turn’ in power as if the spoils of office were a mat-
ter of getting in line for a go of the jukebox.
The State’s reckless disregard for the wel-
fare of the people, exemplified by the glaring
health and safety gaps in the Corrib gas project,
has been amply documented in its broader real-
ity, as the Ryan Report, Hep C scandal and scan-
dalous conditions for children in care fail to
move the Dáil to decisive action. It will be inter-
esting to observe whether the memoirs of the
two Éamons (Ó Cuív of Fianna Fáil and Ryan
of the Green Party) will include the town-hall
meeting at Inbhear last April, an event which
should rank as one of the most passionate pub-
lic encounters between the government and the
governed in recent years. The public meeting
with the Ministers took place in the aftermath
of the assault on Willie Corduff at the Shell com-
pound on April th. The local people, whether
naïve or amnesiac, believed that their elected
representatives had finally come to understand
the scale of the crisis and alienation within the
community.
At least people squeezed into the small
community hall, while others watched through
open windows, despite the freezing weather.
Ciarán Ó Murchú, spokesperson for Pobal le
Chéile, voice of the business community, opened
the encounter. It quickly became apparent that
the Ministers had come with the sole purpose
of telling the community that the government
was powerless to act, powerless to intervene but
and it suddenly seemed a long journey for such
a short message - the Ministers felt their pain.
The response was remarkable and is obligatory
viewing (available free on DVD) for anyone
seeking to understand the significance of the
Erris conflict, a three-hour epic in which dozens
of people spoke out, combining passion, anger
and the trademark forensic knowledge of all
aspects of the gas project. The Ministers fiddled
with their pens and adopted the glazed-eye look,
a little embarrassed, demonstrating the earnest
Ministerial staring-over-heads technique. The
meeting began on the last day of April and ended
on Mayday, after midnight had struck. For a
brief instant, it seemed like we were living in
another country, where the people spoke and the
politicians listened. It seemed that if the energy
generated by one small rural community could
be replicated throughout Ireland, not only would
the government be shaken to its foundations
but the natural gas needs for the nation might
be met without any pipeline being built. It was
of course an illusion. The Ministers put up with
it, the media ignored it and the locals returned
to their homes. The ‘real’ event happened the
following day as the Ministers attended their
North West Mayo Forum, a pro-gas lobby
comprising gardaí, council officials and business
people, none of whom live close to the project.
Fr Michael Nallen, the local priest, denounced
the Forum as a ministerial attempt to create a
‘manufactured community’.
As An Bord Pleanála prepares to deliver its
verdict on the onshore pipeline route, the com-
munity remains steadfast in its opposition to the
project in its current form yet ready and willing
to sit down with anyone who can offer a compro-
mise. The Inbhear meeting, the beating of Willie
Corduff and the sinking of Pat O’Donnell’s boat
have radicalised the moderates and deepened
the sense of injustice. One of the most remark-
able comments made at the Inbhear meeting
was by Ciarán ÓMurchú, a skilled mediator and
former Air Corps pilot; and managing director
of Coláiste Uisce college; “We cannot trust Shell,
we have to take the law into our own hands”. This
comment from someone regarded as the most
moderate of the moderates was the final evi-
dence, if it was needed, that local patience is at
an end. The Erris campaign is enjoying a grad-
ual national resurgence as Shell to Sea opens
branches in Gort, Kildare, Killybegs and Kinsale,
complementing active groups in Cork, Galway,
Dublin and Limerick. The group is devoting time
to research and public-awareness events, broad-
ening the support base. This shift in tactics has
had one unexpected dividend as Shell security
workers, vital buffers against the action element
of the campaign, are put on shoRter hours. The
security staff at the terminal have seen their
working hours reduced from to a week,
leaving them with a wage
they claim is barely above
the dole. The workers com-
plain that the company is
rewarding their ‘loyalty’
with disdain after years
of protest which has left
them estranged from their
neighbours. This rare pub-
lic expression of disquiet
from behind the wire
should alert the campaign-
ers that deserting the bat-
tlefield on occasion can be
more useful than fighting
on hugely unequal terms.
The combined power of the world’s third larg-
est corporation, Royal Dutch Shell, with a pliable
government eager to court foreign investment,
should have given the Corrib gas developers an
easy ride to the finishing line, with gas expected
to flow by . Six years later, the project has
yet to secure a definitive onshore pipeline route,
while legal challenges look likely to delay the
project further. As the political system enters
stormy waters, the people of Erris have shown
how passion and ideas can invigorate the social
landscape, inviting inevitable conflict but also
offering a vision of another country should Irish
voters wake from deep slumber and follow their
poets rather than their politicians.
“dozens of people spoke out,
combining passion, anger
and the trademark forensic
knowledge of all aspects of
the gas project. The Ministers
fiddled with their pens”
Rossport, Ireland. Just a dream?