Michael Phillips ✍ I bumped into someone who jogged an odd detail loose. 

Let’s call him a Truth Seeker—one of many, I dare to hope. He mentioned that, once upon a time, the agent in the Kenova report—the one who officially doesn’t exist but whom every dog on the street seems to know—lived in a quaint little community in County Down. Another voice chimed in that he’s lived in more houses than you or I have had Sunday roasts. That rang true. I don’t recall many Sunday roasts growing up; there were too many marauding mouths to feed in our house for a single roast to survive beyond the first sitting.

That detail triggered a memory: a meeting I once had with the agent-who-doesn’t-exist at a tourist spot beside a beautiful lake. He invited me up to feed the swans. It was a long way to go for swans. I went anyway, just for the craic, and never once questioned the location. The truth is, I was still in my Republican nappies, so the less said the better. I do remember briefly wondering whether it was reckless or brazenly bold—given the area was home to security forces and well-to-do Unionists. Ignorance is bliss, and I was clearly guilty of incuriosity. Looking back now, though, the idea that he had his own personal rat hole nearby makes perfect sense. He wasn’t reckless or bold at all. He was in his natural habitat.

That was then. Times, they are a-changin’. Perhaps I’m too curious now. Funnier still is that some people are paid to be curious—their careers are built on it—yet they’ve managed to ignore the most obvious and controversial issue staring them in the face, without so much as a twitch suggesting they might probe it.

Another Truth Seeker recently asked me about certain journalists, sending me rummaging through the recesses of my brain to see what I’d missed—again. Not long ago, articles were circulating online pointing out how certain northern journalists have ignored the agent-who-doesn’t-exist, despite documented links to him. Normally, it pays not to react to every online provocation. But this Truth Seeker might be onto something. For one, the journalists in question were close enough to the agent to adjust his hidden microphone. Two, their careers are long, respected, and well established. Three, their paths have crossed for decades.

So how is it possible they’ve never reported on one of the most explosive stories in the North? Their lack of professional curiosity deserves Olympic gold—especially given that some were tipped off years ago by a friendly source. They chase major crimes and political heavyweights, yet suddenly turn coy when confronted with a British agent who slipped through the Stakeknife saga. Voltaire warned: “Cherish those who seek the truth but beware of those who find it.” True to form, these journalists cherry-picked their truths. When the agent-who-doesn’t-exist appeared, they heard no evil, saw no evil, and published no evil.

And now, ironically, they’re becoming the story.

Michael Phillips is a former republican prisoner.

Hear No Evil, See No Evil, Write No Evil

Peadar O'Donnell Socialist Republican ForumRóisín McAleer hosts a discussion on the current situation in Iran between Members of Social Rights Ireland and the Peadar O'Donnell Socialist Republican Forum.

What Is happening In Iran

UnHerd Written by Emily Jashinsky. Recommended by Christopher Owens.

He went from Democratic hope to chump

Tim Walz is a lot like a party balloon. He spent some time soaring, but it was always clear that the Minnesota governor would either slowly leak air or pop on a tree branch. A little more than a year after being launched into national politics as Kamala Harris’s vice-presidential nominee, Walz has landed back on the ground, dropping his gubernatorial re-election bid and watching his state go up in flames. The damage to his career may be irreparable.


A haphazard Kamala Harris campaign plucked Walz straight from cable news, where he was effectively defining the Trump-Vance ticket as “weird” throughout the mid-summer of 2024. Clips of Walz — a Midwestern Dad seemingly straight from central casting — were going viral on social media during the heyday of Couchgate: baseless allegations that JD Vance had once engaged in sexual activity with a couch. Indeed, just one day after Harris named him to the ticket, Walz referenced the meme about Vance’s supposed lust for living-room furniture.

“I can’t wait to debate the guy — that is, if he’s willing to get off the couch and show up,” Walz smirked

Continue @ UnHerd.

The Unravelling Of Tim Walz

Lynx By Ten To The Power Of One Thousand Nine Eight Hundred And Sixty Seven

 

A Morning Thought @ 3044

Frankie Quinn with a poem from his expansive body of work. 

