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Letters: As more public money is thrown away, keeping faith in RTÉ is a big ask

Letters: As more public money is thrown away, keeping faith in RTÉ is a big ask

Media Minister Patrick O'Donovan was on RTÉ granting absolution.
'We need a functioning public service broadcaster,' he said, and expressed confidence in the current management.
Where is this need? And for whom? A total of €725m of our money has already been committed to RTÉ over three years. Then add in licence fee and advertising revenue.
This is all despite the established financial mismanagement of the recent past and the utter avoidance by the then RTÉ management to be held accountable.
And remember that the so-called top talents are still paid enormous contracts/salaries that are mostly funded by the public purse.
I have to wonder how any reasonable person can have faith in RTÉ's self-assigned public service remit of 'holding power to account'.
Larry Dunne, Rosslare Harbour, Co Wexford
World leaders must wake up and demand an end to Israel's siege of Palestine
It has now been two long, harrowing months since Israel reinstated a total siege on Gaza, blocking the entry of life-saving humanitarian aid and commercial goods into a region already devastated by war.
Desperation has reached unspeakable levels. Mothers are boiling grass to feed their families.
Children are suffering unbearable hunger, trauma, violence and abandonment.
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Gaza's hospitals, already crippled, are close to collapse, unable to function without essential medicines, vaccines and equipment.
Women, girls and other vulnerable groups face escalating risks of gender-based violence.
Stocks in aid warehouses are nearly gone. Palestinian organisations continue to seek to supply desperate communities through local markets, but they are facing eye-watering prices.
Yet it seems world leaders are distracted while the ethnic cleansing and likely genocide of Palestinians rages on. As the UN secretary gener­al put it, Gaza is a killing field and its civilians are trapped in an endless death loop.
The weaponisation of aid, including withholding food, water, healthcare and shelter, has led to a surge in preventable deaths and threatens the dignity and survival of Palestinians in Gaza.
This is a preventable atrocity, and it does nothing to address the horror of the remaining hostages and their families.
Meanwhile, Israeli forces have intensified military operations in the occupied West Bank, severely disrupt­ing humanitarian aid delivery there.
World leaders must demand an immediate end to the blockade.
Karol Balfe, CEO ActionAid Ireland, Dublin
Clear double standards in the media when it comes to reporting on Gaza war
A recent attack by Russia on the city of Sumy in Ukraine in which 34 people were killed was described in the western media as a massacre.
The greater numbers murdered in Gaza are described as killed or, worse still, reported as killed.
Israelis held in Gaza are referred to as hostages while thousands of Palestinians are called prisoners. Why?
The Israeli army is called a defence force. The media reports that Israel is blocking aid to Gaza, instead of saying it is starving the captive population.
Israelis who evict Palestinians from their properties in the West Bank and beat and kill them are called settlers. Is this the best description of them?
Every article appears to mention that 'the war started on October 7'. There is never a mention of the thousands of Palestinians killed before that date, including many children.
Is it really a war when only one side has planes, tanks and cruise missiles?
Michael Jordan, Dundalk, Co Louth
If you thought Trump's first 100 days were bad, you ain't seen nothing yet
The world has survived Donald Trump's first 100 days, but it has been nothing short of a car crash.
His tariffs policy has been rife with threats and bluffs, culminating in pauses, deferment and capitulation to trading partners – or rather, the bond markets.
His 'end wars strategy' by the 'art of the steal' isn't playing out as well as he thought in Gaza and Ukraine.
America is joined at the hip with the world economy, and going on solo runs doesn't work when you're so dependent on non-American resources.
What's in store for the rest of his term? Death by a thousand cuts on the shifting sands of Trumpism, or will his money friends desert him when those MAGA promises cost too much?
It might be worth the watch.
Aidan Roddy, Cabinteely, Dublin 18
We should all celebrate Protestant influence on Irish society and culture
I am at one with Chris Fitzpatrick on the positive relationship between Presbyterianism and the Irish lang­uage ('Heartening to see the Presbyterian celebration of forgotten Irish links' – Letters, April 30).
Apart from the Irish language, there are many academic achievements by members of Ireland's Protestant community in Irish literature, music and wider culture, which is a reminder of the considerable influence the community in Ireland has had on Irish culture.
Dr Douglas Hyde, the first president of Ireland, was one of the founders of the Gaelic League; painter Sarah Purser established An Túr Gloine; WB Yeats and Lady Gregory formed the Irish Literary Theatre in 1899, which then became the Abbey Players in 1904.
George Petrie and Edward Bunting are responsible for the wealth of ancient Irish music in our archives, while JM Synge, George Russell (AE) and Kathleen Lynn were all major contributors to the shaping of modern Ireland.
Tom Cooper, Templeogue, Dublin 6
Tables have turned on the Dubs, but at least it gives hope to all their rivals
The sports blurb on the cover of the Irish Independent on May 1 looked ominous for Dublin ('Dublin facing nightmare draw in group phase').
Gone are the days when a headline such as this would read '[insert any county outside the capital] facing nightmare draw against Dublin'. Ah, well.
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The Irish Independent's View: Collective inaction on Gaza is a dark stain on humanity
The Irish Independent's View: Collective inaction on Gaza is a dark stain on humanity

