I was told officially, when I went for
tea at the Tara Tea Rooms grand
There was a major excavation, beyond my expectation, so I
went with my
cap in my hand...
And when I got to that Sacred spot, well, I could only
admire the view
High above that money-mad-mile under the Tara sky so
blue...)
.
When the earth sheds its skin, the energy within is
unstoppable
creative force
And if youre driving a machine through the
Tara-Skryne your race has
run its course
Were singin up the land, not afraid to take a
stand to let Creation
shine through
High above that money-mad-mile under the Tara sky so
blue...
Weve all been awoken, the Word has been spoken
Stop the work on the
Money-Mad-Mile
And people get ready, keep the Spirit steady, we gotta
raise the roof
up for a while
Its the Spirit of the Land or the Plan of the
Damned, and its a hell
of a thing to do
But were gonna fly high above that money-mad-mile
under the Tara sky
so blue...
Do you hear the sound through the holy ground where the
ancient Fianna
sleep?
In their gravelly beds, the Spirits of the dead and the
Lia Fáil weep
And wherever we rest, in this world or the next, we will
have learnt a
thing or two
High above that money-mad-mile under the Tara sky so
blue!
The cynical-clinical clones of construction seem to think
that were
some kind of clowns
So weve got to pull together through this stormy
weather
to make those money-mad-men back down
And if they take us all away, well have to watch
and pray
over this wreck of the Ship Of Fools
High above that money-mad-mile, under the Tara sky so
blue...
Theres a solution to this cultural pollution
thats goin on in Gabhra
green
Take the route to the West, the short road is best, no
Toll through the
Tara-Skryne
Born wild and free, people like me are not gonna see this
road go
through
And soon well being flying high above that
money-mad-mile under the
Tara sky so blue...
Theres no need to panic, were a natural
organic dynamic, rekindling
the ancient fire
So politicians rethink, step back from the brink, and
listen to the
dawn choir
These are timeless rights, so well sit here through
the nights
and we will fight for what is true
High above that money-mad-mile under the Tara sky so
blue!
Copyright © Steve Cooney 2007
Liam Ó Maonlai - vocals, piano
Laoise Kelly - wire harp
Odhrán Ó Casaide - violin, uilleann pipes
Steve Cooney - guitars, bass, percussion, ditjeridú,
production
Liam is probably best-known as the lead-singer of one
of Irelands most popular groups, The Hothouse
Flowers . Liam and his family have strong links
with the West Kerry Gaeltacht
TARA
- THE GREAT GOVERNMENT INSULT AND betrayal - the green
party minister contributes to the history book of
MacMurrough
PRESS RELEASE
TARAWATCH.org
25 July
'Categorical Rejection of Claims by Minister Gormley that
he is
Powerless to Save Tara'
TaraWatch categorically rejects the claims made today by
Minister for the Environment, John Gormley, to the effect
that he is powerless to save the heritage under threat by
the M3 motorway at the Hill of Tara.
The Minister makes a number of claims in a question and
answer type document that have been addressed in a
detailed response document (attached) prepared by
TaraWatch, after taking independent legal
advice. http://tarawatch.org/
The Minister is understating and downplaying his options,
as well as the significance of the Lismullin henge. We
are releasing a document to he media today that shows he
has the power to act. The Minister is ignoring the fact
that a new souterrain or underground complex has been
discovered in the pathway of the M3 (as reported in the
Irish Times on Friday 20th July).
TaraWatch also calls on the Minister to intervene in the
situation at Tara immediately, to ensure the safety of
both workers and demonstrators. The acceptance of the
bail conditions today by the seven Tara demonstrators in
Navan District Court should not be seen as an acceptance
of the legaility of the M3 works. If Meath County Council
wants to prevent further demonstrations, it should seek a
civil injunction instead of allowing construction workers
to physically remove demonstrators.
Vincent Salafia said:
"Not only does the Minister have the power to
protect the monuments at Tara, but a number of factors
now legally require him to do so. "The discovery of
a very significant new site, the Reasoned Opinion of
the European Commission and the inclusion of Tara on the
100 Most Endangered Sites list are 'changes in material
circumstances', which now empower and compel him to act.