Songbird

Beneath bird’s wings she sleeps
Questioning Humanity
Head bowed, hunger ravaging her delicate body
The sunbird collects nectar 
For her sustenance
Protecting her from the Inhumane inhabitants planted on homeland.
♞♜♝
She sings in different dialects as the oppressed Artists paint the beauty in rebellion
Enemy can’t clip the wings of freedom
The lark rose from a dark H block cell
carried freedom’s voice to millions
The Tiny sunbird whispers truth in the ears of Palestine.
♞♜♝
As she opens her gentle hands
The sunbird flutters her wings 
Warbles the freedom song from the river to the sea
In death we are free. 
She curtsies, closes her eyes
Falls to her knees in the roots of an olive tree
Embraces it becoming one with her origins forever

⏩ Frankie Quinn is a former republican prisoner who is now a community activist. He is the author of Open Gates, a book of poetry.   

Songbird

A Digest of News ✊ from Ukrainian Sources ⚔ 5-January-2026.

In this week’s bulletin

 Ukraine & Venezuela.
 Russia’s Idée Fixe.
 Abramovich & Tories.
 Soldiers slaughtered civilians & POWs.
 Children abducted.
 Kazakh crackdown on mercenaries.

News from the territories occupied by Russia

Ukrainian POWs and civilians gunned down by Russian invaders near Pokrovsk (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, December 30th)

Weekly update on the situation in occupied Crimea (Crimea Platform, December 30th)

Russia subjects Ukrainian political prisoner with multiple sclerosis to medical torture for serving her country (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, December 29th)

Neo-Nazi sadist wanted for war crimes in Ukraine invited to give ‘lesson on courage’ to Russian children (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, December 29th)

The Face of Resistance: The Story of Crimean Tatar Activist Yanikov Asan (Crimea Platform, December 26th)

Russia sentences tortured Melitopol journalist to 15 years for pro-Ukrainian Telegram channel (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, December 26th)

Analysis of Toretsk Satellite Images (Tribunal for Putin, December 24th)

Russian invaders abduct 52 civilians, including children, from Sumy oblast (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, December 24th)

Imprisoned Crimean Solidarity activist Tofik Abdulgaziev needs urgent operation for a malignant brain tumour (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, December 23rd)

Russia’s supreme court OKs illegal charges & faked 'evidence' against Crimean Tatar political prisoners (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, December 22nd)

News from Ukraine

Few politicians are interested in Anti-Corruption Court's effective work, court's head says (Kyiv Independent, December 15th)

Ukrainian military intelligence says it faked neo-Nazi militia commander’s death (Meduza, 1 January)

Defiance & denial: residents of besieged Sloviansk resist surrender to Moscow (Observer, Dec 28th)

Oil Spill Report in the Black Sea near Odesa Following Russian Attacks on Port Infrastructure (Crimea Platform, December 24th)

War-related news from Russia

‘Your power is based on lies and violence.’ Three years for sharing Ukrainian songs (People & Nature, 4 January)

Ukrainian drones mysteriously “attack” Putin’s residence: The chronology of yet another Kremlin lie (The Insider, January 1st)

Gordey Nikitin’s story: 17 years for “high treason” (Ivan Astashin, The Russian Reader, 31 December)

Five years for enlisting. Kazakhstan prosecutes hundreds of citizens for fighting in Ukraine (Mediazona, December 30th)

Predatory recruitment is sending Indians to their deaths on the Ukraine front (Scroll.in, Dec 30th)

Russia’s Descent Into Tyranny (Nina Khrushcheva, Foreign Affairs December 30th)

Russian army in 2025: “meat grinder” continues (Mediazona, 30 December)

Banking on repression: How Russia weaponized its “terrorist” list against political dissidents (The Insider, December 28th)

Banking on repression: how Russia weaponised its “terrorist” list against dissidents (Ivan Astashin, The Insider, 28 December)

We need to change our view of the Arctic as a frontier (Valentin Zemlyansky interviewed at Posle.Media, 24 December)

Free Daria Egereva! (Russian Reader, December 24th)

Putin Uses End-of-Year Presser to Send Message to Trump (Carnegie Politika, December 23rd)

