
Renewed political pressure to expand opposition to Israeli assault on Gaza
legislation banning trade with the Occupied Territories
.
Tánaiste
Simon Harris
secured Cabinet approval to begin drafting the legislation on Tuesday, saying he hoped other
European Union
countries would join Ireland in banning trade from the illegally occupied areas.
But there was criticism of the pace with which the Bill is expected to proceed through the Oireachtas, as well as its scope.
Labour Party TD
Duncan Smith
said he is 'utterly angered at the fact that it still seems it will be autumn at the earliest before it will be brought into law'.
READ MORE
He said it should be prioritised and the Committee on Foreign Affairs should 'sit as quickly and as often as is necessary to get it into the Dáil and through the Seanad and done before the summer recess'.
Mr Harris's spokesman said the Tánaiste would be open to the Dáil continuing to sit during the summer recess to debate the Occupied Territories Bill, adding that he would be guided by the recommendation of the Oireachtas committee.
The Coalition indicated on Tuesday that it was unlikely to include trade in services in its Bill, which is being sought by the Opposition and by Independent Senator Frances Black, who drafted the first Bill in the area seven years ago.
A Government spokesman said it was not proposed to regulate trade in services 'at this time', arguing that the basis in EU law for such a move is 'much weaker than is the case in the field of goods trade'. The Coalition said it will take into account recommendations on this front that arise during prelegislative scrutiny.
Ms Black said the decision today by Government is a 'really important and welcome step, but our work is not done yet'.
'We need to see a full ban on all trade with the illegal Israeli settlements, which includes both physical goods like fruit and veg, but also intangible services like tech and IT,' she said.
Opposition parties are also pursuing other avenues to increase pressure on the Government to act, with left-wing parties due to combine in support of a
Sinn Féin
Bill yesterday evening that would restrict the sale of Israeli government bonds through the Irish financial system.
Sinn Féin has cited advice given to it by legal advisers to the Oireachtas which suggested such a move could be possible with the appropriate safeguards in place.
However, ahead of a debate on the motion scheduled for Tuesday evening, the Government dismissed the move, with Taoiseach
Micheál Martin
describing it as 'completely unworkable' and incompatible with EU law.
Sinn Féin leader
Mary Lou McDonald
rejected this analysis as 'utterly cynical and bogus'.
The Government says Israeli bonds are not listed on the
Irish Stock Exchange
nor available to purchase through any regulated entity in the State.
'The Bill is asking for an activity that does not take place here to be terminated,' a Coalition spokesman said, adding that preliminary advice from the Attorney General suggests 'key provisions may be unworkable and may conflict with EU treaties and our obligations as a member state'.
'Importantly, this Bill does not prevent Israel from raising money by selling bonds.'
The
Labour Party
, meanwhile, is preparing a motion for next week to mandate the Taoiseach to move a motion at the UN seeking an international peacekeeping force for Gaza.
The Coalition has indicated it will not oppose the motion, with a spokesman saying it welcomes the approach 'as one that favours multilateralism, and the pursuit of peace and security', adding that the 'urgency of the need for peace could not be clearer'.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Irish Times
4 hours ago
- Irish Times
‘This war took my entire life from me': Thousands attend pro-Palestine march in Dublin
Tens of thousands of people marched through Dublin city centre on Saturday afternoon calling for the Central Bank of Ireland to 'stop funding genocide' through the facilitation of the sale of Israeli bonds. Social Democrats TD Gary Gannon told protesters he would be taking a legal case against the Central Bank over the issue and would lodge papers next week. The Dublin Central TD has previously written to the bank's governor , Gabriel Makhlouf, claiming that investors in Israeli bonds approved by the Irish Central Bank risk being legally complicit in genocide in Gaza . The bank is the designated authority in relation to the sale of Israeli bonds in the EU, and has determined the securities meet the standards of the bloc's prospectus regulations. READ MORE Protesters leading the demonstration carried a giant sphere in the style of the logo of Ireland's Central Bank with the words 'stop funding genocide' painted on it. Photograph: Ella Sloane Saturday marked the sixteenth national demonstration of its kind since October 2023, with organisers estimating more than 70,000 in attendance. Protesters draped in Palestinian flags and keffiyehs arrived in droves at the Garden of Remembrance before marching to Leinster House. The demonstration was organised by the Ireland Palestine Solidarity Campaign (IPSC) and was backed by more than 170 organisations, according to the IPSC. The group called