"We are asking for an immediate meeting with the
Minister, who has stated he has an 'open door' policy, in
order to present these arguments in detail and avoid
litigation and further direct conflict over the issue.
ENDS
Vincent Salafia 087-132-3365
ATTACHMENT
[Please visit tarawatch.org for a copy of 'The Status of
the Archaeological Monuments in the Core Zone of Tara' by
Conor Newman, Joe Fenwick and Edel Bhreatnach.
TaraWatch Response to Tara information note
Questions and Answers
Can the Minister change the route of the M3 motorway?
Yes. The Minister has both the power and duty to reroute
the M3. The Minister is aware that another monument has
been recently discovered in the pathway of the M3 a
souterrain or underground series of chambers and passages
from the circa 10th century approx 80 metres from the
Lismullin henge. Excavations are being monitored by the
Lismullin Advisory Committee, as the extent of the site
continues to grow. If
Minister Gormley were to declare it a national monument,
he would then have the power under section 14A of the
National Monuments Act to give directions for
preservation in situ.
The Act specifically provides for rerouting a motorway
where the Minister makes this decision, and details how
An Bord Pleanala can order a new Environment Impact
Statement if the decision results in a
material change to the project. The European
Commission has now
indicated that the decision to demolish a national
monument is a
material change to the scheme, which necessitates a new
Environmental
Impact Statement for this section.
In a recent Reasoned Opinion to the Minister the
Commission has
indicated that the National Monuments Act 2004 is
contrary to EU law
because it allows for demolition of a national monument,
which is a
material change to the scheme envisaged by the original
Environmental
Impact Assessment. This is in fact noted in the
First Report of the
Committee to the Minister; The Committee was also
advised that certain
legal issues have been raised by the EU and must be
responded to by the
Department.
The Minister claims he cannot move the M3 because;
The route of the
motorway was chosen by Meath County Council and the
National Roads
Authority five years ago, and approved by An Bord
Pleanala in 2003.
The Minister is now on legal notice from the EU that
there has been a
material change to the approved scheme and must require a
new EIA for
the Navan to Dunshaughlin section of the M3.
The Minister also has the power to legislate, and has
already promised
a major review of heritage regulations. The current
situation is not
unlike the Carrickmines Castle situation, where the
Minister for the
Environment, Martin Cullen, introduced new legislation,
dictating the
route of the M50. Section 8 of the National Monuments Act
2004 was
entitled South Eastern Route and National Monuments
Acts 1930 to
2004.
As Minister for Heritage, the Minister has a
constitutional duty to
give the highest level of statutory protection possible
to national
monuments, and has the power and duty to legislate to
protect them, if
necessary. Since the EU has stated the Act is contrary to
EU law, the
Minister should immediately expand the Lismullin Advisory
Committee to
contain independent legal experts, who can advise on this
matter.
Why does the Minister not impose such a preservation
order?
The Minister misunderstands the call for a Preservation
Order.
TaraWatch has called for an Order to be placed on all
newly discovered
monuments in the Tara complex, which will then allow time
for
conducting a new Environmental Impact Assessment.
The National Monuments Act provides for a Preservation
Order; Where it
appears to the Minister
that a national monument
is in danger of
being or is actually being destroyed, injured, or
removed, or is
falling into decay through neglect
The Minister has been supplied a Report by Conor Newman,
Edel
Bhreatnach and Joe Fenwick, which states that the entire
Tara complex
is a single national monument, and that every monument
within it is
also a national monument, due to its context alone. This
report is
being released to the media today by TaraWatch.
The Minister should place a preservation order on the
Lismullin
Souterrain Complex, in light of the fact that it is a
national
monument, which was not identified in the EIA and the An
Bord Pleanala
planning permission of 2003 did not contemplate
demolition of any
national monument. This will allow for conducting a new
Environmental
Impact Assessment for the affected area of the route, as
is required
under EU law.
What about Lismullin. Why does the Minister not impose a
preservation
order on that site as it has been declared a national
monument?
