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President stands over his remarks on the EU debt crisis

The President Michael D Higgins says he feels it is appropriate for him to contribute to the deba...
Newstalk
Newstalk

10.48 3 May 2013


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President stands over his rema...

President stands over his remarks on the EU debt crisis

Newstalk
Newstalk

10.48 3 May 2013


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The President Michael D Higgins says he feels it is appropriate for him to contribute to the debate over the EU debt crisis.

He says he is concious of his role under the constitition and the oath he has taken in the Presidential office, and he feels his comments fall within that.

In an interview with the Financial Times, the President said there needs to be a radical rethink on how EU leaders handle the economic crisis, and the eurozone faces a moral crisis.

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Speaking in Dublin this morning, Michael D Higgins said people don't have to agree with him, but he feels its important to contribute to the debate.

The President was speaking at Dublin City Hall, where he presented the 2013 Front Line Defenders Award for Human Rights Defenders at Risk to anti-slavery campaigner Biram Dah Abeid of Mauritania, founder and director of Initiative for the Resurgence of the Abolitionist Movement, Initiative pour la Résurgence du Mouvement Abolitionniste (IRA).

Biram Dah Abeid was selected from a total of 100 nominees from 40 countries on the basis of his exceptional courage defending the rights of the more than 500,000 people who are held as slaves in Mauritania.

Speaking at the Award ceremony Front Line Defenders Executive Director Mary Lawlor said “It is entirely fitting that we honour Biram Dah Abeid's work to end slavery in Mauritania in this room dominated by the statue of Daniel O'Connell - the liberator - the man who worked to end Ireland's own version of slavery with the ending of the penal laws and Catholic emancipation. Biram Dah Abeid follows in those heroic footsteps”

Despite the legal abolition of slavery in Mauritania it still remains an endemic there, accounting for between 10% and 20% of the population.

Human rights defenders who speak out and challenge the practice are targeted by those who refuse to accept change.

Biram Dah Abeid has been threatened, defamed and harassed because of his work defending human rights and against slavery in Mauritania. He has been arrested and ill-treated on several occasions and in April 2012 he was “disappeared” for several weeks into a secret, high-security government facility, without being able to contact to his family and without any legal assistance.

IRA Mauritania and other human rights defenders in the country believe he would have been killed but for the international outcry. He was released in September 2012 and continues his work inside Mauritania.

Despite the constant harassment and threat of arrest Biram Dah Abeid has sworn to continue the struggle until slavery is finally eliminated in Mauritania.


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