logo
Ban on services from occupied territories has to 'factor in' US anti-boycott laws, says Taoiseach

Ban on services from occupied territories has to 'factor in' US anti-boycott laws, says Taoiseach

Irish Examiner21 hours ago
The Taoiseach has warned that introducing a ban on services from the occupied territories could negatively impact multinational companies operating in Ireland due to US anti-boycott laws.
Micheál Martin said the Government must 'factor in' laws passed in some US states that penalise companies who engage in boycotts, but it was open to including services in the laws if it is legally possible.
'That's an issue we have to factor in, because we don't want any companies or multinationals in Ireland inadvertently being caught up in this,' Mr Martin said.
'The objective is to create pressure on Israel to stop the war and in particular to adhere to international law and in terms of the ICJ (International Court of Justice) judgement.'
At present, the Government's legislation to ban trade with the occupied territories in the Palestinian West Bank only applies to goods, not services.
Asked if the Government was seeking to prioritise commercial interests over a moral argument, Mr Martin rejected the assertion.
'It's not commercial, like it's putting bread and butter on people's table,' Mr Martin said, citing the 'hundreds of thousands" of jobs from multinational companies in Ireland. 'The object of the exercise here is to put pressure on Israel, not to disadvantage Ireland unduly and that's a factor."
Mr Martin said people should be aware the legislation would be 'misinterpreted' within the United States.
He added there were other challenges with the legislation, including its potential impact, citing that only €690,000 worth of trade has been done with Israeli occupied territories over the last five years.
'There's no point in Ireland coming out the worse if it had no impact on Israel. That's the only point I'm making, we have to be clear-eyed in terms of the impact. People should know about the impact is what I'm saying,' Mr Martin said.
'We don't want to inadvertently catch companies and have them punished in the United States for something they're not aware of.'
The Taoiseach also questioned how it would be possible to prove if services were procured from the occupied territories.
'How do you actually detect, how do you punish the offence, the practicalities around all of that. Those are real and the bill is fundamentally symbolic, it's important.'
Mr Martin said there are still 'very narrow grounds' to implement the bill.
Anti-BDS legislation is in place across numerous US states, including California and Florida, which can levy sanctions against companies who participate in boycotts against Israel.
Gambling legislation
Meanwhile, the Taoiseach said he would favour a ban on free bets by gambling companies, adding it should take place if recently passed laws allow for it.
'We don't want young people being lulled into and induced by gambling at an early age, for example, through that mechanism because addiction, once it starts it's very difficult to shed an addiction. Gambling can have catastrophic consequences on families,' Mr Martin said.
His comments come after an ESRI report found that companies offering free bets led gamblers to spend more, lose more and push them into making bad decisions.
'Our findings imply that gambling offers aren't merely marketing tools, but pose a real risk of financial harm, particularly among vulnerable groups,' said Dr Diarmaid Ó Ceallaigh of the ESRI's Behavioural Research Unit.
Read More
No use crying over spilt stout: Taoiseach rallies after faux pas in Tokyo
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Government committed to €200 childcare fee, but increase in places must happen
Government committed to €200 childcare fee, but increase in places must happen

Irish Independent

time36 minutes ago

  • Irish Independent

Government committed to €200 childcare fee, but increase in places must happen

A big feature of the election, which also made it into the Programme for Government, was the promise to reduce childcare fees to €200 per child per month. Last month, Children's Minister Norma Foley announced that fees for parents paying the highest rates in the country are to see those fees capped from September. This meant that fees would be brought closer to the average weekly fee of €197 for full day care, when the National Childcare Scheme subsidy is included. However, the figure is a long way off the commitment from government - but Taoiseach Micheál Martin said commitments in the Programme for Government would be followed through. 'The minister will come to us with her priorities, and obviously it's a Programme for Government commitment, so all Programme for Government commitments, will be followed through. So that's the basic point,' the Taoiseach said. 'But we also cannot lose sight of the need, as well as affordability, we have to move also in terms of additionality, in terms of places, and that people can get places,' he added. Mr Martin added that research showed more childcare places were needed quickly. 'We've made very good progress in childcare, but we need more places, so the access issue and the number of places is also important as well as affordability,' Mr Martin said. 'Some of the research at the moment is pointing towards the need to improve the number of places fairly quickly. In respect of child care, again, that speaks to the growth of population and the pressures on child care and health services and education. So there will be a focus on childcare, and that will continue,' he added. Asked if measures to begin the process of moving towards the €200 per month promise need to happen to show the Government is committed to reduction, Mr Martin said progress made in recent years needed to continue. However, he added that 'we can't do everything at once'. 'We have a whole range of issues now that we have to make progress on. There will be negotiations leading into the budget. We can't do everything at once, so we will endeavour to prioritise and continue the progress we've made in recent years,' he added. Last year, it was reported that a row had broken out in Government over the increase to social welfare payments with former Social Protection Minister Heather Humphreys wanting increases for some on welfare payments, including pensioners, but not for jobseekers. Speaking in Hiroshima on his final day of his four-day visit to Japan, Mr Martin said the row was a 'false row' and that the proposal was never put to Fianna Fáil. Asked if he thought job seekers were less deserving of an increase in the budget than others on welfare, he said he does not agree with the characterisation of people on welfare. He added that priorities would have to be made in the budget and would like to see measures on child poverty come from the Department of Social Protection. 'I don't like drawing distinctions, and I've never been into the characterisation of people on welfare. I've never been into that politics,' Mr Martin said. 'We do have to make priorities. In terms of how we allocate, my view is that we have, over the last two years, committed to doing something significant on child poverty, to turn the dial around on child poverty, and that's where I would like to see a targeted set of measures emanating from the Department of Social Protection,' he added.

