Skiing in the jungle

Questions were asked on RTE this morning (6th report) as to why Irish troops serving in Chad were wearing dark, heavy jungle fatigues instead of the more appropriate light desert blending uniforms that all other nations wear in such conditions.

An RTE reporter visiting Chad was told:

“The Irish Defence Forces wanted to stand out, they wanted everybody to know who they were and on that basis they would be in some way different. What was unstated was they wanted to be different from the French but for the men and women serving out there it’s going to be very rough indeed.”

It certainly is going to be very rough. South Lebanon is nowhere near as hot as the deserts of Chad but when I served there with the UN we were issued with very light, very comfortable uniforms and were very happy with not having to wear the heavier Irish Defence Forces uniforms.

To wear jungle fatigues in the desert is just as ridiculous as wearing polar uniforms and skis in the jungle and must be deeply embarrassing as well as very uncomfortable for Irish troops.

Bord na gCon report – A cleverly written whitewash?

A special investigation by the Comptroller and Auditor General into the activities of the Greyhound Board (Bord No gCon) has found evidence of mis-management and financial irregularities over a ten year period up to 2006.

Despite these findings the C&AG also found that in general the funds of Bord na gCon were properly applied.

It should be noted at this point that the C&AG was appointed auditor of Bord na gCon in 2001. In his report the C&AG states; “In my annual audits of Bord na gCon I have satisfied myself that the broad framework of financial administration and internal control was appropriate.”

So the state agency responsible for both auditing and investigating Bord na gCon was satisfied that the broad framework of financial administration and internal controls were appropriate during a period when very serious irregularities occurred.

The core work of the C&AGs office should also be kept in mind as we analyse this very questionable report.

The core work of the Office is the conduct of financial audits which culminates in an annual opinion on all accounts of State and State-sponsored bodies falling within the audit remit of the Comptroller and Auditor General (C&AG). This work entails examining the accounts and underlying records and transactions of those entities in order to ensure that
• the accounts properly reflect the transactions
• the transactions recorded in the accounts are regular – have been applied for the purposes intended and in accordance with rules governing them.
For each account an examination is also made of the internal financial control arrangements.

We at Public Inquiry would ask – Why was a state agency that has responsibility for signing off on the finances of a semi state body also investigating that same body? At a minimum there is a serious conflict of interest.

We would also call into question the C&AGs conclusion that “in general the funds of Bord na gCon were properly applied.” A look at just some of the more serious irregularities clearly contradicts that conclusion.

A building overseer was given authority over a €12 million redevelopment of Shelbourne Greyhound Park between 2000 and 2002 in the absence of the managing director due to illness.

When this overseer was in charge, control over the project was not being exercised by either Bord na gCon or its subsidiary, Shelbourne Greyhound Stadium Limited.

The same overseer was given a contract to manage security at Shelbourne Park without advertising or a recruitment process.

The same overseer organised a fraud (See Paschal Taggart’s comments at Appendix D) involving the purchase of a ‘new’ generator that cost €124,704 but which was subsequently found to be 20 years old.

The overseer had instructed the services consultant retained to manage the tender process to add to the list of those tendering for the contract a company of which he, the overseer, was a director. Not surprisingly, that company got the contract.

After discovering this fraud, Bord na gCon sought legal advice and were told that it would be futile to take the matter any further as there was insufficient evidence.

Despite the central part played by the overseer in this scandal the contractual relationship he had with Bord na gCon remains unclear.

Obviously, the overseer is the central character in all these activities but when I questioned a spokesperson at the C&AGs office I received a somewhat muddled response.

Why weren’t names named, the overseer, for example?
It’s our policy not to include names in our reports.
Who makes that policy?
It’s an office decision, an internal decision.
If I ask for names can I get them?
There are names at Appendix C.
But it doesn’t give the name of the overseer.
The overseer wasn’t examined, the overseer can’t be found.
He can’t be found? You must be joking?
We had no one to correspond with.
But this man played a major part in the fraud.
We were examining Bord na gCon; the overseer is not and never was an employee of Bord na gCon. As auditor of Bord na gCon, we’re not the police; we don’t go chasing people around.
But surely somebody in Bord na gCon must know who he is?
No, we went and enquired and, we know who he is, just can’t contact him.
Could you give me his name; I might be able to track him down?
I’d have to come back to you on that one.

Fortunately, through an impeccable source, Public Inquiry has learned that the infamous overseer is a Mr. Dan Lannon. The report says Mr. Lannon has “extensive experience in the construction industry”, which could mean a number of things, including possible conflicts of interest.

It is crystal clear that the C&AG has failed in his duty to ensure that transactions of public bodies are in accordance with legal authorities governing them. It is also clear that there are still many unanswered questions surrounding this scandal and that the report submitted by the C&AG is nothing more than a cleverly written whitewash.

Copy to:
Comptroller and Auditor General
Bord na gCon
Minister for Arts, Sports and Tourism

Notes and quotes

Mary O’Rourke’s howls of pain could be heard for miles as that dog bit deeply into her ankle.

“I take responsibility having led the Yes campaign that goes with that position. I don’t walk away from that in any way.” (An Taoiseach Brian Cowen, 1st report, 11th item)

In most countries taking responsibility means resignation – In Ireland it means nothing.

I suspect that plans and plots are afoot for the toppling of Enda Kenny.

“Obviously you’re not being allowed to interview me. As you know we were opposed by elements on the extreme left and extreme right. We’ve seen this in European history before and one of the first things to go is free speech.”

