Tag Archives: Northern Ireland

silence: in church and the sea…

This morning, Andrew and I woke up at home, got up, had some breakfast and then went to Church. As I said on twitter…

We arrived at St George’s just before two friends from Changing Attitude Ireland and they joined us in the pew. Throughout Mass it was clear that the LGBT community is welcome in the church. I knew I was welcome in St George’s, now I am finding out that Andrew continues to be surprised and pleased at how he is welcomed and valued there too. Among the hymns we sang were Blessed John Henry Newman’s Firmly I believe, and truly, God is Three and God is One. Also, O Jesus I have promised to serve thee to the end. The hymn before the prayer of consecration was my favourite, Let all mortal flesh keep silence.

It is in the silence of our hearts, that we find and listen our God. We find that He loves us, whole, complete, and sinners as we are. In the peace and quiet of St George’s today I felt the love of God, something which was rather absent from the Cathedral Church of the Holy Trinity, Dublin yesterday.

After lunch, we returned for the Northern Ireland Maritime Service of Thanksgiving and Commemoration of those who have no known grave but the sea, which was attended by H.M. Lord Lieutenant of the County Borough of Belfast, Dame Mary Peters, D.B.E..

This was particularly poignant for me this year as I now have a connexion to the Battle of the Atlantic through my husband. Andrew’s grandfather, Alexander McFarland served on M.V. Victor Ross, which was torpedoed and sunk by U-boat U-43. The simple service had music from Sumsion which I remember singing in Ripon, and even remember trying to learn the accompaniment on the organ. I’ll let you listen to it as sung by the choir of Ely Cathedral.

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Help us all by telling PSNI about those who plant hoax devices

Police Service of Northern Ireland

Police Service of Northern Ireland (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Thankfully the evacuation of Omagh Police Station last night was due to a hoax device. Sadly, even hoax devices can be used to create terror in the lives of our police and of our communities across Northern Ireland. I call on anyone with any information about those who plant hoax devices and real devices to contact the PSNI about this. It is essential that those responsible are brought before the courts for justice.

The PSNI can be contacted on 0845 600 8000 for non-emergency reporting. In an emergency do phone 999.

Originally published on Michael Carchrie Campbell

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Those who try to create terror must not be let to win.

Police Service of Northern Ireland

Badge of the Police Service of Northern Ireland (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

With reports from Chris Lindsay, BBC journalist on NewsLine that Omagh Police station is being evacuated due to a suspicious package,

I sincerely hope and pray that nothing untoward is found. My thoughts are with all serving our community in the Police Service of Northern Ireland at this time. Those who continually seek to create terror in Northern Ireland need to know that we will not put up with this. You will be found by the PSNI and brought before the courts.

 

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Dispicable blood ban must be lifted in Northern Ireland

Health Minister urges people to give blood

The DUP Health Minister urging as many as possible to give blood within a month of taking office. Photo from DUP Flickr page

Once again, Northern Ireland lags behind progress in the rest of the United Kingdom. The health minister at Stormont, Edwin Poots MLA of the DUP has said that he will not be rushed on lifting the ban on gay men giving blood. Last October, he was quizzed by the health committee in the Northern Ireland Assembly and told them,

I am not going to be rushed, pushed or harassed on an issue that is about public safety

The Minister continued to state his position:

We are not west Brits here: we are Northern Ireland, and we are a devolved Administration. We receive advice, and we have civil servants and others to give us advice. I am not some direct rule Minister. I am in charge here, and I make the decisions. I will seek to do that within the law, I will seek to do what is right for the population that I serve and I will give due consideration to everything.

The Minister, may be doing everything he can within the law, but does his reasoning actually stand up to tests? Stephen Glenn of the NI Liberal Democrats argues otherwise. Even before the Minister gave evidence to the health committee, Stephen said:

If the Minister is still contemplating his decision after his rather final words in Spetember (sic) we should applaud him for doing so. But like too much LGBT legislation in Northern Ireland we don’t want the devolved powers to kick it into the long grass hoping that people will forget about it, only for central government to force it through. Let’s have some action after all the Belfast Agreement says that all policy should be tested against LGBT criteria among others.