People in Gaza experiencing 'deprivation of water'
People in Gaza experiencing 'deprivation of water'

RTÉ News​

timean hour ago

  • RTÉ News​

People in Gaza experiencing 'deprivation of water'

Children in Gaza are within weeks from dying of thirst due to a blockade of fuel, a spokesperson for UNICEF has said. James Elder said that a 100-day blockade of fuel in the region is impacting water as "you need fuel to distribute water", with those in the territory experiencing "deprivation of water". Mr Elder, who was in Gaza, said the blockade on any fuel entering the enclave is "one of the darkest testimonies to the intent of what we're seeing in Gaza". "A 100-day blockade of fuel means that people are within weeks of seeing children die of thirst," he said. Speaking on RTÉ's Morning Ireland, he said that water is being supplied to the enclave in two ways, through pipelines and electricity. Israel is controlling the pipelines, Mr Elder said, and they "turn the tap on and off"; while electricity is used to run desalination plants. "You can talk backwards and forwards about blocking food because Hamas steals it," he said. "There's no evidence base to that. "It's a population being starved, water goes straight to a population, so again there is no rhyme nor reason, no evidence nor logic for that." The latest bloodshed in the decades-old Israeli-Palestinian conflict was triggered in October 2023 when Hamas attacked Israel, killing 1,200 and taking about 250 hostages, Israeli tallies show. Gaza's health ministry says Israel's subsequent military assault has killed over 56,000 Palestinians. It has also caused a hunger crisis, internally displaced Gaza's entire population and prompted accusations of genocide at the International Court of Justice and of war crimes at the International Criminal Court. Israel denies the accusations. A previous two month ceasefire ended when Israeli strikes killed more than 400 Palestinians on 18 March. The US and Israeli-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation operates four sites in Gaza, Mr Elder said, adding "imagine all of all of Dublin was under a siege and then you've got four sites now in Citywest and that's the only four sites you can get food". He added UNICEF "can't access them" because the sites are located in "a militarised site", adding "anywhere we move in the Gaza Strip must be deconflicted". Their operation within such zones, he said, is "one of the great concerns with this". "You cannot force people through a militarised zone and then have a justification for them being shot because they're in a militarised zone," he said. He noted that UNICEF is "still handing out therapeutic food, doing our distributions, and no one is being shot, no one is being killed, whether it's in Sudan, Ethiopia or Gaza". 'Immense hope' for Gaza Mr Elder said that he has an "immense hope" for Gaza due to its literacy rate and people's attitude. "Parents and grandparents do everything in their power to keep those kids in school," he said, adding "UNICEF does the same in our education work, in our trauma work". "So there is a reason why Palestinian graduates from Gaza are the envy of universities around the region," he added. However, Mr Elder warned "we are in unchartered territory when it comes to trauma". "Every single child in Gaza needs mental health support," he said.