What We Learned from a Hacker Attack on the Russian Military Registry Developer (iStories, 22 December)

While others are celebrating, Ukrainian POWs are being tortured in Russian prisons (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, December 22nd)

Siren songs (Novaya Gazeta, December 17th)

Analysis and comment

‘What’s wrong with US aggression against Venezuela’ (Sotsialnyi Rukh / European Network for Solidarity with Ukraine, 3 January)

Retrieving History: Ukrainian People’s Republic (Vladyslav Starodubtsev, Against the Current, January 2026)

The Russian Idée Fixe (Andriy Movchan, Counterpunch, January 1st)

Money talks: Abramovich, the Tory peer and the Trump adviser (Ukraine Solidarity Campaign, December 31st)

Generating pushback: Eastern European countries are turning away political asylum seekers from Russia and Belarus (The Insider, December 24th)

The EU blinks: When capital’s inviolability trumps geopolitical necessity (Labour Hub, December 21st)

A Ukrainian view of Nathan Gill’s prison sentence for taking pro-Russian bribes (Nation Cymru, November 22nd)

Research of human rights abuses

Michael O’Flaherty published a report on Ukraine (Zmina, December 31st)

A court for Russian propagandists: how to prove their complicity in international crimes? (Ukrainska Pravda, December 24th)

International solidarity

Street singer Diana Loginova’s first interview in exile: “I thought, what could they do to me?” (Meduza, 2 January)

Annual Report of Solidarity Collectives 2025 (Solidarity Collectives, 31 December)

Green Party conference to hear Ukraine solidarity motion (Ukraine Solidarity Campaign, 23 December)

Ukraine-Sweden: Upholding Human Rights for Victims of the Russian War (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, December 23rd)

Upcoming events

Wednesday 7th January, 5.0 pm. No to Business as Usual with Putin’s Oligarchs: Protest at Tory HQ, 4 Matthew Parker Street, London SWIH 9NP, called by USC.

Thursday 15th January, 7.0 pm. Webinar: Russia’s War on Ukraine, US Security Review – Stopping the authoritarians. Organised by By Ukraine Solidarity Campaign Scotland

Thursday 5th February, 6.30 pm. Try Me For Treason: readings from speeches by anti-war protesters in Russian courts, and discussion. Clore Lecture Theatre, Birkbeck College Clore Management Centre, Torrington Square, London WC1E 7JL.

 

🔴This bulletin is put together by labour movement activists in solidarity with Ukrainian resistance. More information at Ukraine Information Group.

We are also on twitter. Our aim is to circulate information in English that to the best of our knowledge is reliable. If you have something you think we should include, please send it to 2U022ukrainesolidarity@gmail.com.


We are now on Facebook and Substack! Please subscribe and tell friends. Better still, people can email us at 2022ukrainesolidarity@gmail.com, and we’ll send them the bulletin direct every Monday. The full-scale Russian assault on Ukraine is going into its third year: we’ll keep information and analysis coming, for as long as it takes.

The bulletin is also stored on line here.

To receive the bulletin regularly, send your email to:
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News From Ukraine 💣 Bulletin 177

Christopher Owens 🎵 with the 59th in his Predominance series.

“Made to lay down in a stone pasture/We were made to to lay down in a pasture of stone/Besidе dark waters and some steel tanks/By your side I rеst my head” - Easterhouse


Horns up 

New Horizons

Foetus – Halt

Supposedly J.G Thirlwell’s final album under the Foetus banner and if it is, he’s gone out with a bang. His deranged mixture of Frank Zappa orchestration, King Crimson power and Fela Kuti beats sounds mightier than ever but there is genuine drama in the music (such as ‘Polar Vortex’). Simply put, the man is a genius and we should all bow down to Foetus.

The album can be streamed and purchased here.

Zu - Ferrum Sidereum

With the title being Latin for ‘cosmic iron’, it’s no surprise that the Italians continue to be inspired by the esoteric. Going for a sound that King Crimson and Tool pioneered in the mid 90’s, it’s a proggy take on industrial rock with tight and precise riffage that allows for a more trippy, esoteric vibe throughout.

