Minister Ryan – Nothing less than a fool

Anglo Irish Bank has now been sorted by the Government. The directors have all been paid off with massive golden handshakes and the billions owed by property developers will be paid by taxpayers.

Green Party Minister Eamon Ryan has said the top 15 customers in Anglo Irish Bank who each owe €500 million will be pursued to repay the debts in full.

This is not going to happen and the minister is nothing less than a fool to make such an assertion.

The billions owed by property developers to AIB and BOI will now have to be dealt with and the strategy will be the same. The directors will receive massive pay offs and all liabilities will be transferred over to taxpayers.

Manipulation and secrecy

Powerful and ruthless people sat down to consider the best possible moment and manner in which to release the PricewaterhouseCoopers report.

Given the ongoing ferment they knew that a complete suppression of the report was out of the question. There was, however, plenty of scope for manipulation and secrecy to minimise the impact of publication.

The report is censored to such an extent that it tells Irish citizens virtually nothing. It is, as the title states, a ‘summary of extracts’ of the real report.

Next they released it at 9pm on Friday night knowing that all major news programmes had reported and that the media would be concentrating on other news stories over the weekend like the Sinn Féin Ard Fheis and the expected massive protest march in Dublin city centre.

The truth is revealed…

From today’s Irish Independent.

The coalition is finally admitting it — this Government is incompetent. Green Party chairman Dan Boyle was forced, tongue-in-cheek, to concede the point when he was asked if anybody else would do as bad a job in government.

“I would say that any other combination of parties to form another government would be just as incompetent because they’d have to follow the same policies,”he said, on Nightly News with Vincent Browne.

It’s about time somebody admitted it. Although, is this the official Green Party talking or the Green Party in Governme

Comment from a victim of Irish corruption

I think this comment from below deserves publication.

I can honestly say that until I started following press articles and blogs after I lost over £80k in Anglo Irish shares as a result of nationalisation, I had no prejudice against any race. However, I must confess that now my eyes have been opened, I will avoid any dealings with the Irish in future.

I thought my son-in-law was talking rubbish when he said the Irish were crooked and that I should sell my Anglo shares. I will never doubt his word again. It is clear that corruption is widespread.

Lorna Lancaster

The exposure of a corrupt state

Even if Fitzpatrick deigned to appear before the Economic and Regulatory Affairs Committee it would make no difference whatsoever, the committee has no power. It was set up after the 1997 general election for the same reason that all Dail committees are set up – jobs for the boys.

None of the 30 or so Dail committees have any power. They are nothing more than cash machines granted to politicians to keep them on side with their parties. They also serve the useful purpose (at least until the present global crisis) of giving the impression that the State is serious about bringing white collar criminals to account.

Politicians are most proud of the Public Accounts Committee (PAC); they waffle on endlessly about the great work done in bringing banks to account over the DIRT scandal. It is, of course, just that – waffle.

The banks only paid back a fraction of the countless millions they robbed from the State in that particular mafia scam and, in keeping with that great Irish tradition, not a single bank or official was investigated by the police never mind actually charged with a crime.

Here are some other so called regulatory agencies that, in theory, are charged with protecting the State and its citizens.

Financial Regulator: This organisation has never taken any serious or effective action against the widespread criminality within the Irish financial sector. The Financial Regulator by its actions and particularly by its inactions, in effect, acts to as a protector of wrongdoers. The Financial Regulator is exempt from the Freedom of Information Act and operates under strict secrecy laws.

Tribunals: Tribunals are useful in uncovering the vast amount of sleaze and corruption that infects Irish public and business life but they have no power whatsoever to prosecute, this is not an accident.

For example, politicians, quite deliberately, introduced a law that prevents any evidence given to a tribunal from being used by the police in any subsequent criminal investigation.

If such an investigation were to take place, (highly improbable) the police would have to start off from scratch ignoring the vast amount of evidence gathered, under oath, by the tribunal. This law didn’t just fall out of the sky.

Comptroller and Auditor General: The C & AG reports once a year invariably highlighting very serious incompetence, waste and often corruption within government departments. He has no power whatsoever to take matters any further, his only ‘power’ is to make recommendations.

Irish citizens are then subjected to the farce of seeing powerless Dail committee members rant and rave about the action they’re going to take to put a stop to all this incompetence, waste and corruption before collecting their expenses and settling down until the next C & AGs report where the whole farce is repeated.

In common with Dail committees and tribunals the C & AG is also useful for giving the impression that the State is actually serious about dealing with the disease of corruption.