The Minister today states: Minister Gormley has
received legal advice
that he cannot reverse that decision unless he receives
important new
additional information on the site, which was not in the
possession of
the previous minister
The Minister misstates the legal advice he was given by
the Attorney
General. In the Statement by Minister Gormley on the M3:
directions to
NRA 15/06/07 he states: Without a change in
material circumstances
affecting this case, there is no basis for amending the
quasi judicial
determination recently made.
TaraWatch maintain that there have been a number of
changes in
circumstances, which were not considered by Minister
Roche, including:
(1) The inclusion of the Tara complex on the World
Monuments Fund, List
of 100 Most Endangered Sites (2) The Reasoned Opinion
from the European
Commission, to the effect that the planning permission
for the M3 is
fundamentally flawed, since it did not contemplate
demolition of
national monuments, and (3) The discovery of a souterrain
complex,
which was not excavated nor mentioned in the Directions
given by
Minister Roche. (4) Expert advice shows that the site is
a very rare
royal ceremonial enclosure, that sits in a natural
amphitheatre. While
some of the features may be delicate, the site itself
could easily be
preserved intact. Now being on legal notice of these
circumstances,
Minister Gormley can and must take action to protect the
surviving
monuments under threat.
What advice has Minister Gormley received on Lismullin?
The NRA has failed to designate the souterrain complex in
Lismullin a
national monument, but a Report by Conor Newman, who sits
on the
Lismullin Advisory Committee, shows it should
be designated as a
national monument.
The Minister was given a copy of the letter from Pat
Wallace to Dick
Roche, congratulating him on designating Lismullin a
national monument,
and saying that Baronstown should also have been
designated such. This
should have put the Minister on notice that there is a
problem with the
methodology being used by the National Roads Authority in
designating
monuments national monuments.
TaraWatch has supplied the Minister with the Report by
Conor Newman,
Edel Bhreatnach and Joe Fenwick, entitled The
Status of the
Archaeological Monuments in the Core Zone of Tara.
This Report states:
In addition to these two sites or monuments of
superior importance,
(Baronstown and Collierstown) there are a number of less
well
understood sites, some whose remains are possibly more
ephemeral, that
acquire their significance as National Monuments within
the meaning of
the Act, because they fall within the core zone of Tara
landscape as
defined.
The Report criticises the methodology of the NRA in
assessing
monuments, and notes the Chart prepared by NRA
archaeologist which
states that the Cultural, Historical, Architectural and
Group Value of
all 38 archaeological sites in the Tara section of the M3
as being
None. [Chart at:
http://www.hilloftara.info/images/chiefstategraph.JPG
What exactly is at Lismullin?
The present description of Lismullin by Minister Roche is
a disgraceful
exercise in misinformation. Describing some physical
features of the
site and ignoring others, as well as its age, use,
rarity, and context,
is no description at all. Even the NRA report, released
in the
Lismullin file by the Minister, described the site as
very
significant and compared it to the few known
surviving royal
ceremonial sites in Ireland like Eamhain Macha in County
Armagh and Dun
Ailianne, County Kildare.
TaraWatch has retained international expert Dr Ron Hicks,
of Ball State
University, Indiana, who inspected the Lismullin sites on
Friday 20th
July. Dr Hicks is the expert who endorsed the World
Monuments Fund
nomination. He is of the view that the site was a natural
amphitheatre,
as it still is today. The post holes were for stakes that
were low, and
allowed the surrounding audience (who may have sat on
bleachers), to
view the royal rituals. This is where downs of Irish
kings performed
their most sacred rites. Even if you remove the post
holes and the
delicate features, the site is STILL a national monument
because of
what happened there, in plain view of the top of the Hill
of Tara. The
physical shape of the site is still intact, and could and
should be
preserved, as it lies at the very heart of the Tara
complex, where the
kings performed their rites.
What is John Gormley doing to protect our archaeological
heritage?
The Department of the Environment today states:
Minister Gormley has launched a major review of
archaeological
policies and practices, arising out of controversies such
as Tara. The
aim of the review is to identify measures to further
strengthen our
heritage protection measures, and ensure best practice in
the field of
archaeology. It is the most wide-ranging review ever to
have been
carried out in this area.
