Daily Ireland: Shell issue ‘has its roots in shady era’: Sun 12 Feb 2006 03:29 AM EST
by David Lynch
11/02/2006
The row between Shell Ireland and the Rossport Five over the controversial
Corrib gas pipeline is a “brutal battle” where there will only be one winner,
according to broadcaster Eamonn Dunphy. Mr Dunphy told an audience in Trinity
College that he believed the roots of the Corrib pipeline controversy lie in the
‘shady corrupt era’ of former governments.
Mr Dunphy was speaking at a public interview on Thursday evening with Micheal O’
Seighin of the Rossport Five, organised by Shell to Sea Dublin campaign: “This
is a hugely important case that made a lot of headlines last year, but the media
tends to come and go from stories and not follow them until the end,” said Mr
Dunphy.
“It has to be said that governments and multi-nationals do not like publicity.
In this case, it is a major scandal that has its roots, in my opinion, in the
Charlie Haughey, Ray Burke era of corruption in this country.
“And this story has its roots in that shady corrupt era when these boys were
creaming it for themselves. The situation is now that the Irish people will have
to buy back our own gas, our own resources at the market rate.”
Mr O’ Seighin told the event that the people of his community would not benefit
from the development of a pipeline.
“There is nothing in it for our community at all,” he said.
Mr O’Seighin is back in the High Court on Monday along with the other members of
the Rospport Five.
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