From time to time, usually when media pressure is making politicians sweat over some scandal, the C & AG is called in to conduct a ‘special’ investigation. Again, the C & AG has no power to act on his findings; he just publishes his report and makes recommendations.

Recently, the C & AG carried out one such special investigation into the Irish Greyhound Board – Bord na gCon.

Despite uncovering irrefutable evidence of very serious corruption the C & AG concluded:

“In my annual audits of Bord na gCon I have satisfied myself that the broad framework of financial administration and internal control was appropriate.”

“In general the funds of Bord na gCon were properly applied.”

These conclusions came as a great relief to the board of Bord na gCon and, I’m sure, to politicians who could now claim that all was well and no action was required. Incidently, nobody thought it the least bit odd that the C & AG is also the auditor for Bord na gCon.

Office of Corporate Enforcement: In reality, the ODCE is a toothless tiger with a fancy title and, in the main, deals with minor wrong doing by company directors.

The office is seriously understaffed, under funded and possess only weak law enforcement powers. Apart from fines, the most common punishment meted out is a ban on practicing as a company director for a number of years.

But like tribunals, Dail committees and the C & AG office, the ODCE acts as a very useful mechanism whereby allegations against very powerful people can be channeled away from public attention and, more importantly, away from the (remote) possibility of criminal proceedings.

For example, the ODCE, ‘processed’ the people responsible for the very serious fraud at National Irish Bank. These people received nothing more than a slap on the wrist.

Two of the biggest tax cheats in the history of the State, the Bailey brothers, are also being ‘processed’ by the ODCE. The very best we can hope for is that these two gentlemen will be banned from acting as company directors for a couple of years. In other words, another slap on the wrist.

The ODCE has also taken the infamous Jim Flavin of DCC under its gentle wing. The highest court in the land, in a civil case, found that Flavin had committed fraud on the stock exchange to the tune of €83 million. But (lucky) Jim will be treated kindly by the ODCE with perhaps, yes, a gentle slap on the wrist before being sent on his happy and very rich way.

And let’s remember, it is the ODCE that will be ‘processing’ the Anglo Irish/Irish Life and Permanent fraud. Politicians are falling over themselves to assure the Irish people that this is the organisation that will bring these people to account.

Let me say right now, unless there is an actual revolution in the way white collar crime is dealt with in Ireland these people, Sean Fitzpatrick and all the rest will never, ever be brought to account.

The structure and operation of all so called regulatory agencies in Ireland are, effectively, designed to avoid bringing the corrupt to account. Whether it’s by strict secrecy laws, a lack of power, a lack of resources or a deliberate policy of protecting the rich and powerful the consequences are always the same for Ireland and its people – disastrous.

There is, however, some hope. The political, business and bureaucratic reaction to the Anglo Irish Bank/Irish Life and Permanent scandal is nothing more than a desperate scramble to prevent the international community from finding out just how rotten the Irish system really is.

They are unlikely to succeed as the global crisis continues to expose Ireland as the most corrupt country in the Western world.

In the long run that can only be a good thing for Ireland and its people.

Copy to:
All relevant Dail committees
Fianna Fail
Government Press Secetary
Financial Regulator
ODCE
C & AG

How business is done – in a banana republic

Lenihan says he didn’t tell Cowen about the €7 billion transfer from Irish Life and Permanent into Anglo Irish Bank so that covers Cowen.

We’re told that officials didn’t tell Lenihan about the relevant sections of the Price Waterhouse Cooper report so that covers Lenihan.

The officials are anonymous and unaccountable so that coves them.

If the pressure becomes too much a token official will be asked to retire with a lotto sized pension and golden handshake.

If that official possesses sensitive information he will be give a massive bribe to keep his mouth shut – just like the €202,000 bribe given to former Financial Regulator, Patrick Neary.

This is exactly how government business is done in a banana republic.

Fools believing the fool

Let’s cut to the chase here.

Only a complete idiot would believe Lenihan’s story that he didn’t know about the €7 billion transfer from Irish Life and Permanent into Anglo Irish Bank. Yet, as usual, the Irish media have turned their collective heads away to study the wallpaper.

So far, (I haven’t heard Morning Ireland yet) not a single journalist or commentator has made a serious challenge to Lenihan’s fairy tale. They should be (Like every angry citizen in the country is already doing) treating this fool with the derision he richly deserves as he packs his bags

Media and officialdom

I see Moira Creedon (Irish Times) is agreement with me on the pathetic media reaction to Brian Cowen’s (in) famous speech.

Madam,

I cannot believe the media in this country are so pathetic.