Iran's ‘medieval' fatwa demanding Trump be CRUCIFIED could spark homegrown terror attacks in West, top politicians warn
Iran's ‘medieval' fatwa demanding Trump be CRUCIFIED could spark homegrown terror attacks in West, top politicians warn

The Irish Sun

timean hour ago

  • The Irish Sun

Iran's ‘medieval' fatwa demanding Trump be CRUCIFIED could spark homegrown terror attacks in West, top politicians warn

IRAN'S "medieval" regime demanding Donald Trump be crucified could provoke "homegrown terrorist attacks", top politicians warn. Warped Ayatollahs issued a call to arms to Muslims urging them to make the US president "regret his actions" - branding him an "enemy of God". Advertisement 6 Donald Trump was shot at during an assassination attempt last year Credit: AP 6 Grand Ayatollah Naser Makarem Shirazi issued a horrifying Fatwa Credit: Alamy 6 A picture of the fatwa released by the Iranian mullah Fatwas - religious edicts - have been levelled against Trump and Sharia law states those charged must not only be killed but also tortured prior to death, including through crucifixion and limb amputation. Senior cleric Najmuddin Tabasi vowed Trump "must be executed" and said "the same hand that fired a shot past his ear can put a bullet through his throat" - referring to A sickening fundraiser has even been set up by hardline Iranian cleric Abdolmajid Kharahaani to hire an assassin to murder Trump and Israeli prime minister Netanyahu. Advertisement More on Iran It comes in the wake of the so-called 12-day war which saw Trump and Israel "obliterate" much of Iran's nuclear empire. United Against Nuclear Iran (UANI) Chairman Governor Jeb Bush, CEO Ambassador Mark D. Wallace, and Senior Advisor Rt. Hon. Tom Tugendhat MP insisted the mullahs must be urgently sanctioned. They also warned how high-ranking regime enforcers are in contact with individuals in both the US and Europe. In a statement shared exclusively with The Sun, Bush, Wallace and Tugendhat said: "The Iranian regime's medieval and barbaric threats against the US president and others cannot be ignored – and must not go unanswered. Advertisement Most read in The Sun Breaking "The US government and its allies should immediately sanction Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, his son Mojtaba Khamenei, Makarem-Shirazi, Hamedani, Tabasi, and Panahian, as Specially Designated Global Terrorists. 'None of these men have been sanctioned to date under counterterrorism authorities. Iran executes three prisoners accused of spying for Israel in brutal crackdown in wake of 12-day war "Additionally, the US Justice Department should seek indictments against these me and American law enforcement should partner with its allies to request INTERPOL Red Notices for issuing threats to internationally protected individuals." The trio also urged US authorities to conduct national security-based immigration review on named clerics, Iranian officials and their families to stop them from traveling to America and allied nations. Advertisement "UANI has revealed that these senior Iranian regime mullahs are in direct communication with individuals and entities in the West, including in the US and Europe," they added. "Against this backdrop, there is an added urgency to implement stringent measures against them. "These calls are incitements to homegrown terrorist attacks and pose a serious threat to the president and US nationals—they should be treated accordingly." 6 Smoke rises from a fire following a strike on Tehran in June Credit: Reuters Advertisement 6 Ayatollah Ali Khamenei addressing the nation in June during Israel's strikes Credit: AFP What is a fatwa? A FATWA is a formal ruling or interpretation on a point of Islamic law by a Marja - a title given to the highest level of Twelver Shia religious cleric. It calls on all Muslims, including the Islamic governments and individuals, to ensure its enforcement. In countries where Islamic law is the basis of the legal system, a fatwa can be binding. A fatwa issued by Iran's first supreme leader Ayatollah Ruhollah Musavi Khomeini led to the massacre of 30,000 prisoners including some as young as 13 in a shocking two-month purge. The 1988 executions were revealed in the memoirs of Grand Ayatollah Hossein-Ali Montazeri, one of Ayatollah Khomeini's closest advisors who went on to condemn his murderous act. In it, he accused prisoners of "waging war against God" and urged Death Commissioners in charge of the mass killings to "show no mercy". Grand Ayatollah Naser Makarem Shirazi unleashed the fatwa on Sunday in response to Trump's comments on possible intentions to kill Ayatollah Khamenei. It comes after the US leader, 79, warned last month that he knew where Khamenei was hiding but wouldn't target him - "at least not for now". A day earlier, Netanyahu had said killing the supreme leader would not "escalate the conflict", but instead "end it". Advertisement Furious Shirazi said 'any person or regime that threatens the leadership and religious authority' is considered a 'mohareb' – one who wages war against God. The sick fatwa also forbids any Muslim to cooperate with or support the two leaders - and says that any jihadist who is killed while attacking them will receive a reward from Allah. Shirazi's ruling came following an inquiry on how Muslims should react to threats made against the Supreme Leader and other Shia leaders. Timeline of assassination attempts on Donald Trump July 13 , 2024 - Thomas Crooks shot at Donald Trump after