Now, I am a gay man who is not able to give blood. For a very simple reason: I am living with HIV. However, while I may not give blood and for a very, very good reason, I see no reason why Northern Ireland should be lagging behind the rest of the UK on this issue.

The advice given by NHS Blood and Transplant (for England & North Wales) says:

You should never give blood if:
* You have ever had syphilis, HTLV (Human T – lymphotropic virus), HIV or hepatitis C.
* You’ve ever worked as a prostitute.
* You’ve ever injected yourself with drugs – even once.

You should not give blood for 12 months after sex with:
* A man (if you’re a male). Men who have had anal or oral sex with another man (with or without a condom) are deferred from blood donation for 12 months.
* A man who has had sex with another man (if you’re a female).
* A prostitute.
* Anyone who has ever injected themselves with drugs.
* Anyone with haemophilia or a related blood clotting disorder who has received clotting factor concentrates.
* Anyone of any race who has been sexually active in parts of the world where AIDS/HIV is very common. This includes countries in Africa.

Here in Northern Ireland, it is difficult to find any advice on the NI Blood Transfusion Service website. Certainly, I have not been able to find any… Perhaps the NIBTS is as embarrassed by the Minister’s stance as I am.

National Union of Students-Union of Students i...

National Union of Students-Union of Students in Ireland (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

This week, Northern Ireland’s students are being asked to come on board with putting more pressure on Edwin Poots to live this ban. Many of us know that NUS-USI campaigns on many issues, not just student-related ones. The organisation articulates the views of students on many issues including delivering fairness and equality in society. Speaking ahead of this year’s conference, President of NUS-USI Adrianne Peltz has said:

For a ban to exist on gay men giving blood is an absolute disgrace as it flies in the face of equality and fairness. Think of the appalling message that this ban sends out. The fact that this blood donation ban is being lifted elsewhere but still exists here brings shame on Northern Ireland.

For government to fail to lift the ban would be scandalous. As well as this being a key equality issue, we also need more blood donors here and this is literally a matter of life and death for a significant number of people in Northern Ireland.

NUS-USI LGBT Officer, Chris Geddis, said:

We need to see this ban overturned immediately and we will keep the pressure on the Minister until he delivers fairness on this issue. Government must reflect on what having this ban says to the rest of the world about Northern Ireland. Northern Ireland simply must be a society that has equality and respect for everyone, and this ban must be removed as a matter of urgency.

Anyone who wants to put pressure on the Minister, should write to:

Minister for Health, Social Services and Public Safety
Room C5.10
Castle Buildings
Stormont Estate
Belfast
BT4 3SQ

You can telephone the Minister’s Private Secretary on 028 9052 0643
Alternatively you can email the Private Office at private.office@dhsspsni.gov.uk
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Maundy money reporting goes awry at the Beeb.

Once again, the BBC has equated the UK with England….

To mark her Diamond Jubilee, the Queen handed out money to people from all of the UK’s 44 Christian dioceses. – BBC News

I think that this should read,

from all of the Church of England’s 44 dioceses.

There are many more dioceses in the whole of the UK, listing only the Anglican ones you get 19 more:

Church of Ireland (Dioceses with territory in N. Ireland)
Armagh
Clogher
Connor
Derry
Down & Dromore
Kilmore, Elphin & Ardagh

Scottish Episcopal Church
Aberdeen & Orkney
Argyll & the Isles
Brechin
Edinburgh
Glasgow & Galloway
Moray, Ross & Caithness
St Andrews, Dunkeld & Dunblane

The Church in Wales
Bangor
Llandaff
Monmouth
St Asaph
St Davids
Swansea & Brecon

So perhaps the article should read,

To mark her Diamond Jubilee, The Queen handed out money to people from all of the UK’s 63 Anglican dioceses.

And all of this is before we get on to the Dioceses of the Catholic Church: England & Wales (22); Scotland (8) and N. Ireland (6) making another 36… and this is before we start to examine the many differing parts of the Orthodox Churches in the UK.

It really is about time that the BBC learnt the difference between the various parts of the United Kingdom. It is also about time that the BBC took some care about how it reports matters of faith.

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