National debt is about to go through the roof — assuming we can actually borrow the money. The private sector is indebted well beyond sustainability. Personal and corporate bankruptcy is forecast to escalate. Bank workers take a pay rise not because they are worth it but because they can. Unemployment is galloping towards the 400,000 mark. Discredited bank directors and regulators retire to play golf on massive pensions.

And the media seem impressed because an incompetent prime minister made a 17-minute speech in recognisable English? No wonder the country is in the current morass. – Yours, etc,

MOIRA CREEDON,

Inchicore Road,
Kilmainham,
Dublin 8.

It really is interesting to observe the extent to which the media, and especially RTE, have seamlessly merged with officialdom.

The Messiah has landed

The eagle has landed, the Messiah has returned, the cavalry has arrived – Brian Cowen made a speech that has, apparently, changed the universe.

Well, not really but he did get the media all excited. I suspect this is because many in the media predicted that Cowen was indeed the long awaited Messiah and now, apparently, he was delivering on their over rated predictions.

On Morning Ireland (5th report, 2nd item) Aine Lawlor and Harry Magee, political journalist with the Irish Times and the only media person present at the ‘historic’ event were overwhelmed with admiration for the Great Leader.

A ‘tsunami of extemporaneous prose’, he didn’t pull his punches, there was a pulse, a tempo and a passion that some said Cowen had lost, gushed Magee.

Lawlor, (In a reverential and hushed tone) “Almost – Yes, we can?”

Magee immediately agreed. “I think there are a couple of lines in there that Obama would not have thrown away lightly – some of his speech was almost poetic for an Irish politician.”

The media excitement continued on Today with Pat Kenny (Friday).

He’s a man, who, this time, eyeballed you all, said Pat (in an awed tone) to businessman Martin Murphy who was actually at the great event. (Will Cowen’s speech morph into a GPO type phenomenon where every mother and her son will claim to have been present?).

Yes, said Martin. He’s a man who’s on top of his job, a man who has his finger on the pulse, bringing people with him, it was all about leadership, he stepped up to the plate.

Gina Quin, CEO of Dublin Chamber of Commerce, was beside herself with excitement.

“He was absolutely dynamic on the night – People were saying two words – Barack Obama.”

(We remember that this is the same Gina who described Sean Fitzpatrick’s dodgy ‘loan transfers’ as ‘one small unfortunate incident.’).

Sadly, for the media and business world, ordinary Irish citizens did not agree. There was a massive response from the general public and with the exception of one or two callers the reaction to Cowen’s speech was negative and very, very angry. It was clear that Pat Kenny was genuinely puzzled at the level of anger being expressed by ordinary citizens.

One caller, a plumber, who had just lost his job.

“I’m paying €1,200 per month mortgage and €1,600 per year to a management fees company that I can’t even contact. I lost my job over a month ago and I’m still waiting for benefit. Brian Cowen’s call to arms means nothing to me.”

Other callers thought the speech was nauseating, vacuous and full of empty rhetoric. A speech made in front of and for the benefit of rich people who weren’t being asked to take any of the pain.

The Great Man granted an interview to Marian Finucane on Saturday. Here’s some of what he had to say.

Throughout the interview he maintained that the crisis was international. Marian never made any serious challenge to this dishonest stance.

He said people were wrong to say there was any connection between Fianna Fail and developers. Marion made no serious challenge to this dishonest claim.

Governance issues in relation to banks are now being investigated by ODCE., he said. This is a joke. It’s an absolute certainty that ODCE will never bring a single banker to account.

On remuneration for bankers – “we’ve set up a committee to look into it.”

On the spontaneity of his speech.

“I knew the Dublin Chamber of Commerce had arrangements to tape my speech.”

On getting angry when criticised in Dail Eireann.

“Listen, the Dail has its own little realty, thing’s are very serious. We all have to cop ourselves on to be honest.”

Pain for everybody except bankers and the ESB

Ok, just so we’re all clear on the situation. The global economy is going down the tubes, wholesale closure of industry and mass layoffs with countless millions of previously wealthy people facing a very bleak future. Some countries, like Ireland and Iceland in danger of complete meltdown. It’s a crisis on a scale never before known to humanity.

Politicians and a whole myriad of experts are agreed that everybody must feel the pain, sacrifices must be made, all bets are off; everybody must put their shoulders to the wheel – except the banks and ESB. Why?

Well the ESB had a previous agreement written in stone by god himself apparently, so that’s impossible to change and the greedy bankers who got us into the mess in the first place must be paid because, apparently, their bonuses are ‘historical.’

Now, where did I leave that sackcloth?