Pádraic Mac Coitir ✒ Watching the news and soccer on English television it is disgusting how much most of the British media go on about their armed forces and how they put them on pedestals like heroes.


Even if the wearing of poppies and laying wreaths at their monuments was only about remembering WW1 and WW2 it wouldn't interest me in the least.

It must be remembered that the majority of Irishmen who fought for Britain in those wars done so willingly and only a very small number left in disgust when they saw what was going on not only here in Ireland but also countries like India. Look at the history of the 'Irish regiments' involved in massacres like Amritsar.

I went to Milltown cemetery this morning to visit Republican graves like my mother and father's and as I walked around the different plots I couldn't help thinking what they would make of Sinn Féin members paying homage to the British armed forces. My mother, Máire, died aged forty when I was only fifteen and although I knew she was a Republican I didn't talk too much about politics because I wasn't too clued in.

Our parents encouraged us to read books but at that time the only ones that appealed to me were about Tom Barry, Dan Breen and one or two others. On the other hand I was able to speak more politics with my father, Pat. I first went to prison when I was eighteen and my two eldest sisters were also in gaol so it was obviously hard for my father raising seven other kids. When I was released three years later my da would've given me his opinion on the politics of the day. His old comrades from prison in the 1930s and 40s would regularly call to the house and occasionally I'd sit in on their conversations. I was back inside during the 1981 hunger strike and whenever my da visited me in the Crum and whilst on remand in the H-Blocks I got to know his politics better. He died shortly after I was released in 1982 so I can't speak for him and my mother about what they would think of the path Sinn Féin is taking now.

Unfortunately we hear many Sinn Féin people use the names of our dead comrades to justify their dealings with the British, Free Staters and yanks. How can anyone say such and such would be standing with them? As we watch Sinn Féin people do all that is anathema to what Irish Republicanism is about it is disgusting.

Padraic Mac Coitir is a former republican
prisoner and current political activist.

Anathema To Irish Republicanism

Anthony McIntyre  Today Catherine Connolly is officially President of Ireland.


When she first announced her candidacy, I thought it good to have a Left dog in the fight even if I was far from confident that the fight could be won. What boosted her chances somewhat was getting in before Sinn Fein. It seems very plausible to believe that this is an election that Sinn Fein could have won had they sprang out of the traps early enough with a candidate that could attract rather than repel voters.

Sinn Fein's decision not just to endorse Catherine Connolly but to put teams on the street to row in behind her put even more wind in her sails, which acquired turbo power when when Fianna Fail's Jim Gavin pulled out over something relatively minor compared to what the kingmaker in the current government coalition has been responsible for.

Much better in terms of conveying her message than her sole opponent, Heather Humphreys, Catherine Connolly no longer faced the risk of mutual backslapping transfers between Fianna Fail and Fine Gael squeezing her into second place in a winner takes all competition. As the days passed fewer dark clouds appeared on the horizon. Those that did seemed more like smoke signals coming out of the Fine Gael camp, signifying Blueshirt desperation rather than any real change in the weather. Nobody seriously expected rain to fall from those type of clouds to deter voters from turning up on the day.

As that day approached, the smell of defeat from the Fine Gael camp was hard to mask with perfumed pontificating. Smear the bejaysus out of her drew more attention to the author of that comment than to its intended target. As an attack dog, Heather Humphreys was more sheep than wolf, unable to effectively throw the snowballs that the Fine Gael slurry and slime department was manufacturing for her.

For almost every day of October up until the night before the election - which saw us pound the streets of Clogher Head as part of the Drogheda For Connolly campaign team - I took to the canvass trail, usually alongside Bobby McCormack. Some times we did it, just the two of us. On others we were joined by an array of campaigners. Sinn Fein and People Before Profit activists turned out alongside individuals who belonged to no political party. There was a sense of unity and purpose with one goal in mind - putting Catherine Connolly in the Aras. When we bickered it was over what estate to hit on which night; whether we should door knock or post leaflets. Nothing of substance which was refreshing for the Left, so often drawn to a split like a moth to a flame.