for the Government to enact sanctions against Israel and to fully enact the Occupied Territories Bill. The Government has committed to implementing the Bill, which would ban trade in goods with the occupied Palestinian territories, and it is due before the Dáil in autumn. Protesters on Saturday called on the Government to include a ban on trade in services in the Bill. Photograph: Ella Sloane They also called for the cessation of use of Irish airspace for transporting weapons. Traffic was brought to a standstill as the march travelled down O'Connell Street, through College Green and up Dawson Street. At a rally outside the Dáil, which filled the length of Molesworth Street, Marah Nijim, a 23-year-old student from Gaza told how her brother had recently been hospitalised due to starvation. 'It's kind of heavy for me to talk now because I just got the news that my brother is in hospital because of a lack of food and because of the starvation,' she said. 'I'm here to speak about my home, the one that I was forced to leave without any clothes, without anything but what I was wearing.' 'This war took away from me my entire life,' she told the crowds who had gathered outside Leinster House. Mr Gannon told the crowd about his legal case against the Central Bank of Ireland. He said he would keep his speech brief because 'politicians have done too much talking and we haven't done enough in terms of acting, legislating and sanction'. 'The case is moral. A genocide is happening. We are obligated to prevent it. So I will take it as far as it needs to go. We are lodging papers on Tuesday,' he said. IPSC chairperson Zoe Lawlor described it as 'shameful' that the Government 'lets the US military use Shannon Airport' to transport Israeli weapons. 'Israel does not commit this genocide alone. It does so with the weapons, the money and the political cover it gets from the US and the EU,' she told the crowd. . Ms Lawlor condemned the Government, saying 'their actions do not match their words'. She spoke about the refusal of visas for 33 young GAA players from Palestine who had planned to tour Ireland. 'They have delayed the visas of the Lajee dancers and football team. They are blocking the students in Gaza who already have been accepted to Irish universities,' she said. During a break in the speeches, Galway singer Declan O'Rourke performed World on Fire, which he dedicated to 'the people of Palestine'. Other speakers at the rally included: Mohamed Migdad, an economics lecturer from Gaza; Dunnes Stores striker Mary Manning; Bernard Joyce, director of the Irish Traveller Movement; and Conor O'Neill of the Pass the Occupied Territories Bill Campaign.


Irish Times
4 hours ago
- Irish Times
Baltic states' ‘visceral fear' of Russian invasion ‘almost impossible' for Irish to understand, says ex-MEP
Ireland is having an 'esoteric' debate about ending the triple-lock on sending Irish soldiers abroad while other European Union states fear invasion by Russia , former Green Party MEP Ciarán Cuffe has declared. [ 'Hands off Ireland's neutrality': Government warned changes to triple-lock system will be fought Opens in new window ] The 'visceral fear' felt by Estonia , Latvia and Lithuania that Russian leader Vladmir Putin could order the invasion of their countries is 'almost impossible to understand' for an Irish audience, he said. Speaking at the Patrick MacGill summer school in Glenties, Co Donegal, Mr Cuffe, who is now the co-chair of the European Green Party, said the Baltic states are debating whether to pull out of an international agreement banning landmines. 'Why? Because these countries want to have a belt of landmines ready if Putin comes across the border. We can have an esoteric discussion of the triple lock. But in those countries, it's what might happen tomorrow or the next day,' he said. READ MORE [ Poll shows Ireland's attachment to neutrality is strong but nuanced Opens in new window ] Eastern European EU states worry about mobilising soldiers in 24 hours: 'It's a debate we're not even thinking about here. We're still wrestling with [a report] that said our army, our defence forces are 40 years out of date. I think we have to come to grips with that.' Former MEP Ciarán Cuffe at Patrick MacGill Summer School on Saturday Speaking on the Gaza crisis and Ireland's stand on the issue, Mr Cuffe urged an Irish audience to remember that 'the legacy of the Holocaust casts a very long shadow over central Europe. 'When I talk to my colleagues in Germany or Austria, they are so hard-wired into protecting the state of Israel, they find it incredibly difficult to recognise the magnitude of human slaughter of Palestinian people that is occurring. 'However, public opinion is changing in Germany,' he said, adding that the European Green Party now favours the suspension of parts of the EU-Israel association agreement that do not require all EU states to agree. Ireland's focus on the Gaza crisis is understandable given our history as a postcolonial country: 'We do find it so strong and so close to our own history. So, we have to act on that,' he said, Meanwhile, Dr Eoin Drea, senior researcher at the Brussels-based Wilfried Martens Centre for European Studies, warned that Ireland's positions on neutrality and defence spending have damaged the country's standing. 