TaraWatch welcomes the review of archaeological
practices, but this
response only reinforces the truth of the current
situation; that the
Minister has the power to preserve the national monuments
at the Hill
of Tara. Not only can he issue orders and declare sites
to be national
monuments, but he has the power to draft new legislation.
If the former
Minister could draft a specific section of legislation
pertaining to
the route of the M50, then the current Minister can draft
a similar
piece pertaining to the route of the M3. He also has the
power to
require a new Environmental Impact Assessment for the
Navan to
Dunshaughlin section of the M3. Indeed, EU law now
requires that he do
so.
TaraWatch calls on the Minister to draft a bill which
provides for the
preservation of the greater Tara archaeological complex,
as a national
monuments, and for the rerouting of the M3 motorway,
after a new
Environmental Impact Assessment is performed, which takes
adequate
account of the national monuments in the region.
[Press
Release]
(I am holding the Kilkenny Flag.JB,editor)
PROTECT TARA
MARCH, 21ST JULY, IN DUBLIN.
"We will be the first generation in 5,000
years to deface Tara. This motorway will cut us off from
our past"Prof.Sean Duffy Dept od Medaeval History
TCD..
(actually British "Israelites"
dug there looking for the Ark of the Covenant one time)
Poorly Advertised - I found only
one poster in a back alley of Temple Bar and mentioned on
RTE(Radio Eireann) who excelled themselves as salesmen of
dumb cynicism - during that Saturday morning interview
with concerned callers from Chicago and elsewhere, these
callers were referred to as Leprechauns. When reminded by
a caller that all our great writers who had consolidated
Ireland as a free nation, were also conservationists of
our Heritage and perceptible History - our bold man in
the radio station declared that they were all dead and we
didn't need to think about them anymore. The march
occurred, poorly attended - the populace was at the Law
Courts attending a murder trial so there were only Asians
and East Europeans in the streets or staid bus queues.JB,
editor.
Gathering news
of desecration:
a previously
unknown national monument was discovered at
Lismullin".
Minister for the Environment
John Gormley pledged to release to the media the
entire file about the national monument found at
Lismullin on the controversial M3 route near the
Hill of Tara.
WILL HE DO THAT?
Tara Watch said that it had called a meeting at
the Custom House yesterday to demand that the
Minister halt works on newly-discovered sites
along the route of the M3 motorway.
Conservationists opposed to the route of the M3
motorway have expressed disappointment after they
failed to meet Minister for the Environment John
Gormley at the Custom House in Dublin
yesterday.The conservationists said they were
told that the Minister, one of two new Green
Party members of the Cabinet, was too busy
preparing for his appearance in the Dáil to
answer parliamentary questions today.They also
said they were told he would later be busy
preparing for an EU meeting.They said they were
particularly disappointed to have been told that
the Minister had an "open door policy"
only to be informed subsequently that gardaí
would be called if they refused to leave the
building. |
The Irish Wolfhound found atlast? O! But the bones were
trashed...No one took this amazing chance to check the
DNA?
The Meath Archaeological and Historical Society (MAHS)
said: "This is not the only national monument that
has been discovered on this section of the motorway, it
is simply the only one that the roads authorities have so
far recognised as such".Julitta Clancy,
archaeological officer with the MAHS, said the find
raised questions about the National Monuments Act 2004,
"which leaves the decision on whether to report the
discovery of a national monument entirely up to the
developers on road schemes"."The act does not
set out any objective criteria for the determination of
what is or is not a national monument and one must ask
how many national monuments are being destroyed along
road schemes simply because they are not recognised as
such".
She said a complex of sites had emerged in the core Tara
area, with evidence of human settlement and activity from
the Mesolithic (Middle Stone) Age at Blundelstown just
north of Tara, where a major intersection is planned.She
said other sites provided evidence of "very
impressive settlement during the first and second
millennium AD, including some outstanding ring forts -
the complex could be best described as an archaeological
mosaic".© The Irish Examiner, 7th. May
2007.
"The monument is located in the valley between the
hills of Tara and Skryne and in the vicinity of Rath
Lugh".The site was the seat of Ireland's
pre-Christian High Kings and marks the spot where Irish
myth and Irish history intertwine.