Irish Independent

timean hour ago

  • Irish Independent

The Irish Independent's View: Collective inaction on Gaza is a dark stain on humanity

The totally preventable tragedies of Gaza are a black mark on our age. But where is the global pressure to insist that the cruelty must end? One wonders if 21st-century life has really become so transactional as to be impervious to the traumas of defenceless children. If such is the case, we are in a very dark place. Surely the unwarranted cruelty witnessed daily in Gaza is intolerable to a rules-based order. Yet it appears that, even after 22 months, there are no depths of agony from which the people of the enclave can hope to be spared. The starvation in Gaza is of a magnitude that medics sent in to help are collapsing from hunger And so US secretary of state Marco Rubio thought it fitting to lash out at France for becoming the first G7 nation to recognise Palestine as a state. It was, he said, a 'slap in the face' to the families of the victims murdered by Hamas. Can he be unaware that since then, 60,000 Palestinians have been killed? Concerns for them and their remaining loved ones and the worsening death toll seems non-existent. All death is deplorable. To be casual about the mass taking of life is to risk being trapped in an inescapable moral vacuum. The starvation in Gaza is of a magnitude that even the medics sent in to help are collapsing from hunger. At the same time, the killing of desperate people – many of them children taking on the responsibility of fending for the families – continues. The lines of the skeletal and the destitute queuing for whatever scraps they might be offered belong in the Dark Ages. As daily bombardments continue, Israeli troops fire near where the aid is handed out. Recently returned from Gaza, Dr Nick Maynard told RTÉ he had seen young boys who were shot in the testicles. He believed they had been used as target practice as their wounds were all of a similar nature. But even as the deaths from starvation mount, Israeli heritage minister Amichai Eliyahu went on radio to claim: 'There's no hunger in Gaza.' Israel 'is racing ahead for Gaza to be wiped out', he said, calling Palestinians 'indoctrinated Nazis'. 'Thank God we are wiping out this evil,' he added. I can't imagine I'm going to die of starvation after 21 months of bombing One female doctor is quoted in the Washington Post as saying: 'I can't imagine I'm going to die of starvation after 21 months of bombing. We are all walking towards death.' Atrocities are no less atrocious because they are carried out by elected politicians and facilitated by democratic governments. Yet in this darkest hour, Donald Trump and Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu appear to be abandoning peace talks. Mr Netanyahu said it was clear that Hamas did not want a deal, and Mr Trump said they would have to now be 'hunted down'. That Hamas needs to be brought to account is not in question. But this 'forever war' in which civilians and children are deemed worthless and expendable is unjust and indefensible and must be stopped.

Letters: Echoes of Sarajevo, yet we are supposedly the ones who are ‘out of step'
Letters: Echoes of Sarajevo, yet we are supposedly the ones who are ‘out of step'

Irish Independent

timean hour ago

  • Irish Independent

Letters: Echoes of Sarajevo, yet we are supposedly the ones who are ‘out of step'

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Benjamin Netanyahu and Donald Trump appear to abandon Gaza ceasefire talks
Benjamin Netanyahu and Donald Trump appear to abandon Gaza ceasefire talks

Irish Independent

timean hour ago

  • Irish Independent

Benjamin Netanyahu and Donald Trump appear to abandon Gaza ceasefire talks

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