A very angry Brian Lenihan as he experiences a rare contact with ordinary people (1st report, 8th item).

I agree with several commentators who said that the result was principally a reflection of the disconnection between ordinary citizens and the body politic.

Would everybody please now standby for chaos in the universe followed by the sky falling in – Thank you.

Not once during the campaign did I hear the word ‘conscription’ mentioned never mind hotly discussed as a serious possibility. Yet Michael Martin claimed on a number of occasions today that fear of conscription, put out by the No side, was a factor in the result.

The funniest comment today was written on the tricolour displayed at Dublin Castle – “Who is the loola now Bertie? (1st report, last item).

Raymond Crotty – a hero of democracy

Article in today’s Irish Independent.

We owe vote to this man

By Mary Cody
Thursday June 12 2008

The actions of a Kilkenny man secured the right for three million Irish citizens to vote on behalf of 500 million Europeans in today’s Lisbon Treaty referendum.

Ireland is the only country in the EU where citizens are being allowed to vote on the adoption, or not, of the Lisbon Treaty European Constitution.

Raymond Crotty’s daughter Mary, and her sister Ann, who has returned from South Africa where she works as a journalist to campaign for a ‘No’ Vote, explained the pivotal action which their father took and which could now impact on the shape and direction Europe takes in the future.

“The French and Dutch, who were given an opportunity to vote on the European Constitution, voted against it. They are not being given an opportunity to vote on the Lisbon Treaty,” she said.

“We are being afforded this right, not because our government has secured it for us, but because our father, Raymond Crotty, took the Irish government to court back in 1986.

“The Supreme Court ruled in that case that in the event of any major change within the EU that impacted upon Ireland’s constitution, the government would be obliged to get approval for that change from the Irish people.

“The implications of the current treaty are so wide-ranging that lawyers who worked on our dad’s case believe that, if it is implemented, it will be our last EU-related referendum.”

The most patronising argument

Fergus Finlay wins the prize for the most patronising, most dishonest and most insulting argument to come from the Yes side.

Writing in yesterday’s Irish Examiner, Finlay, who in a previous life was advisor to the Labour Party and always gave the impression that he was a democrat, glibly skips over the fact that only 1% of the EU population is being given the opportunity of deciding how the EU will operate in the future.

“I know it has been said there’s something undemocratic about that, and maybe there is.”

It gets worse, Finlay goes on to tell us that if we vote No we will damage the newer member states.

“We can, of course, say ‘I’m alright Jack’ and decide to leave things as they are by voting no…But it will damage the people who need Europe’s help to get their economies growing a bit like ours.”

This is just patronising nonsense, to Irish citizens and to the newer states. A No vote will not damage these countries and it is dishonest to state otherwise. In fact many of these countries have progressed more in the last two decades since throwing off the yoke of Soviet oppression than Ireland has since our independence in 1922.

For example, Polish citizens can vote in general elections no matter where they are in the world and I suspect the same applies for referendums. Irish citizens have no such freedom, if you’re not in the county – tough, no vote.

The infrastructure of many of these countries is decades ahead of ours especially in the areas of health, education and transport while we struggle to keep up with Third World standards. And many of the improvements in these countries are down to the efforts of their own politicians who are for the most part competent, hard working and honest.

To my knowledge, every one of these new countries has taken action against corruption, especially the white collar variety. Most of them have established well funded anti corruption agencies with real power to put people in jail. In Ireland, we don’t have a single agency with the power or competence to take on the corrupt. Instead, corrupt politicians and businessmen are bestowed with honours and given state funerals.

Finlay, like practically every Yes politician, reminds us how Ireland has benefited from the EU. Equal pay, anti discrimination laws, environmental laws consumer’s rights and so on – Irish people would never have these advantages if it wasn’t for the EU, they tell us. It apparently never enters their narrow minds how these claims reflect on their own intelligence and abilities.

I’m voting No in this referendum because I believe those with power are side lining what they see as the inconvenience of democracy. Instead they trying to create a United States of Europe controlled by bureaucrats.

I think it is inevitable that Europe will evolve into a United States of Europe and I have no problem with that whatsoever so long as it’s done by the democratic will of the people of Europe.

In such a United States of Europe Irish citizens would enjoy the great benefit of being ruled by a competent and efficient administration and hopefully would be rid of the moronic self serving and for the most part corrupt rabble that have blighted our country since independence.

Mary O'Rourke's ankle

Pat Kenny (Monday) started off his show this morning with Mary O’Rourke on the campaign trail in Athlone.

One voter said she was voting Yes because she trusts politicians to say and do the right thing – Obviously, somebody that hasn’t been following the shenanigans at the Mahon Tribunal.

Mary O’Rourke said that dogs were her biggest fear while out canvassing. “No matter how placatory you are they still go after your ankle.”

Let’s hope the No vote gets a good firm grip on her ankle on Thursday.

The most bizarre Yes argument

Green party leader, John Gormley, out canvassing in a working class area of Dublin, has surely advanced the most bizarre argument for a Yes vote (Drivetime, 1.10).

He was asked by a woman – Does it mean we’ll get less say in things?

“I think we have a huge say in the European Union. One on the reasons we have a huge say is that we speak English and that’s a huge advantage at the moment because all of the discussions take place in English, you know, say at lunchtime. We have a fantastic opportunity there.”

Let’s be charitable to Mr. Gormley here and assume he was suffering from a bout of sunstroke and not treating this group of women as if they were a herd of morons.