The album can be streamed and purchased here.

Xiu Xiu - Xiu Mutha Fuckin' Xiu: Vol. 1

Jamie Stewart and co. take time out to fuck up (in the best way) some songs that mean a lot to them. The minimal take on ‘Warm Leatherette’ highlights the grotesquely visceral lyrics, ‘In Dreams’ is even more nostalgic and ‘Sex Dwarf’ is transformed into an industrial techno dancefloor filler. An interesting diversion but towers over most cover albums.

The album can be streamed and purchased here.

Bloody Head – Bend Down and Kiss the Ground

The Nottingham based noise rockers return with their finest album to date. With a cleaner production that allows little intricacies (such as bass lines) to shine through and make the songs much more powerful (see the title track for such an example). One of the albums of the year and it’s only the end of January.

The album can be streamed and purchased here.

Golden Oldies


Alan Vega – Alan Vega


Probably responsible for manys a confused rockabilly seeking out synth punks Suicide, front man Alan Vega’s debut solo record sees him fully indulge his love of rock n roll through hip shaking classics like ‘Jukebox Babe’ while ‘Love Cry’ feels like a tip of the hat to John Cale’s version of ‘Heartbreak Hotel.’



The Sound – All Fall Down

Written to get out of their record contract, retrospective listening finds this to be a solid follow-up to the band’s first two albums. While it may lack the pathos of later releases, songs such as ‘Monument’ and 'Glass and Smoke’ are fine slabs of earnest post punk that display an optimism that can be overlooked upon first listen.



Warning – Watching from a Distance

20 years on, the power and emotion radiating from this LP is second to none. While very much traditional doom metal, the emotion radiating from Patrick Walker combined with the seriously slow and heavy riffing, makes this a record for those long dark nights of the soul.



The Smashing Pumpkins – Melon Collie and the Infinite Sadness

30 years on, the album that Billy Corgan declared would be the equivalent of Pink Floyd’s ‘The Wall’ for Gen X has held up remarkably well. From aggressive number ‘Jellybaby’ through to lush orchestral beauties like ‘Tonight Tonight’ and the krautrock influenced ‘1979’, it’s overblown but never sags and it does bring you into a different world.



⏩ Christopher Owens was a reviewer for Metal Ireland and finds time to study the history and inherent contradictions of Ireland. He is currently the TPQ Friday columnist.

Predominance 59

Lynx By Ten To The Power Of One Thousand Nine Eight Hundred And Sixty Six

 

A Morning Thought @ 3043

Brendan Curran 🍺The cage search came a week early.

It was usually every six weeks, but they brought it forward two weeks to catch us out for Christmas and catch the predicted poitin run. They were right. Daithi and myself had been running through the wash for 3 days previous to create the required amount of drink for both Christmas Day and St Stephen’s Day, enough drink, both scrumpy and poitin needed for all 3 huts, 72 men in all. We had it brewing weeks in advance. 

The brewing started the very afternoon of the last cage search. It was planned to allow for maximum fermentation time. We brewed the batch in 3 huge plastic dustbins, 30 lbs of sugar to each bin, bags of powdered baking yeast and every bit of fruit and surplus dinner vegetables available that you could create alcohol from. 

The bins were raised off the floor on wooden planks to allow the required heat to get it to ferment to perfection. Each bin had a sealed plastic pipe sticking out from the bin lid into a jam jar full of water to allow it to vent and expel air but importantly not allow fresh air back to interrupt the brew. The lid of the bin was sealed with bread soaked in milk like a poultice treatment, which when cured and dried out it would form a seal so hard that it was air tight around the lid and body of the bin. 

The yeast in each bin was bubbling and gurgling away, changing the fruit and anything else we could muster into pure alcohol. The yeast was smuggled into the cage on the visits weeks ahead and well in advance of the “run”. The Cage Christmas drinks committee had ordered all the prisoners to buy extra sugar from the prison tuck shop to feed the yeast and also to get extra fruit in their weekly family food parcel> the increase of the fruit now appearing in each parcel I’m sure sent out the alarm bells to the prison authorities that drink was on the menu.

