logo
Killers of Irish peacekeeper have escaped justice for too long

Killers of Irish peacekeeper have escaped justice for too long

BreakingNews.ie13 hours ago
It is 'unsatisfactory' that the main person convicted for the killing of an Irish peacekeeper in 2022 is still at large, the Taoiseach has said.
Micheál Martin was speaking after a man was given a death sentence in Lebanon over Private Seén Rooney's death.
Advertisement
Rooney, 24, from Newtowncunningham in Co Donegal, was killed when a convoy of Irish troops serving with a UN peacekeeping force was ambushed and fired upon on December 14th 2022.
The shooting happened near the town of Al-Aqbiya in the south of Lebanon, a stronghold of Hezbollah.
Pte Rooney, from the 121 Infantry Battalion of the Defence Forces, was killed.
In March, Tánaiste Simon Harris said he pressed the case during meetings in Beirut with the Lebanese ministers for foreign affairs and defence.
Advertisement
On Monday, the Government was informed of the completion of a military tribunal in Beirut for those indicted for the murder of Pte Rooney.
Taoiseach Micheál Martin said a number of people had been convicted in relation to his murder but some of the sentences were 'unduly lenient'.
'The main culprit was at large and that is very, very regrettable,' he said ahead of Cabinet.
'The delay that it has taken to have justice has been far too long and I must say that some of the sentences are unduly lenient as well in respect of others.
Advertisement
'Peacekeeping is a very noble cause and Private Sean Rooney gave his life to the cause of peacekeeping and to protect others.
'I've said repeatedly to the Lebanese authorities that the nobility of the role of the peacekeeper must always be reflected in terms of bringing those who are responsible for this murder to justice and we will continue to make that point.'
The Taoiseach said death sentences in Lebanon had not been applied for 'quite some time' and the expectation is that it will be commuted.
'Overall, those responsible had escaped, if you like, justice for far too long. Many are at large for quite some time and the main individual now is at large as well and that is very unsatisfactory.'
Advertisement
He added: 'The court has made its decision, we can't interfere in the operation of the court itself. But I think the whole process certainly left a lot to be desired.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Radical Islamic cleric leads Peak District spiritual and fitness camp
Radical Islamic cleric leads Peak District spiritual and fitness camp

Telegraph

time5 hours ago

  • Telegraph

Radical Islamic cleric leads Peak District spiritual and fitness camp

A radical Islamic cleric who has supported members of Hezbollah is running a summer camp that combines combat training with religious education in the Peak District this week. Sayed Hussein Makke, a London-born Shia preacher and influencer, has mourned members of the Lebanese terror group – including a British friend who died fighting for Hezbollah – and Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC). Earlier this year, his visa to visit Australia was revoked after Sky News reported that he had allegedly hailed Hassan Nasrallah, a Hezbollah leader killed in an Israeli air strike last year, as one of the world's 'greatest freedom fighters'. It was claimed that Mr Makke, who attended Nesrallah's funeral, had celebrated the number of mourners as evidence that the 'resistance' was 'alive and well'. The military wing of Hezbollah has been proscribed in the UK under counter-terror laws since 2008, and its political wing was banned in 2019. Lawyers for Mr Makke said he was not a member of, and had not provided support to, any proscribed organisation. The cleric is currently promoting a physical and Islamic training camp for young British men in the Peak District from Wednesday, July 30, to Aug 3. The camp, known as the Spiritual Warrior Project and held at Darwin Lake in Derbyshire, offers 'Olympic-level wrestling' alongside religious education by a cleric. The course is described as focusing on 'God-centric masculinity' and 'man psychology'. Applicants are asked how much they value 'discipline' and 'brotherhood'. Promotional material for the course says: 'Brotherhood is to trust your comrades – to know that you and your mission go further together than you could ever do by yourself. Spiritual Warriors live, eat and breathe brotherhood.' Speakers at the event include Sheikh Salman Zaarour, a Shia cleric who at a previous course is shown standing above a fire at nightfall guiding young men to 'reflect on our destinies'. An Instagram post shared by an account named Jafar Hammoud on Oct 7 last year, the first anniversary of the Hamas attacks on Israel, features Mr Zaarour with fellow students at a seminary in Lebanon. The post is captioned 'war nights' and states that 'victory is near'. In a separate programme called the 'One-on-One King Programme', Mr Makke offers private mentoring to men and is said to explore 'the masculine archetypes – king, warrior, magician, lover,'in a programme tailored to overcome personal weakness and 'maximise potential'. Mr Makke also sells oil-based products, including a pill to 'boost libido' for customers embarking on the 'spiritual warrior path'. In a response shared by a legal group on his behalf, Mr Makke claimed media reports about Spiritual Warrior Project were an 'attempt to stir up hatred against our camp attendees'.