With its passage tomb, earthworks and prehistoric burial
mounds, it is viewed as the mythical and ceremonial
capital of Ireland, dating back 5,000 years.
Historians have long been baffled by its mysteries, with
only partial, unconnected ruins found to date, leading
experts to believe there may be many more undiscovered
treasures.
"Following an inspection of the monument by the
chief state archaeologist and discussion on site with the
project archaeologist, it was agreed that the monument is
of national importance", he noted. "A formal
report should be submitted by the National Roads
Authority to the minister. Following an evaluation of
submissions in the matter, the view of the minister is
that the enclosure at Lismullin is a National
Monument".He writes that under law, where a
previously unknown national monument is discovered during
a road development-the minister may, at his discretion,
issue directions to the road authority to do one or more
of the following: preserve, renovate, excavate, make a
record of, or demolish the monument.
Mr. Roche elected to make a record of the monument and
demolish it.
He said,"The minister has consulted in writing with
the director of the National Museum and has received the
written comments of the director in reply".
"The minister has also taken into account that the
monument has been degraded by ploughing in the past, that
the surviving features are shallow, that the monument is
in a fragile state and that there is a risk of
degradation of the monument by natural elements".
************************************************************Since
the work began, they have found human bones and other
material crushed under mechanical diggers.
Sunday World 3rd
June******************************************Meanwhile,
three reports warned the Minister and the NRA that the
current route of the M3 would devastate an area that is
recognised internationally as unique in its historical
and archaeological richness.
Two stone souterrains, or underground structures, were
uncovered approximately ten metres apart close to the
newly discovered stonehenge in Lismullin.It is possible
that many more underground chambers and passages dating
back to the Iron Age may be uncovered, as the area is
being excavated for the first time.
"This is a spectacular underground complex of
chambers and connecting passages with very high-quality
stone-work", said Laura Grealish of the TaraWatch
campaign, who will now be guarding the area while reports
are made to the National Museum and the new environment
minister, John Gormley.
A "material change in circumstances" would be
required to reroute the M3 motorway, which is due to go
through the heritage site. TaraWatch campaigners now hope
this find will be substantial enough to have the road
re-routed."We are reporting this discovery to the
minister and the National museum this morning",
campaigner Vincent Salafia said yesterday. "We want
to know if the National Roads Authority reported the
discovery to the minister or the museum and if not, why
not?" The NRA said yesterday that the find was not a
unique feature.© The Sunday Tribune, 24th. June
2007. *************************Three weeks ago, the
Minister for Transport turned the first sod on the
motorway, oblivious to the fact that his colleague, the
Environment Minister, already knew that a large and
ancient site lay directly in the path of the new road.
© The Irish Independent, 22nd. May 2007.
Outcry as burial ground razed
- "under cover of night"
By - Paul Melia.
AN ancient burial ground near the Hill of Tara - said to
be more impressive than the national monument discovered
in recent months - has been destroyed.
Bulldozers razed the Baronstown site early yesterday
morning to allow construction work on the controversial
M3 motorway in Co. Meath continue.
Protesters claimed that the site, a bronze age settlement
described as a "multi-period archaeological
complex", was destroyed overnight after machinery
moved in. They claim earth movers stripped the site at
about 4am on Wednesday.
The complex dates back 4,000 years and the Campaign to
Save Tara group claimed it had been recommended for
national monument status by archaeologists working on the
M3 project. But former environment minister Dick Roche
rejected the application.
********************************************************
A conservationist who did not want to be identified :
Collierstown Dunshaughlin
she had been "trying for a week to get the NRA to do
something about the gravestones".She said human and
animal bones have been identified at the Collierstown
cemetery as part of the archaeological excavations. But
she insisted that stones which had been used to line the
graves were now visible piled in heaps beside hard core,
in spoil and lying about exposed to the elements.She also
maintained "bones are visible in the topsoil, in
spoil and around the graves". She said she had
removed a number of bones to give to the National Museum.
However, the NRA chief archaeologist Mary Deevy said the
claims represented typical "misinformation".