Making drink in the cages was a process which was complicated but was also simply enough. It was a well rehearsed practice. In each of the huts there were two toilets at the end of the hut. Immediately outside the toilets was a small single tap handwashing basin, the perfect location and installation for distilling alcohol from the wash (well fermented drink mix) well away from the smell and eye of both the prison screws and the soldiers in the watch tower which was only yards from and towering over our 4 huts. 

The process was simple. We used the bins to create the brew and when it was ready we began the “Run'. The timing of the run was so important - it had to be timed to as near to perfection as possible so as not to lose the “brew” in a routine cage search . . .  which was a balancing act to try and squeeze as many days out of the fermentation cycle as was possible. Each hut had a huge commercial type electric hot water boiler placed on a table at top of each hut on a large table, The boiler had a large shiny lid with a handle in the middle and a water tap spout on the front and a large numbered dial beside it to boil the water or decrease it in stages as required….the perfect modern day poitin still that they never suspected. The lid's central handle was removed to allow the copper pipe into the boiler to release the boiling steam rising up from the now percolating wash mix. The lid of the boiler was sealed onto the body of the boiler, once again with a mix of milk and bread held on with a strip of homemade bandage made from a bed sheet to create the perfect seal.The toilet plumbing and flushing pipes were stripped out of their housing and rearranged to connect to the boiler lid and fold past and under the hand basin cold water tap to instantly turn the heated steam and vapour in the pipe to pure alcohol… the very finest long kesh poitin. 

I didn’t drink so when we ran it through the still Daithi did all the tasting, and by the end of the run he had done enough sampling for the both of us. The other prisoners who entered or left the hut beside the still gave us their hearty greetings, some stood beside us to watch the ever slowly drip drip of the crystal clear liquid as it filled up the jam jar. Once the jar was filled it was transferred into a milk carton or plastic containers to be secreted into one of the hundreds of the huts sheets of tin that we hoped would draw the least attention or be too far up the roof for the trade screws to bother to search.

Anyway, unexpected or not at 7.15 Am the next morning the shout came the middle hut…curdach anois….the hated phrase …a cage search by the screws…the last thing we wanted or needed, a definite strike to kill off the Christmas spirit in more ways than one. The search went on and on for hours on end. We were all locked in the canteen which was the end hut but we could still hear all the banging and thumping of the tins as usual. Later on in the morning we were all taken one by one into the wash room to be humiliated and strip searched. 

The cage search was a serious one, all the screw trades men (joiners, plumbers and electricians) were all taken in to ensure a thorough raid and search of each hut to try acquire all our hidden escape or drink contraband. The raid was a success - they found all our poitin hidden behind the tins in two floor cleaning gallon drums. The screws were over the moon and they didn’t hide it - they strutted all around the place displaying the psychological victory of two plastic drums one in each hand. Once the raid was over everyone tidied up their wrecked cells and the now breached tins sticking out all over the place. 

That afternoon the cage OC told everyone that we would buy more sugar, that another batch was going down before Christmas. Everything needed to be fast forwarded, and it was. A roof heater was taken down rewired and pointed at the new bins of wash all day. This was to help the mix ferment faster and faster. At last the wash was ready. On Christmas Eve myself and Daithi ran the mix all day long, right up to lock up time. We distributed a share of the run to each of the huts just in the nick of time before lock up. 

Christmas was a was hard time for all prisoners but in particular for the married men, their wives and children, but also for young people missing their families and girlfriends. But lo and behold out of the blue at 11pm a drunken screw entered the cage with the 2 plastic containers full of poitin, captured 2 weeks earlier, offering us them back…a sign of Christmas peace…a bit like the football match in no man’s land during World War One….maybe. But the peace was rejected; the OC told him to stuff it, saying we had more than enough of our own. But St Stephen’s Day morning revenge was on its way: a snowfall had taken place during the night and the large cage yard behind the huts was covered with snow and a huge Union Jack now appeared made from a disgruntled screws heavy boots foot prints in the fresh virgin white snow… Merry Christmas everyone from the POW spirit of a Christmas past.

⏩ Brendan Curran,  Irish conflict poems 2020

The Spirit Of A Christmas Past . . . Cage 12