[Search for users] [Overall Top Noters] [List of all Conferences] [Download this site]

Conference tallis::celt

Title:Celt Notefile
Moderator:TALLIS::DARCY
Created:Wed Feb 19 1986
Last Modified:Tue Jun 03 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:1632
Total number of notes:20523

1395.0. "Discrimination, weed it out" by ESSB::PBUTLER () Thu Jun 30 1994 09:55

	Yesterday, Lord Justice Carswell of the Northern Ireland Appeal Court 
	upheld a finding by the Fair Employment Commission that the
	Belfast Port Authority Employers (BPES) had discriminated 
	against Roman Catholics in favour of Protestants in 1988.

	15 jobs in Belfast Port were advertised and 164 people applied. 
	135 Protestants and 29 Catholics. But no Catholics made it onto the
	shortlist of 41 for the 15 jobs.

	In a lower Court, BPEA had claimed that only those applicants
	who had substantial connection with the local branch of the 
	(predominantly Protestant) Amalgamated Trade and General Workers 
	Union (ATGWU) were included on the shortlist, so that there would 
	be industrial peace. 

	The Appeals Court found that 6 of the 41 Protestants in the short
	list has, however, no connection with the ATGWU and concluded 
	that another basis, sectarian disrimination, was in fact used.

	--------------------------------------------------------------

	GOOD to see the Fair Employment Commission (funded by the 
	British Government) standing up for Catholic's rights.

	BAD to see such blatant discrimination against Catholics. This is
	the sort of behaviour that generates the divisions into which 
	step violent people.  Wonder has it changed since 1988 ?.

	/Peter



T.RTitleUserPersonal
Name
DateLines
1395.1TALLIS::DARCYAlpha Migration ToolsThu Jun 30 1994 10:584
    So what happens now to BPES now?  Are they forced to hire more
    Catholics?  Are they monetarily fined?  Or is this only a
    warning?  What power has the Fair Employment Commission?
                                           
1395.2Pillar of Peace: economic justiceKOALA::HOLOHANTue Nov 29 1994 16:09105

                               Irish Echo
                             Nov 23-28 1994
                                 Letters
                      Pillar of Peace: economic justice
                       By Inez and Vincent McCormack


Human rights must be central to discussions on Northern Ireland now
taking place involving the administrations of ireland, britain, the
United States and the European Union.

The British government has on six occasions since the foundation of the
Northern Ireland state in 1920 given commitments to equal treatment of
all citizens. At first the promise was that discrimination would not take
place. More recently --since 1976--the commitment was that the government
would end it. We became involved in the Macbride Principles campaign
because of the failure of internal mechanisms to prodeuce real change.

It is often assumed, both by the media and many politicians in Ireland
North and South that inequality is much reduced, that remaining
discrimination can be accounted for by historical factors rather than
current practices, and the political and human rights significance of
discrimination has diminished. This is an example of how propaganda and
self-imposed censorship has led to a serious distortion of reality. The
London Independent, meanwhile, recently reported that "evidence of persisting
discriminationis provided on an almost weekly basis by fair-employment
tribunals."

Findings from the Fair Employment Tribunal confirm that discrimination,
often of the most blatant and ugly kind, remains a reality. The number of
complaints to the tribunal has been rising in the last four years, with
the total paid in awards and settlements to date reaching [pounds] 1
million, about one half paid by publicly funded employers.

A disturbingly high number of tribunal cases have resulted in court
settlements. The tribunal has, therefore, been unable to make a ruling.
Some of these cases have involved publicly funded bodies, and since the
terms of such settlements are confidental, the public does not even know
the size of the bill.

Probably the single most important factor that determined that the
government could not avoid the introduction of new legislation was the
revelation in 1987 that Catholic males were 2.5 times more likely to be
unemployed than Protestants. Yet 1991 census figures show that the
differential is substantially unchanged, with the figure for males at
2.2. For females the figure had risen to 1.7, so overall the ratio has
shown virtually no change.

New figures presented by professor R. Rowthorn of Cambridge University
show that Catholic economic disadvantage has worsened in recent years. In
1991, the percentage of male Catholics without work was 43 percent, while
for non-Catholics it was 26 percent. Averaging figures from the
late 1980s, the percentage of male Catholics without work in the 20-24
years old range was 48 percent while for non-Catholics it was 26 percent.

When the 1989 Fair Employment Act was being debated , the British
government rejected a number of recommendations that would have increased
its impact but promised to hold a review of its effectiveness after five
years. It is already running behind schedule, since the report of the
review is not due until the end of 1995. Even if its recommendations are
acted upon it is unlikely to be the end of the millennium before they
have any effect.

We have, in any case, reason to doubt the seriousness of the exercise.
The review is being coordinated  by the Central Community Relations Unit,
a branch of the Northern Ireland Civil Service. We must question the
independence of the review, since government intends to review itself.

On St Patrick's Day 1991 in New York, the British government announced
its intention to introduce equality guidelines for government policy. Six
months later it was forced to withdraw the guidelines following a storm
of protest at their inadequacy. Amended guidelines were finally
introduced at the beginning of 1994.

In 1990 the government announced that  it intended to target disadvantage
and social need, and it adopted this as a third spending priority, after
security and the ecomomy. Some four years later, only one of 13
Government departments has even embarked on the program.

What is urgently required is the comprehensive reconstruction of the
northern economy to tackle inequality on the basis of need. This could
promote peace and reconciliation by impacting upon the poorest
Protestants as well as the poorest Catholics. The powerful White House
Committee putting together an aid package for the North must have
assurances that the American dollars will be used fairly.

Also, recently there has been a welcome recognition of the need to
restructure the International Fund for Ireland so that it addresses
inequality and community development. For the sake of its own credibility,
the Fund must have a transparency of purpose, clear accountability and,
crucially must directly involve those who are most affected by inequality.
By demanding a new economic and political deal we can ensure that every
dollar, deutschmark and ecu--and every pound sterling and punt--spent in
Northern Ireland can be used twice: once for jobs and once for justice.
That would not be a bad return. The peace process desperately needs both.

(Inez McCormack, a signatory to the MacBride Principles, is a trade union
official in Northern Ireland. Vincent McCormack, her husband, is a
lecturer at the University of Ulster. Both are veteran civil rights
activists.)



1395.3True FactBELFST::MCCOMBI'm glad I live in Carrickfergus....Wed Nov 30 1994 04:5618
    re .0
    
    All the facts in this are true. Now all companies employing more that 25
    have to  submit their religious breakdown to the fair employment
    agency and must declare in all job advertisements that adhere to the
    agencies rules.
    
    I believe that Digital's Human Resources document on this subject was
    published in here on a previous occasion.
    
    Incidently last week saw the first advertisement for jobs in the RUC
    which asked specifically for Roman Catholic recruits.
    
    Lets hope these posts will be filled.
    
    Rgds
    
    GAreth