'I always get anxious talking about Ukraine in Ireland because I really want Irish people to know that in Brussels, Ireland is not viewed as a credible voice, as a serious voice on security and defence,' he said. Ireland is talking about buying a towed sonar array to track Russian submarines 'interfering with our undersea cables, but on some days, we don't have enough sailors even to put a ship to sea. So, what are we going to tow this sonar array with?' Before the Ukraine crisis, few other EU states took any notice of Ireland's attitudes on defence and neutrality, he said: 'There was a lot of ignorance about the Irish situation before Ukraine. We were out on the western seaboard, we didn't matter.' Since then, however, it has become clear to other EU states that the United Kingdom 'takes care' of Ireland's security and defence: 'If there's a Russian fighter that buzzes by Irish airspace, it's RAF jets that are scrambled to meet them,' he said. [ Who protects Irish skies? The secret air defence deal that dates back to the cold war Opens in new window ] Meanwhile, trust in democracy has fallen significantly over the last 25 years across western countries because of voters' 'lack of faith' in traditional political parties' ability to tackle problems, former minister for Europe Lucinda Creighton said. Scandals in nearly all western countries have led to 'an erosion of trust in the consensus around the political order', the former Fine Gael TD said. Traditional centre-left and centre-right political parties have 'struggled to capture the attention of younger voters' and have been unable to use social media tools to connect with them, unlike populist parties. Blue-collar and middle-class workers 'just don't have the same hope and positivity and sense of opportunity that they might have done in the past', leading to a lack of faith in the liberal order, she went on. Equally, populist or right-wing parties in Poland, Germany, France and elsewhere have successfully 'adopted quite radical left-wing policies, but coupled them with some right-wing narratives', she said.


Irish Times
7 hours ago
- Irish Times
‘Somebody has to speak for the Irish people': Michael Flatley ‘seriously' considering presidential bid
Michael Flatley is not ruling himself out of seeking a nomination to run for president of Ireland , he told Brendan O'Connor on RTÉ Radio 1 on Saturday. The former dancer, famous for creating and choreographing the Riverdance and Lord of the Dance shows, said he believes the Irish people do not have a voice at present. He suggested he may run 'if I thought that I could be of benefit to the Irish people and maybe more importantly, if I thought I could be a voice of the Irish people'. 'I'm very blessed in that… I meet the average person on the street from [ages] five to 95,' Mr Flatley said. 'I meet them all and I hear their concerns. And I'd be lying if I said they're happy right now, and somebody has to speak for the Irish people.' So far, two candidates have been confirmed for the presidential race. Independent TD Catherine Connolly announced her bid after receiving the backing of 20 Oireachtas members, while former European Commissioner Mairead McGuinness has been nominated by Fine Gael. READ MORE [ Who is Mairead McGuinness, the early front-runner in the presidential race? Opens in new window ] Ms McGuinness leads the field in a list of potential candidates, according to the latest Irish Times/Ipsos B&A opinion poll, though the results show nobody has yet caught the public imagination. While he has not yet made a final decision, nor has he been approached by a political party, Mr Flatley said he has had contact with 'some very weighted individuals, people in the know'. Citing his encounters with world leaders like Donald Trump, Vladimir Putin, the Obamas and the Clintons, Mr Flatley suggested the job of the president might be to promote the country on a cultural front. [ Who is Catherine Connolly? The outspoken left-wing campaigner running for president Opens in new window ] 'I'm not sure we need another politician if I'm honest,' he said. 'I know it's a statesman's role, but I spent the last 30 years of my life touring the world, promoting Ireland and Irish culture. I've met them all.' Mr Flatley was reluctant to declare any outright intention to run, but confirmed he is 'taking it seriously' and has constructed a team of advisers. He said he has a large business to run with 'an army of dancers counting on me to make a living,. I have a whiskey company, a beautiful young wife and son that I want to spend time with'. [ Michael Flatley refused access to documents in row over legal fees and receiver costs Opens in new window ] 'It's certainly not something that I've made any decision on, but it does get frustrating when you see the hard-working Irish taxpayer working as hard out and having no say in things,' he added. When pressed, he concluded by saying, 'let it be said that I stand for Ireland and the Irish people – sin é'. It remains to be seen whether Mr Flatley would secure a nomination should he seek one.