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Recent articles by Shane O'Curry
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ireland / britain |
migration / racism |
opinion / analysis
Tuesday October 11, 2011 18:13 by Shane O'Curry - WSM
The notorious 1994 Criminal Justice Act effectively repealed the 1968 Caravan Sites Act, signaling a return to the usual form for legislation in Britain, Ireland and Europe, in that it also effectively criminalises nomadic culture and Travellers way of life. The general thrust of legislation and policy in Ireland, Britain and Europe, has for the most part been about framing Travellers, Romanies, Rroma, Tziganes, Gitanos and other nomadic peoples as problematic populations whose way of life must be criminalized and whose cultural distinctions eliminated. The net result of these policies, if you are from one of the many nomadic cultures is, according to every post-war study by the EU, WHO, World Bank and UN, all your quality of life indicators ( life expectancy, death rate, infant mortality, general health, mental health, suicide, literacy etc.) are continents away from that of your settled neighbours. It is literally the difference between the first and third worlds. Similar legislation in Ireland, such as the specifically anti-Traveller Section 24 of the Housing (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 2002, and the continued non-recognition of Traveller ethnicity by the Irish State, contributes to a historic trend of forced sedentarism for Travellers infamously celebrated by Charlie Haughey in his 1960 remark that “There can be no final solution of the problem created by itinerants until they are absorbed into the general community” ( the choice of the words “Final Solution” only 15 years after the end of the ‘Porrajmos’, in which European Fascism’s “Final Solution” meant the extermination of 1.5 million Roma, can only be read as intentionally echoing Hitler’s words.) As the halting sites in Britain have become increasingly blocked, increasing numbers of Travellers, including some English Romanies, came to settle in Dale Farm, as it is one of the only safe spaces left where Travellers can live and work in their traditional extended family units, and where they can practice their culture and build for the future . Dale Farm is the last option for Travellers wanting to live as Travellers. As 69 year old resident Mary Ann McCarthy told the Guardian last year “"Without an address you can't get doctors, our kids can't go to school. The camps we used to pull in to have been closed and barricaded up. Travelling life is finished for Travellers." New families came to the Traveller-owned site to make a life for themselves. The settlement extended into parts of the former scrapyard deemed ‘green belt’ by the Tory council, and near-futile attempts were painstakingly made to get planning permission (in Britain, less than 20 percent of applications for planning permission are granted to Travellers, compared to over 60 percent for non-Travellers). Now that Dale Farm residents and Traveller activists fight the last of their legal appeals , the end of a long and exhausting journey, solidarity in the form of Traveller activists and other ‘fellow-travellers’ pours in from around Britain and Ireland, and legal action gives way to direct action as people brace themselves to face the bailiffs and bulldozers, and the cover given to them by racist media and politicians. Ireland’s all-Traveller forum, Minceirs Whiden, has called for a vigil or picket of the British Embassy in Ballsbridge, this Friday, 16 September, from 12.30 pm to 2 pm. The vigil has been called in solidarity with the families who are facing eviction from their own land at Dale Farm, in Essex. If there is a time to show your solidarity with Dale Farm residents and Travelling people throughout Europe, it is now. Come to the picket at the British Embassy in Ballsbridge this Friday at 12.30. “Stop the Bulldozers: respect Traveller culture and ways!” WORDS: Shane O'Curry |
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