(We all know of the stupefying "competition"
among peer groups in our museums that have led to the
loss of artefacts,manuscripts etc in the
past..........JB.editor)
***************Conor Newman, Professor of Archaeology at
NUI Galway, said he was pessimistic the government would
save the site.He said: "The campaign to preserve
this site has become a legal battle when in fact it
should be an ethical one - whether we value our heritage
or not".© The Irish Post, 9th. May 2007
**************Enda Tyrrell, a member of the Eurolink M3
Ltd. consortium, said that "Contrary to the recent
misinformation in the media, the 500m exclusion zone at
Lismullin, required as a result of the new archaeological
discovery, does not affect our day-to-day work on the
project and the works are proceeding as
scheduled".© The Irish Times, 7th. May
2007.
PLEASE
SIGN PETITION TO SAVE IRELAND'S MOST IMPORTANT HERITAGE -
THE ENTIRE LANDSCAPE SURROUNDING TARA - FROM FIANNA
FAIL'S ROAD-BUILDING MANIA
WWW.TARAWATCH.ORG
Ms Grealish writes:
"Apparently Minister Gormley is
getting annoyed at people saying that
he does have the power to change the M3 route. Perhaps
that explains
why there were no Green Party representatives at the
march today,
unlike previous ones.
and Vincent Salafia:
"Minister Gormley obviously wants us to ask the
courts to compel him to
act, even though the EU has stated the demolition of the
national
monument in Lismullin is illegal.
"There is a another new national monument recently
discovered by the
NRA, consisting of underground passages and chambers, as
reported in
the news today.
"Now Minister Gormley must act and does have the
power to reroute the
M3 as this is a material change in circumstances from the
order given
by former Minister Roche.
****************
Once the NRA picks a road,
nobody can stop it. Oral hearings are held by An Bord
Pleanála, but they are a waste of everyone's time and
money. No An Bord Pleanála inspector has ever refused
permission for a motorway proposed by the NRA. I doubt
that any ever will.When it comes to tolling the proposed
routes, the system is even more risible. The NRA appoints
an inspector to consider its proposal to toll, but in
case he doesn't agree, the authority retains the power to
ignore his recommendations.The only person who can stop
the NRA won't. Successive ministers for the environment
have been too well house-trained to disagree with civil
servants.
& elsewhere in the same edition:
Last February, a site of major archaeological
significance was found at Lismullin, on the Tara complex.
Under the 2004 National Monuments Act, Dick Roche should
have ordered that work on the site stop immediately, but
instead activity seemed to increase. Last weekend, Martin
Cullen arrived on the scene like a harbinger of doom to
turn the sod. The following day, work on the Lismullin
site was halted, the significance of the find having
become too obvious to ignore any longer.....he will
consult half-heartedly with the necessary officials,
announce that the site is not so important and destroy
it. That would be the cowardly thing to do . . .
but should we really expect anything else?
Diarmuid Doyle.
© The Sunday Times, 6th. May
TTHE
Eurolink consortium has signed a 575m
contract with the National Roads Authority to
build the controversial M3 motorway that will run
close by the Hill of Tara.
The announcement was made in Spain by Eurolink's
chief stake-holder, Cintra Concesiones
Infraestructuras, which owns 95% of the
consortium.
The agreement is to design, construct, finance
and operate the toll road, with Eurolink
collecting from the toll road for 45 years.
The company noted that it will begin construction
next month having been announced as the
"preferred tenderer" last September.
The M3 project is to include about 60km of
motorway and 50km of access roads. It will cover
around 700 hectares of land between Clonee and
north of Kells, linking Dublin with the
northwest.
The project generated controversy and was the
subject of an unsuccessful High Court challenge
because of its proximity to the historic Hill of
Tara, a court case which delayed the start of
construction.
Siac Ferrovial, the company which trades as
Eurolink, had already moved machinery onto a site
compound in Dunshauglin, Co. Meath.Jim
McGrath.
© The Sunday Tribune, 11th. March 2007.
|
Fine Gael has expressed surprise that
"more than 500 archaeologists, hired at the cost of
30 million, managed to miss a four-acre historical
site while excavating for the M3 motorway".
