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Thursday, August 11, 2011

DRM, Metro Eireann Interview.

Norway tragedy ‘a wake-up call’ for all Europe

Last update - Monday, August 1, 2011, 12:02 By Catherine Reilly
Irish are ‘letting ourselves off the hook’ over right-wing extremism AN IRISH anti-racism organisation has warned political leaders “not to assume” the atrocities in Norway cannot happen here.
Catherine Lynch, co-ordinator of the Irish Network Against Racism (formerly ENAR Ireland), said European political leaders needs to consider the attacks in Norway – which appear to have been fuelled by racist and anti-Islam ideology – as “an urgent wake-up call”, and noted that the tragic events in Oslo show how “extremism can impact on the whole community”.
Reported racist crime in Ireland has been decreasing in recent times – from 214 in 2007 to 122 last year – but Lynch said there is a “clear sense” on the ground that racism is actually increasing, with an apparent “growing tolerance for and acceptance of racism”.
The Irish Network Against Racism is renewing its call for the introduction of aggravated sentencing, which would require increased sentencing where there has been a racist motivation. It is also calling for tougher measures to combat internet racism.
“The 1989 [Incitement to Hatred] Act has long been under review,” said Lynch. “We now need to see results including assurances that racism on the internet shall be explicitly covered within the scope of the legislation.”
She said a suggestion that right-wing extremism is not a concern in Ireland is “letting ourselves off the hook”.
Indeed, in recent months a group called Democratic Right Movement (DRM) Ireland – a self-described “white, nationalist political movement” – has been developing a street presence in Dublin to complement its website, where it propagates its extremist views.
Founder Michael Quinn told Metro Éireann that the group “definitely wouldn’t support” the actions of xenophobe Anders Behring Breivik, whose killing spree claimed at least 76 lives on 22 July – including many young people at a Labour Party youth camp on the island of Utoeya, near Oslo – although their views mirror some of those in Breivik’s diaries and ‘manifesto’ discovered in the wake of the tragedy.
“I don’t condone him going and slaughtering children,” said Quinn, who nevertheless indicated that politicians were ‘fair game’. http://metroeireann.com/article/norway-tragedy-a-wakeup-call,2861

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