
14 April 2015
NEWS NAMA
victorious. Finally, he returns home
with new-found powers to bequeath
blessings on those he left behind.
Here’s a local adaptation of Campbell’s
heroic sequence. A property developer
or banker realises that his avaricious,
hedonistic and spendthrift behaviour
has got him into a bit of bother. He must
flee the country and keep his head down
in some luxury foreign resort, pining for
home and avoiding the newspapers as he
swings his golf clubs and swills chilled
prosecco. While enduring the harsh life
of the exile his mates, and advisors,
keep him abreast of developments back
home.
When the time is right he will meta-
morphose from a poor emigrant to a
property developer again. Sure aren’t
most of his debts written off and aren’t
the people of Ireland crying out for him
to return and build much needed houses?
With asking prices rising by 2.2 per cent
nationally in the first quarter of 2015,
it’s his duty to convert them from rent-
ers to home owners, to give something
back. It all comes to him in a dream. It
was thus with St Patrick.
Of course modern Irish mythology,
aided by seanchaí David McWilliams,
created its own heroic types. The bit-
part players were the house-buyers and
breakfast-roll addicts; the toadies were
the financial institutions, some elected
representatives – and, many would say
– certain sections of the media; the aco-
lytes also came from sections of the
financial, political and media world.
Their heroes were the builders, the
developers and their financiers, whose
swagger was a foil to the cowardice and
ineptitude of those who should have
known better. Their disdain for the
humble PAYE workers equalled Coriola-
nus’ disdain for the Roman plebeians:
“What’s the matter, you dissentious
rogues,
That, rubbing the poor itch of your
opinion,
Make yourselves scabs?”.
The names of individual heroes are
already immortal and each reader will
have a favourite. The likes of David
Drumm, Sean Quinn, Sean Dunne, Sean
FitzPatrick (so many Seans) and Johnny
Ronan will be exam revision material for
a future generation. The waste-laying
Fianna Fáil-Green coalition government
will be neo-Cromwellians for our credu-
lous descendants.
Isn’t it just Panglossian to recollect
that the 22 builders of destiny, the
speculating wing of FF and FG, armed
with wrecking balls and cement mixers,
had borrowed €25.5bn between them?
€8.8 bn of this was used to buy develop-
ment land. This is what was uncovered
by the PwC report into Irish financial
institutions commissioned by the Cen-
tral Bank after the bank guarantee in
2008. One can only imagine how close
to Hitler’s bunker that room in govern-
ment buildings was on bailout night in
2008.
Ireland’s government and central
bank acted as a money factory for these
touts. So called ‘officials’ were in the pid-
dling halfpenny place compared to these
peddlers of builders’ rubble.
Having lain low in abject luxury while
passing themselves off as ‘victims’ they
are now weaving themselves back into
the fabric of Irish society. Sean Quinn’s
return to his Cavan-Fermanagh border
principality in January is rivalled only
by Caesar’s return to Rome after con-
quering Gaul. This was made possible
after a local consortium paid €100m
to the Aventas Group, which took over
when Quinn Inc. went kaput, to buy back
a substantial slice of Quinn’s old empire.
All may soon be forgiven for all that off-
shore-y, Russian-y confusion, though
Judge Peter Kelly had meanly said that
in all his years dealing with “fraud and
chicanery” he had never seen anything
like the Quinns. But things are looking
up again for Team Quinn. That didn’t
take long, did it?
A much-celebrated player who looks
like he’d keep a dagger in his toga is
Johnny Ronan. Fresh from bankrupting
Treasury Holdings with debts of €2.7bn,
€1.7bn of which was owed to NAMA he
has finalised a deal with two multi-bil-
lion dollar funds, Colony Capital and
M&G to secure his leave-taking from
Nama.
Between them they will pay over
€250 million to buy out Ronan’s per-
sonal debts of over €290m. The Sunday
Independent cannot get enough of it.
Most ludicrous though, is the fact that
Ronan and fellow developer Paddy McK-
illen recently refinanced debts on the
Treasury Building wherein resides the
headquarters of NAMA.
Ronan is also the largest shareholder
in Connaught House, which houses the
former Anglo Irish Bank. This is the
stuff of Lewis Carroll’s ‘Looking Glass’.
More ludicrously again, in view of the
geopolitics, the deal is backed by Deut-
sche Bank.
It seems that you never pay for your
misdeeds in this story; you just sit back
and wait for the gods to smile on you
again.
Meanwhile the radical left, rather
than picketing the Treasury Building,
Avantas and Gorse Hill is diverted deal-
ing with a crisis generated by… water
charges.
In March 2014 a report by the Hous-
ing Agency revealed that 80,000
residential units will be required over
the next five years to meet the demand
for homes. It won’t be long before the
country is overrun again with whis-
tling bricklayers, bouncy castles and
the Château de Chasselas. With ne’er a
lesson learnt. •
Johnny Ronan,
fresh from
bankrupting
Treasury
Holdings
with debts of
€2.7bn, has
finalised a
deal with two
funds to buy
out Ronan’s
personal
debts
of over €290m
“