The Hill of Tara was one the most powerful of Ireland's
five kingdoms and tribal disputes as well as peace and
defence issues were settled at national assemblies held
there every three years.
The first feis (meeting) began around 1300BC. Its
importance diminished as Christianity became established
in Ireland and little now remains to indicate the area's
one-time eminence, although it continues to attract
thousands of visitors every year.
In 2002, a team of archaeologists uncovered monuments in
the area, some dating back to 4000BC. One of the most
spectacular finds was a huge oval enclosure the size of
Croke Park, thought to have been constructed in 2500BC.
One high-profile opponent to the M3 motorway, Dublin-born
actor Stuart Townsend, has claimed the development
"represents in microcosm of what is happening in the
country as a whole".
© The Irish News, May 3rd. 2007.
******************
Injured
protester to address Love Tara march A
protester that was hospitalised following clashes with
construction workers at Tara this week, will address the
Love Tara march tomorrow, Saturday 21 July. The protester
received a neck injury when thrown to the ground by
construction workers on Wednesday. He was taken to the
Emergency Department at Navan Hospital where an X-Ray was
taken to establish the extent of his injuries. He was
discharged from hospital, but later recalled for further
X-rays due to suspected fracturing to his vertebrae.
TaraWatch
has condemned the manner in which peaceful protestors
have been treated this week, and the group has offered
the injured man legal advice and assistance in making a
complaint to the Department of Justice. The
Love Tara march will commence at 1pm at the Garden of Remembrance,
and will proceed down OConnell Street to the
Customs House. There, TaraWatch will present a petition
containing 50,000 signatures to the Department of the
Environment. There, a number of speeches will be made,
including further eyewitness accounts of this weeks
protests. A
large attendance is expected at the march, despite
predicted adverse weather conditions.
please see PRESS RELEASES end page.
Defensive fortification around the Hill of Tara marked in
red
Archaeological sites and monuments marked with white dots
Archaeologial sites recorded in the geophysical survey
marked with yellow dots
Archaeological sites found during test trenching marked
with green/blue dots
http://www.petitiononline.com/taram3/petition.html
was this hypocrisy (Trevor Sargent leader of Green Party,
centre)?
PRESS RELEASE
PRESS RELEASE
TARAWATCH.org
19 July 2007
'Complaint of Assaults and Batteries by SIAC Lodged With
Navan Gardai'
TaraWatch member Laura Grealish lodged a formal written
complaint with Navan Gardai at 8.00pm last night,
concerning a number of assaults and batteries by SIC
construction workers on demonstrators yesterday at
Soldier Hill, Tara. Garda Paddy Skeehan took the
complaint, but said he did not want any
photographic evidence emailed to him yet. Images showing
workers manhandling demonstrators are available on the www.tarawatch.org
site, andsome others appear in today's papers, clearly
showing personal physical abuse. Ms Grealish described
how she and a number of demonstrators were pushed,
dragged, lifted, thrown and generally intimidated by SIAC
construction workers, while they were peacefully
demonstrating.
Peaceful protests will continue today and tomorrow at the
Soldier Hill site.
A large number of demonstrators from around Ireland and
abroad are travelling to the 'Love Tara' march, to be
held this Saturday. Demonstrators will gather at the
Gardens of Remembrance at 12.30pm and march to the
Department of the Environment, where speeches will be
held and 50,000 petition signatures handed in.
Many demonstrators will then go to Cloverhill Prison to
show solidarity with the four demonstrators who have been
imprisoned there.
Laura Grealish said: "The Gardai took the complaint
very seriously and are looking into the matter. "We
want to know why SIAC has failed to seek an injunction to
prevent civil trespass, and has decided instead to
encourage their workers to commit criminal assaults and
batteries on demonstrators. "The images show workers
gleefully attacking demonstrators. It is an absolute
disgrace. "We may be committing civil trespass, but
everything these people are doing is criminal.
ENDS
'Tara Demonstrators to Appearing in Navan Court at
2.00pm'
18 July 2007 (2.00pm)
The five demonstrators arrested this morning at the Hill
of Tara are
currently in custody in Navan Garda Station and will
appear in Navan
District Court at 2.00pm.