hiding on a roof overlooking the former President's outdoor rally in Butler, Pennsylvania. Crooks was killed by Secret Service snipers after he fired eight shots at Trump and killed one rallygoer and injured two others. The bullet came less than a quarter of an inch from striking Trump's head, Ronny Jackson, the former president's physician, said. September 15 - Ryan Routh was seen by a Secret Service agent hiding in the bushes with a rifle at the Trump International Golf Club in Florida. Trump was playing a round of golf when the alleged would-be assassin managed to get within 400 yard of Trump. Routh fled the scene in an SUV but was caught by cops and arrested. September 25 - Donald Trump posts on social media that he's been informed of an Iranian plot against his life. October 7 - Farhad Shakeri is given an order by an official in Iran's Revolutionary Guard to come up with a plan to kill Donald Trump within seven days. He told the FBI that he never intended to devise a plan in that timeframe, but allegedly discussed it with two hired guns in New York. November 7 - Carlisle Rivera of Brooklyn and Jonathan Loadholt of Staten Island are arrested in New York for being part of the plot to kill Donald Trump along with three other Americans Iran deemed targets. Shirazi, one of Tehran's chief religious authorities, called on Muslims worldwide to "make these enemies regret their words and actions". Advertisement A fatwa was previously handed down on author Salman Rushdie in 1989 after his book The Satanic Verses infuriated then Ayatollah Khomeini - who put a $3million bounty on his head. The novelist, 77, faced numerous death threats and was forced to live largely in hiding for years before an assassination attempt in 2022. He lost sight in one eye after he was repeatedly stabbed on stage during a lecture in New York. It comes amid fears the fatwas are being used to stoke fears among domestic dissidents who dare to rebel against the regime. Advertisement Hundreds Campaigners have warned the wounded regime is ramping up repression of its own people in a bid to stamp out any chance of an uprising. At a funeral for military top brass killed during Israel's strike, haunting chants of "Death to America" rung out. 6 Advertisement United Against Nuclear Iran statement in full Chairman Governor Jeb Bush, CEO Ambassador Mark D. Wallace, and Senior Advisor Rt. Hon. Tom Tugendhat MP said: UANI vehemently condemns the Iranian regime's barbaric fatwas calling for thecrucifixion of President Trump and other US nationals. Over the last few days, some of the most senior Iranian regime ayatollahs and officials — Naser Makarem-Shirazi, Hossein Nouri Hamedani, Najmuddin Tabasi, and Alireza Panahian — have issued fatwas (religious decrees) calling on Islamists worldwide to carry out barbaric, homegrown terrorist attacks against President Trump and US nationals. Senior regime mullahs Makarem-Shirazi and Hamedani have specifically issued fatwas calling for the assassination and crucifixion of President Trump, Prime Minister Netanyahu, and others under the Islamic penal code of mohareb (waging war against God). Under Sharia law, all those charged as a mohareb must not only be killed but also tortured prior to death, including through crucifixion and cross-amputation. Panahian, who is a senior member of the Office of the Supreme Leader and a close associate of his son Mojtaba Khamenei, has amplified these calls for the killings of American officials. Likewise, Tabasi, who is a member of the Society of Seminary Teachers of Qom, proclaimed President Trump 'must be executed' and said, 'the same hand that fired a shot past his ear can put a bullet through his throat.' A mullah on Iran's state TV has even announced the creation of a fund to collect money for the 'killing of Trump and Netanyahu,' which he stated could be achieved with $10–20 million. The Iranian regime's medieval and barbaric threats against the U.S. president and others cannot be ignored – and must not go unanswered. The U.S. government and its allies should immediately sanction Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, his son Mojtaba Khamenei, Makarem-Shirazi, Hamedani, Tabasi, and Panahian, as Specially Designated Global Terrorists. None of these men have been sanctioned to date under counterterrorism authorities. Additionally, the US Justice Department should seek indictments against these men and American law enforcement should partner with its allies to request INTERPOL Red Notices for issuing threats to internationally protected individuals. The US government and its allies should also conduct national security-based immigration reviews on these clerics, Iranian officials, and their families to ensure they are prohibited from traveling to the territories of the U.S. and its allies. UANI has revealed that these senior Iranian regime mullahs are in direct communication with individuals and entities in the West, including in the US and Europe. Against this backdrop, there is an added urgency to implement stringent measures against them. Ayatollah Khomeini's fatwa against the author Salman Rushdie was handed down in 1989. In 2022, Rushdie was almost killed after his eye was gouged out by an individual seeking to carry out the fatwa at a talk in Chautauqua, New York. "These calls are incitements to homegrown terrorist attacks and pose a serious threat to the president and US nationals—they should be treated accordingly.'

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