The campaign saw us rap the doors and ring the bells of estates across Drogheda, Dundalk, Ardee, Termonfeckin and Clogher Head. My daughter joined me in Ardee and Dundalk. The response was very positive. A bit of dismissiveness here and there but no abuse other than from one religiously deranged John the Baptist lookalike in West Street who vigorously objected to me and Ciara distributing leaflets 'outside God's house.' Ireland has changed, he insisted, over the past two decades. When I suggested the change was that priests could no longer rape children and avoid being held to account, the neurons in his brain began sparking causing a dark anger to take hold of his facial expression. When he ended up giving me the middle finger I told him I had one too which I planned donating to religion once I died. Off he went in a tailspin up West Street muttering obscurantist incantations laced with threats of hell and other things his loving god likes to do to people that don't share his superstitions. Other than that, people, even if they were not for voting Catherine Connolly, displayed no signs of insanity or menacing hostility.

The one disappointment throughout the month of canvassing was the palpable absence of the Irish Labour Party from the campaign trail. Apart from local Louth TD Ged Nash joining us on the canvass in Dundalk, the party was more noted for its absence. There was a sense that it was more in line with the Alan Kelly perspective which preferred to see Heather Humphreys elected president. That seems to be the result of the Fine Gael ideational culture permeating throughout the Labour Party. For decades Labour has unashamedly and slavishly functioned as a condom to be worn by Fine Gael while it screwed society's most disadvantaged, affording it protection from the wrath of its victims. When finished, the condom rather than the tool it shielded has always taken the flak.

Although revolutionaries promise speedy change, real progress in the world of politics is characteristically slow. Every advance is painstakingly fought for. Once any ground is taken it has to be fortified to a strength capable of taking the weight of the launch pad that will propel the next surge forward. Ireland now has a president in the mould of Michael D Higgins, prepared to speak out of the left side of her mouth rather than both sides at the same time and who will incrementally move the needle leftwards.

Having learning from RTE news last night that in some cases children with mental health challenges in Ireland have to wait thirteen years before seeing a primary care psychologist, the idea that this country needed a Fine Gael President is unthinkable. If people do what they have always done they will get what they always got.

Welcome to another President with a social conscience.

Follow on Twitter @AnthonyMcIntyre.


President Catherine Connolly

A Digest of News ✊ from Ukrainian Sources ⚔ 9-November-2025.

In this week’s bulletin

⬤ More evidence of Russian torture, 
⬤ shooting of prisoners, 
⬤ deliberate targeting of civilians. 
⬤ Fuel shortages and rail freight collapse within Russia.

News from the territories occupied by Russia

The face of resistance: The story of Crimean Tatar political prisoner Dilyaver Gafarov (Crimea Platform November 7th)

Young Crimean mother of two abducted by the FSB and held incommunicado for over a year (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group November 6th)

Filter and rule: Inside Russia's system of abductions and torture in the occupied territories of Ukraine (The Insider November 6th)

The Holos (Voice) track by hatespeech, created in collaboration with the Crimea Platform, has been included in the longlist for the MEGOGO MUSIC AWARDS 2025 (Crimea Platform November 5th)

Political Prisoner Iryna Danylovych Receives the Stories of Injustice Award 2025 (November Crimea Platform 4th)

13-year sentence on `treason’ charges for pro-Ukrainian graffiti in Russian-occupied Crimea (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group November 4th)

Weekly update on the situation in occupied Crimea on November 4, 2025 (Crimea Platform November 4th)

Tamara Suju Roa joined the advocacy mentorship initiative for Crimean political prisoners (Crimea Platform November 4th)

Kajsa Ollongren Joined the Advocacy Mentorship Initiative for Crimean Political Prisoners (Crimea Platform November 3rd)

Russia defies its own puppet court to further torment blind and disabled political prisoner (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group November 3rd)

75-year-old Volodymyr Ananiev is facing a massive sentence he can’t survive for a `crime’ that never happened (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group November 3rd)

News from the front and ‘peace’ negotiations

Russian losses in the war with Ukraine Mediazona count, updated (Mediazona November 7th)

Russian forces close in on Pokrovsk: Meduza’s military analysts on the threat of encirclement and Ukraine’s chances of defense (Meduza November 6th)

How many soldiers have Russia and Ukraine lost? And how do their armies compare? Meduza’s military analysts answer readers’ biggest questions about the war (part 3) (Meduza November 4th)

Will Russia invade the EU? Meduza's military analysts answer readers' biggest questions about the war (part 2) (Meduza November 3rd)

Russian Troops Burn Their Own Trucks to Halt Pokrovsk Deployment, Partisans Say (Kyiv Post, November 2nd)

