An Irish military volunteer, Finbar Cafferkey, was tragically killed while fighting Russian forces in eastern Ukraine. Cafferkey, a previous combatant in Syria against the Islamic State, had volunteered to assist local forces in Ukraine. Reports of his passing were confirmed by his father, Tom Cafferkey, who declined to elaborate on the circumstances of his son’s death. Cafferkey was known in his local community on Achill Island for his commitment to humanitarian and environmental causes, including his involvement in the Shell to Sea campaign against the Corrib Gas project. While campaigners expressed their condolences to the Cafferkey family on their loss, the parliamentary assembly of the Council of Europe voted that the forced detention and deportation of children from Russian occupied territories of Ukraine is “genocide”, passing a resolution that demands Russia immediately stop the practice and give NGOs and charities access.
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Without gasoline and with diminished popular support, the Cuban regime is left without its May Day
Perhaps the claim began at a stop when someone compared the lack of buses with the line of buses that would be seen on May 1st. Then the demand jumped to the patient who waited for hours for an ambulance but in the hospital he heard the call to fill the Plaza de la Revolución in Havana on Workers’ Day and it infected that retiree who spent half board in a taxi, to attend to a notarial procedure. The chorus became almost unanimous: “How are they going to have a parade if there isn’t even gasoline for the hearses!”
Showing that you have the convening power and political muscle to transport thousands of people is one thing, but materializing this bath of crowds implies complex logistics: the little revolutionary enthusiasm that remains among the Cuban workers must be stirred up, the fuel necessary to transfer them to the main squares of each province and deploy a propaganda apparatus that takes to those places from cameramen to announcers, all of them thirsty for water, snacks, credit on their mobile phones and some other perks.
Until a few days ago it seemed that this authoritarian choreography was going to happen, despite the deep crisis we are experiencing. An event that on this Island has nothing to do with the proletarian date designed for demand and protest, because here decades ago it was tamed and transmuted into an act of support for a regime led by leaders of the Communist Party who have never sweated in a industry, they haven’t counted the pennies to make ends meet and they don’t know the bitter taste that a devalued currency and galloping inflation leaves on their plates.
Falsifying the results of an electoral process requires the complicity of hundreds of officials, but to show a crowd where there is none, more than artificial intelligence is needed
They were going, as so many times in the past, to spend on a day of self-promotion what little we have left in this nation where universities cancel their face-to-face classes, people avoid making plans that involve moving to another municipality and fights break out in families to blows for the few liters of diesel that the grandfather has saved in a drum. This was going to be another year, like the many of us who live under the delusional imprint of Fidel Castro, in which the photo from the rostrum was more important than the day after with his patients urgently needed to move, his deceased waiting to be cremated and their children waiting to get to school.
Why was the pragmatic decision to cancel the great parade and break it up into smaller acts imposed then? The hydrocarbon crisis does not seem to be the only cause for this decision. The old panic of a parade without the hundreds of thousands that managed to summon-coerce in the past may be among the reasons. Falsifying the results of an electoral process requires the complicity of hundreds of officials, but to show a crowd where there is none, more than artificial intelligence is needed. Any photographic or propaganda trick can be quickly contrasted and dismantled in these times.
It was not only the lack of oil that caused the suspension of the parade in Havana. With this change of scenery and by lowering the importance of the commemoration by various degrees, the Cuban regime is making it clear that it has already turned the page of showing itself supported by the people, respected by the workers and applauded for its advances in social justice. .
The crude dictatorships do not even need crowd baths. They do not have to be charismatic or have easy verb speakers or mythical profiles. Miguel Díaz-Canel’s second term began just a few days ago, but he has already defined his fundamental lines: to survive at any cost clinging to power, even if he loses the few collectivist garments he had left along the way.
Castroism no longer needs to smile for the cameras having behind that sculpture of a José Martí so sad that it makes you want not to look. We are in times of absolute imposition and terror. Why do you need a parade?
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US President Biden visits Irish sites, including the Sanctuary of Our Lady of Knock, Mayo-Roscommon Hospice, and the North Mayo Heritage and Genealogical Centre, before delivering a farewell speech in Ballina. Thousands of people gather to hear him speak. Taoiseach Leo Varadkar praises the success of the visit and confirms that the issue of undocumented Irish citizens in the US was not discussed. Biden is emotional when viewing a plaque at the Mayo hospice dedicated to his late son, Beau Biden.
US President Joe Biden has begun the final day of his Irish visit, visiting the Sanctuary of Our Lady of Knock with a private prayer at the Apparition Chapel before moving on to the Mayo-Roscommon Hospice in Castlebar where he viewed a plaque commemorating his late son Beau, who passed away at the age of 46 in 2015. He then stopped at the North Mayo Heritage and Genealogical Centre in Crossmolina where he was briefed about his Mayo roots before delivering a speech outside St Muredach’s Cathedral in Ballina where thousands of people had gathered. The Taoiseach Leo Varadkar has hailed the visit, calling it very successful with no difficult conversations about Ireland’s tax status, and stressing that Ireland is not a tax haven. However, the issue of undocumented Irish in the US was not discussed on this visit, although this was on the agenda during Mr Varadkar’s visit to Washington last month.
President Biden’s Irish visit includes visits to Knock airport, Sanctuary of Our Lady of Knock, Mayo-Roscommon Hospice, North Mayo Heritage and Genealogical Centre, and St. Muredach’s Cathedral in Ballina. His visit has sparked a surge in transatlantic holiday bookings.
President Biden made his third and final day of his Irish visit, starting with a visit to the Sanctuary of our Lady of Knock for private prayer. He then visited the Mayo-Roscommon Hospice in Castlebar to honour the memory of his son Beau, who died of brain cancer in 2015, and stopped at the North Mayo Heritage and Genealogical Centre in Crossmolina. He delivered a speech outside St Muredach’s Cathedral in Ballina, which included waxing lyrical about Irish poets and Irishness, and also praised the Irish peace process. His visit has sparked a surge in transatlantic holiday bookings, with reservations up 93% so far in 2023 compared to last year. Tánaiste Micheál Martin spoke on RTÉ radio’s Morning Ireland about the peace process and how it is seen as one of the most successful interventions from an American foreign policy perspective in terms of bringing peace to the island of Ireland.