Matthew and was described in court as a 'malign force'; Iranians Soheil Jelveh, 51, and Saeid Hassani, 39; Filipino Harold Estoesta, 31; Ukrainians Mykhailo Gavryk, and Vitaliy Vlasoi, both 32; and Vitaliy Lapa, aged 62; and UK national Jamie Harbron. Justice Melanie Greally accepted that none of the accused were operating in the higher echelons of the organised crime group which was directing the operation remotely. But they were 'committed to the success of the venture'. And maritime drug trafficking cannot take place without the expertise of experienced seafarers, which most of the men were, Justice Greally said. The Kinahan cartel is believed to be one of multiple organised crime groups involved in the MV Matthew operation. 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Representatives from the Joint Task Force that intercepted the MV Matthew and uncovered the largest cocaine seizure in the history of the State, were at Haulbowline naval base in Cork today, with gardaí, the navy and revenue commissioners present. Representatives from Interpol and the maritime drug dismantling body MAOC-N also attended.