News from Ukraine

Russian soldier sentenced to life for gunning down an unarmed Ukrainian POW (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group November 7th)

The Ukrainian Parliament has adopted an appeal to the international community to strengthen sanctions against Russia for crimes against journalists (Crimea Platform November 5th)

Kalkan: A Symbol of Unity and Global Protection at the Third International Crimea Global Conference (Crimea Platform November 5th)

War-related news from Russia

A Russian medical student read about Ukraine's Azov regiment while riding the bus. Within hours federal agents arrested him for an `illegal internet search’ (Meduza November 6th)

The wheels are coming off: Russia's rail freight collapse exposes a deeper industrial crisis (The Insider November 6th)

The plunder and violence unleashed in occupied Ukraine has reached Russia’s own towns (Meduza November 5th)

Refineries in the crosshairs: Ukraine's "deep strike" strategy threatens major fuel shortages in Russia by 2026 (The Insider November 3rd)

Analysis and comment

Bursting the bubble: Europe is capable of phasing out Russian gas ahead of schedule (The Insider November 7th)

The book “Free Voices of Crimea” was presented at the British Ambassador's residence, where participants discussed journalists held in Russian captivity (Zmina November 6th)

Meduza talks to analyst Balázs Jarábik about how war and martial law are reshaping Ukraine’s political landscape (Meduza November 6th)

The nuclear option: Russia may be about to steal Europe's largest power plant – with catastrophic consequences (The Insider November 5th)

Capital vs sanctions (Posle Media November 5th)

Three years of full-scale war in Ukraine: Thoughts, Feelings, Actions (Cedos November 3rd)

Research of human rights abuses

The Commission visits Kyiv, reiterating its findings (UNHCR November 7th)

Sinister secrecy over Russia's abduction, torture and imprisonment of Melitopol journalist Anastasia Hlukhovska (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group November 7th)

Russians murder civilians waving a white flag as UN report slams mass-scale and systematic attacks as crimes against humanity (Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group November 5th)

ZMINA’s analyst Borys Petruniok took part in a public conference at the University of Vienna (Zmina November 3rd)

The subscriber is out of range (AlterPravo November 1st)

International solidarity

On silencing voices from Eastern Europe at anarchist events in EU (Solidarity Collectives November 8th)

Crimean political prisoner Iryna Danylovych honoured with "Stories of Injustice Award 2025" in Prague (Zmina November 5th)

Emergency Petition: Belgium Stop Sabotaging Support for Ukraine (European Network for Solidarity with Ukraine n.d)

Upcoming events (timings are GMT)



15/16th November: In Search of Europe (conference organised by the Commons journal) – sessions include `(Un)making Europe: borders, displacement, citizenship’, `Straight into the Abyss: The Rise of Authoritarianism and the Hope for Democracy’ and `The Dilemma of Democracy: Participation and/or Procedure’.

Thursday 20th November, 6.30pm: Try Me for Treason – readings of speeches from Russia’s courts / Book launch for Voices against Putin’s war. Pelican House, 144 Cambridge Heath Road, London E1 5QJ. Ukraine Information Group.
🔴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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To stop it, please reply with the word “STOP” in the subject field.

News From Ukraine 💣 Bulletin 170

CuimhneamhOn Sunday 16th of November at 12pm, Cuimhneamh will unveil a plaque on the site of the ancestral home of the family of labour leader Jim Larkin, where his father, also Jim Larkin, was born in the townland of Ayallogue, in the parish of Killeavy, County Armagh.


The location of this plaque will be just under the Ayallogue Bridge, where the Lower Newtown Road meets the Low Road, a few meters from the site of the Adavoyle Train Ambush Memorial Wall.

This plaque will be unveiled by Tommy McKearney. Tommy spent his early years in Collegeland, County Armagh before his family moved to thee nearby village of Moy in County Tyrone. A former political prisoner, after his release Tommy settled in Monaghan where he now lives with his wife Patricia. A founding member of the Independent Workers Union, he was for many years a member of its national executive and acted as the union’s northern organiser before retiring in 2022.

Tommy is the author of The Provisional IRA: From Insurrection to Parliament and currently writes a regular column for the Communist Party of Ireland's monthly publication, Socialist Voice.

We politely ask attendees to respect the access of local residents, other drivers and pedestrians when parking on Sunday afternoon.