The demonstrators will be charged under Section 8 of the
Road Traffic
Act for causing obstruction to the traffic on the N3 this
morning.
Vincent Salafia said:
"We are attempting to get legal representation for
the demonstrators,
and want the charges dismissed.
"We will are also filing complaints against Eurolink
Consortium/SIAC
Construction, for assault by their workers against
demonstrators.
"If the private companies building this road want to
prevent peaceful
demonstrations they should go to the High Court and apply
for an
injunction. Committing an assault is a criminal offence,
and should be
prosecuted to the full extent of the law.
"We strenuously deny the allegation that
demonstrators assaulted any
construction workers.
ENDS
UPDATE
Allison Bray.
FOUR Hill of Tara protesters have been jailed for a week
after they refused to comply with bail conditions
requiring them to stay away from the site of the
controversial M3 motorway.
The four men, who range in age from 20 to 70, were among
a group of seven heritage campaigners who were charged
with public order offences yesterday following clashes
with security and construction workers yesterday morning.
They were remanded in custody at Cloverhill Prison
pending their next court appearance on Wednesday at the
Navan District Court.
Contact Laura Grealish at 087-972-8603 / Vincent Salafia
087-132-3365
[Press
Release] 'Five Demonstrators Arrested at Hill of Tara'
11th July 2007
TARAWATCH.ORG
Gormley Must Halt Demolition in Tara
Complex Due to EU Intervention and New Site
TaraWatch is repeating its call on Minister for the
Environment, John Gormley, to immediately halt demolition
works on all archaeological sites within the Hill of Tara
archaeological complex, since the
European Commission has called the legality of the
National Monuments Act 2004 into question.
In a response today from the European Commission, to
questions asked by Kathy Sinnott MEP, the European
Commission also noted that Tara had been placed on the
World Monuments Fund, 100 Most Endangered Sites list.
TaraWatch nominated Tara in January of this year.
TaraWatch supports Kathy Sinnotts call for all
works on archaeological sites cease immediately in the
valley, until the legality of the National Monuments Act
can be determined. The Commission has received a number
of complaints about the directions given by Minister Dick
Roche, for the demolition of the national
monument in Lismullin. It notes that the National
Monuments Act, 2004 makes no provision for (second-stage)
Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) in relation to
decisions allowing for destruction of national monuments
that were unknown at the time of a first-stage EIA. The
Commission statement must be considered a material
change in circumstances, which Minister Gormley
says he needs, before being able to revisit the decision
to demolish the national monument.
It must also be considered in conjunction to the action
by the European Commissioner for the Environment,
Stravros Dimas, who recently wrote to the Irish
Government and questioned the legality of the National
Development Plan 2007-2013 (NDP) under EU laws requiring
consultation. TaraWatch sent a complaint to the
Commission in February, because the M3 is being funded
under the NDP.
The ongoing daily discovery of further new archaeological
sites, including the underground chambers in the
Lismullin souterrain complex, described by Professor
George Eogan as very significant, also amount
to a further material change in circumstances, giving
Minister Gormley the power to overturn Roches
decision.
Vincent Salafia said:
Minister Gormley has received communications on the
highest level from
the EU, warning against illegal action. He cannot ignore
that and must
place a Temporary Preservation Order on all potential
national
monuments in danger in the Tara complex.
Minister Gormley must recognize that there has now
been three very
material changes in circumstances, since Minister
Roches decision;
World Monuments Fund Endangered Site designation,
European Commission
intervention and discovery of possible new national
monuments.
It is clear from the file released by Minister
Gormley that Minister
Roche did not consider the World Monuments Fund
designation of Tara as
one of the 100 Most Endangered Sites in his decision. The
list was
published just days before Roches decision was
announced.
Not only has the legal foundation for Roches
decision to demolish a
national monument (the National monuments Act) been
challenged by the
EU, but the entire funding mechanism for the M3, the NDP,
may have to
be re-invented.
We have expert opinion from Conor Newman that other
national monuments
at Tara have been wrongfully classified. Those sites are
now in
immediate threat, and all work on them must cease until
this matter has
been resolved.
ENDS
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