
27
Was there a planned, behind the scenes
campaign to smear the reputation of the com-
munity in response to the popularity of The
Rossport Five? In October , almost ex-
actly a year after their release, a large force
of Gardaí was sent to Ballinaboy where they
began to physically engage with local people
participating in the ongoing, non violent di-
rect action to prevent the construction of an
onshore gas refinery. A baton charge ensued
and many people were injured. Since then, the
victims have, in the media narrative, become
the aggressors. Community campaigners,
outraged by the perceived inversion of truth
which the national media mostly repeat with-
out question, can scarcely get their experienc-
es heard, let alone reported. The media now
frequently send crime correspondents to cov-
er the story and the Irish Times and Sunday
Independent now deploy their “Security Cor-
respondents”. These reporters are invariably
obliged to work closely with the Garda as the
primary source of their information.
The community’s protest campaign is
said by some to be functioning as a ‘recruit-
ing ground’ for dissident IRA terrorists. The
protest in Erris includes people with politi-
cal views from left to right. Willie Corduff
says “this would have been a Fianna Fáil area
mostly”. The presence of Sinn Fein support-
ers among the campaigners is nevertheless
frequently used to imply unspecified ‘sinister’
motives. Not to be outdone for invective by
Kevin Myers at the Independent, Peter Mur-
tagh – the opinion-column editor of the Irish
Times – has made a habit of weighing in with
tendentious views on this subject. Here is his
attempt to link the Erris protest to the murder
of Constable Stephen Carroll.
“Asked if the campaign against Shell wel-
comed the support it gets from Republican
Sinn Féin, thought by the PSNI and Garda to be
the political wing of the Continuity IRA which
murdered Const Stephen Carroll, Ó Mongáin
[a protestor] said: “We welcome support from
everyone and every quarter, we won’t deny
support from anyone.” (Irish Times th
March ).
Peter Murtagh has now written two opin-
ion pieces of Myersesque vituperation about
Rossport, the second of which finishes, “Willie
Corduff ‘very badly beaten up’ by Shell’s mer-
cenary thugs? I don’t know because I wasn’t
there and I’ve yet to see supporting evidence.
But that won’t deter some people pronouncing
it as fact”. It is an extraordinary journalistic
vice that he combines such venom with such
factual unawareness. The fact is Mr Corduff
says he was beaten up. Photos obtained by Vil-
lage, taken while he was in hospital and in the
days after his release, clearly show the bruis-
ing sustained by Willie Corduff all over his
head, face and body. Murtagh says, “ I asked
Shell to Sea last Wednesday whether Corduff
would detail his injuries and publish his hos-
pital records to confirm his medical condition
on admission. The request was acknowledged
but I have yet to obtain the information”. The
information has been sought from the hospi-
tal by Mary Corduff, who was asked to submit
her request in writing. Maybe Murtagh’s ven-
om was premature in the absence of the facts
and in the absence of an attempt to talk to Mr
Corduff himself or his family or the hospital.
Why does such a reputable journalist, one who
enjoyed a stellar career in the Guardian and
was editor of the Sunday Tribune before tak-
ing his position in the Irish Times, take such
an extraordinarily partisan approach for Go-
liath on this issue?
The irony is that when it comes to violence
and sinister behaviour, it is the government
and Shell who have a case to answer accord-
ing to many Erris people who say they have
suffered at the hands of both the Gardaí and
IRMS the security firm employed by Shell.
There is a lot of publicly available video evi-
dence which appears to support that conten-
tion. A former employee of IRMS in Co Mayo,
Limerick man Michael Dwyer, was recently
shot dead in Bolivia suspected by the Bolivian
government of being involved in a mercenary
plot to assassinate the country’s president,
Evo Morales. Though there does not seem to
be a link, it is notable that Bolivia is yet an-
other sovereign, democratic country where
private oil and gas interests are doing their
utmost to prise ownership of energy resources
out of public hands.
It is scarcely reported in the mainstream
media that two of the four local groups oppos-
ing the present configuration of the project,
Pobal Chill Chomain and Pobal Le Cheile (Shell
to Sea and The Rossport Solidarity Camp be-
ing the other two), have put forward a con-
sidered, practical and viable alternative that
would permit Shell to bring the gas ashore at
Glinsk - away from homes and from the seri-
ously endangered drinking water supply at
Carrowmore Lake and from the special are-
as of conservation threatened with destruc-
tion by the current plan. Shell has rejected
this compromise claiming that cliff faces at
the alternative site are an insuperable obsta-
cle. This is an industry that can extract oil
from K feet below the sea bed in the Shen-
zi field off the coast of Louisiana. Neverthe-
less, it is still the community who are depicted
by Shell and their many media supporters of
being difficult and uncompromising because
they decline ‘discussions’ which require them
to accept much of the Consortium’s plan as a
foregone conclusion before those so called dis-
cussions can even begin.
On hearing of the attack on Corduff, offic-
ers of the Goldman Environmental Prize in
California were seriously alarmed. Recipi-
ents of the prize from all over the world have
in recent days written to President Mary Ma-
cAleese and Taoiseach Brian Cowen protest-
ing the treatment of Corduff and urging the
Irish government to reconsider the foreign
owned consortium’s plans for Corrib Gas.
Archbishop Desmond Tutu of South Africa
has also issued a statement in support of Cor-
duff and called for an independent interna-
“The protest in Erris includes people
with political views from left to right.
Willie Corduff says “this would have been a
Fianna Fáil area mostly.”