Tommy McKearney is a left wing and trade union activist. 
Follow on Twitter @Tommymckearney

Plaque At Jim Larkin Ancestral Home

Merrion Press 🔖 has just published a new book by Emma Fogarty.



BEING EMMA
Living My Best Life with Butterfly Skin

Emma Fogarty
Foreword by Colin Farrell



My mother tells me that when I was born the room fell deathly silent. She knew something was wrong, but she didn’t know what. Neither did the nurses, nor the doctor they rushed to find. That silence didn’t last because I began to cry, and my mother tells me I didn’t stop at all. Because I was born in terrible pain.

Born with epidermolysis bullosa, a rare and excruciatingly painful condition that makes her skin as fragile as butterfly wings, Emma Fogarty was not expected to survive infancy. Today, at forty-one years of age, she is the oldest living Irish person with her form of the condition, continuing to defy the odds with extraordinary strength, resilience and remarkable achievements.

However, every accomplishment Emma makes comes with its own set of obstacles. EB is a cruel disease which causes her skin to blister and tear at the slightest touch. She can no longer walk, and she lost the use of her fingers when they fused together. Her bandages need to be changed every two days, an agonising process which takes hours. Emma’s daily life is a battle against debilitating pain, yet she embraces every moment with fierce positivity and determination. In 2024, she took part in the Dublin Marathon alongside her close friend Colin Farrell to mark her fortieth birthday, raising over €1 million for DEBRA Ireland.

Emma’s skin may be fragile, but her spirit is unbreakable – shattering every expectation and lighting the way for everyone who dares to dream beyond their circumstances.

Paperback • €18.99|£17.99 • 280 pages • 234mm x 153mm • 9781785375682

‘Emma's life is an extraordinary one’
COLIN FARRELL

‘A story of power, bravery and the beauty of the human spirit’
TRISHA LEWIS

‘Emma Fogarty is a truly exceptional person’
RAY D'ARCY

'Emma has displayed courage and bravery which has been an inspiration to me during my career but also in my life' 
JOHNNY SEXTON

On sale now
Get your copy



About The Author

Emma Fogarty lives in Laois and is one of just 300 Irish sufferers of epidermolysis bullosa, a painful disease which makes her skin as fragile as a butterfly’s wing. At forty-one, she is the oldest living Irish person with the condition. As an ambassador for DEBRA Ireland, she took part in the Dublin Marathon alongside her close friend Colin Farrell, raising almost €1 million for the organisation.


Out Now 📚 Emma Fogarty

Lynx By Ten To The Power Of One Thousand Eight Hundred And Eighty Four

 

Pastords @ 15

 

A Morning Thought @ 2963

Micheál Choilm Mac Giolla Easbuig ★The pathetic figure of the 'token Nationalist' Michelle O'Neill carrying the laurel wreath which symbolizes victory, achievement, and honour, to be laid at the cenotaph of Imperialism, in Belfast, is very sad. Sad but also disgusting.

 
What possible political gains are to be had by the Shinners by honouring those who fought in imperialist wars and slaughtered millions upon millions of civilians alone? Working class women and men (mainly men) conned by the purveyors of death around the world, into sacrificing themselves and their families, in wars of the wealthy and powerful. Wars to colonise weaker countries to rob them off their wealth and create new markets for their ever expanding capitalist markets. Nothing at all to do with the 'freedom of small or any nations'. And even less to do with, so called, democracy.
 
Then we have the 'Irish question', all 900 years of it. The slaughter, the imprisonments, the deliberate starving to death of at least one million Irish and the forced exiling of millions more. They even killed our language and culture.

Only thirty or forty years ago British troops were killing Irish people in the streets for daring to resist against occupation and colonialism. They slaughtered the Civil Rights marchers, they systematically killed innocent civilians all over the six counties; and in the 26 Counties.
 
When they failed to break us they pacified our, supposed, leadership. And the traitorous "leadership" fooled and pacified the Republican base. Now that same "leadership" honours the very same imperialist forces that subjugated, by ruthless force, the Irish Nation.
 
For what died the sons of Roísín . . .  was it imperialism? For what died the sons of Roísín . . . was it to denigrate our fallen volunteers? For what died the sons of Roísín . . .  to perpetuate a craven colonial mindset?

Micheál Choilm Mac Giolla Easbuig 
is an 
independent councillor on Donegal County Council.

Honouring British Imperialism