US pressures Lebanon to issue cabinet decision to disarm Hezbollah before talks continue
US pressures Lebanon to issue cabinet decision to disarm Hezbollah before talks continue

Reuters

time8 hours ago

  • Reuters

US pressures Lebanon to issue cabinet decision to disarm Hezbollah before talks continue

BEIRUT, July 29 (Reuters) - Washington is ramping up pressure on Beirut to swiftly issue a formal cabinet decision committing to disarm Hezbollah before talks can resume on a halt to Israel's military operations in Lebanon, five sources familiar with the matter told Reuters. Without a public commitment from Lebanese ministers, the U.S. will no longer dispatch U.S. envoy Thomas Barrack to Beirut for negotiations with Lebanese officials, or pressure Israel either to stop airstrikes or pull its troops from south Lebanon, according to the sources, who include two Lebanese officials, two diplomats and a Lebanese source familiar with the matter. The U.S. State Department did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Washington and Beirut have been in talks for nearly six weeks on a U.S. roadmap to fully disarm the militant Lebanese Hezbollah party in exchange for Israel to end its strikes and withdraw its troops from five points in southern Lebanon. The original proposal included a condition that Lebanon's government pass a cabinet decision pledging to disarm Hezbollah. Hezbollah has publicly refused to hand over its arsenal in full, but the group has privately weighed scaling it back. The group, designated a terrorist organisation by the U.S. and much of the West, has also told Lebanese officials that Israel must take the first step by withdrawing its troops and stopping drone strikes on Hezbollah fighters and arms depots. Hezbollah's main ally, Lebanese speaker of parliament Nabih Berri, asked the U.S. to ensure that Israel halt its strikes as a first step, in order to fully implement the ceasefire agreed last year that ended months of fighting between Hezbollah and Israel, according to four of the sources. Israel rejected Berri's proposal late last week, the four sources said. There was no immediate response from the Israeli prime minister's office to questions from Reuters on the issue. The U.S. then began insisting that a cabinet vote take place imminently, all the sources said. "The U.S. is saying there's no more Barrack, no more papers back and forth - the council of ministers should take a decision and then we can keep discussing. They cannot wait any longer," the Lebanese source said. The source and the Lebanese officials said Prime Minister Nawaf Salam would seek to hold a session in the coming days. Barrack met Salam in Beirut last week and said Washington cannot "compel" Israel to do anything. In a post on X after his visit, Barrack said that "as long as Hezbollah retains arms, words will not suffice. The government and Hizballah need to fully commit and act now in order to not consign the Lebanese people to the stumbling status quo." All the sources said that Lebanon's rulers fear that a failure to issue a clear commitment to disarm Hezbollah could trigger escalated Israeli strikes, including on Beirut.

European pharmaceutical firms criticise Trump tariffs on medicines as ‘blunt instrument'
European pharmaceutical firms criticise Trump tariffs on medicines as ‘blunt instrument'

The Guardian

time11 hours ago

  • The Guardian

European pharmaceutical firms criticise Trump tariffs on medicines as ‘blunt instrument'

European pharmaceutical firms have condemned the US move to put 15% tariffs on medicines imported from the EU, calling the taxes a 'blunt instrument' that would harm patients on both sides of the Atlantic. They were responding to a White House text of the deal that inferred the 15% baseline rate on imports from the EU would also apply to drugs if the agreement is implemented on the US side on Friday as expected. 'As part of President Trump's strategy to establish balanced trade, the European Union will pay the United States a tariff rate of 15%, including on autos and auto parts, pharmaceuticals, and semiconductors,' the text said. The European Federation of Pharmaceutical Industries (EFPIA) said: 'Tariffs on medicines are a blunt instrument that will disrupt supply chains, impact on investment in research and development, and ultimately harm patient access to medicines on both sides of the Atlantic.' The trade organisation represents drug companies across the bloc including Bayer in Germany, Novo Nordisk in Denmark, and US multinationals with operations in Ireland such as Pfizer and Johnson & Johnson. The US move to impose import duties on pharma is a breach of a 1995 World Trade Organization agreement that medicines and the active ingredients in them are rated at zero tariff. An EU trade spokesperson said pharma imports from the US to the EU would remain duty free. Washington's text also indicated that the EU had confirmed it would not introduce a tech tax. An EU spokesperson said this was not the case and the bloc retained the 'sovereign right to legislate' in the digital space. Trump declared war on US pharmaceutical companies who were manufacturing medicines for US patients, and booking profits on those sales abroad. Sign up to Business Today Get set for the working day – we'll point you to all the business news and analysis you need every morning after newsletter promotion In March, he repeatedly took aim at Ireland's historical low-tax policies, which helped lure US multinationals including Pfizer, Boston Scientific and Eli Lilly to its shores, claiming the country had looted US businesses. On Monday, Ireland's prime minister, Micheál Martin, said tariffs in general were not ideal but a trade war would have been 'ruinous'. The EFPIA said it strove to 'ensure a fairer distribution of how global pharmaceutical innovation is financed' but there were 'more effective ways' to achieve this that would 'help rather than hinder global advances in patient care and economic growth'. The White House text of the deal has added to existing confusion over the position of pharmaceuticals in the trade deal, given that EU officials said on Monday that pharma exports to the US would remain duty free until the US had completed its section 232 investigation into pharmaceuticals and semiconductors. The text also raises questions over standards of US foods exported to the EU. The EU said the US's reference to commitments to 'address non-tariff barriers affecting trade in food and agricultural products including streamlining requirements for sanitary certificates for US pork and dairy products' did not amount to any lowering of its red-line rules on food standards. It is known that the European Commission has also made a commitment to the UK to streamline veterinary certification processes applying to British food exports post-Brexit. This could include a reduction in the paperwork needed to export products.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store