Death in the valley
The death has occured of Mr Bertie Kennedy of Ballyneale, Carrick-on-Suir, County Tipperary. Mr Kennedy was 37.
He became ill last August, suffering from pains in the chest and breathlessness. In all, he was seen by six doctors.
According to his wife, all the doctors asked him where he came in contact with chemicals. Mr Kennedy did not
smoke and when lung cancer was diagnosed one of the doctors remarked that he had never seen this sort of
cancer in a farmer before. Bertie Kennedy told Magill last May that one of the doctors said that his cancer had
something to do with chemicals. His wife said that another doctor had asked him where he had come in contact with
asbestos.
Bertie Kennedy had no contact with asbestos. Nor had he any contact with chemicals. The problems on his farm
began in 1981 when his cattle began to behave strangely. Last May he told Magill: "I heard them in the barn one night
and I went out to see what was happening. When I went in they were holding their heads up and sniffing the air.
Then they all suddenly bolted down to the bottom of the shed and started to pile on top of each other. Three and four
high they were. I've never seen anything like it before and I've been in Ballyneale for 27 years. One bullock got his
back broken with all of them piling on top of one another. The shed was 135 feet long and they all piled themselves
into the top 15 feet. "
The problems, he told Magill, recurred the following winter: "These were different cattle in different
sheds. They started to tremble and bolted into the corner. They could be standing there looking like they were dead
to all the world and then they'd go all of a sudden.
One day they were standing in the field and they started shaking and one bullock ran and they all bolted out of the
field. But then they came back into the yard and gathered around me like flies. "
Bertie Kennedy's problems occurred at the same time as Paddy O'Meara, whose land is on the other side of the Suir
river, had problems. Mr O'Meara attributes the problems on his farm and his own health problems to the Merck Sharp
and Dohme factory in Ballydine. Both the Department of the Environment and South Tipperary County Council have
been aware of Mr O'Meara's problems for almost two years. They have never monitored his land and never
attempted to get evidence of his medical condition. The Department of Health has also been aware of his problems
and has also done nothing about it.
Bertie Kennedy's problems also started at the same time as John Hanrahan's. 116 cattle have died on John
Hanrahan's farm since 1981. Hanrahan attributes his cattle's deaths to the Merck Sharp and Dohme factory in
Ballydine. The Hanrahan's dog died of cancer in the same month as Bertie Kennedy's dog died of cancer.
It is a year now since any of the land around the factory has been monitored. The monitoring ceased at the
suggestion of Mark Lynch of the Department of Agriculture and with the agreement of J.P. O'Callaghan, County
Engineer for South Tipperary. The reason given was that John Hanrahan refused to hand over veterinary evidence
which he had obtained at his own expense. There was no reason given why the land of the other farmers should
not be monitored.
The Department of Agriculture wanted the information which John Hanrahan had commissioned in order to know
what to look for in his animals and soil. When he refused, on the basis that he is holding it for a court case, they said
they could do nothing. Earlier this year, however, they asked him if they could do tests on his land without the
information. He hesitated, but a month ago notified them to say that he would cooperate with them. He has since
received no reply. The Department, on the other hand, are still saying that he won't cooperate.
At the moment then there are no monitors around the Merck Sharp and Dohme factory and no plans for any. There
was no post mortem done on Bertie Kennedy. When Magill contacted his doctors in May they responded by
attacking Bertie Kennedy and his wife for speaking to the press. Garret FitzGerald's "personal concern" about the
matter has not even resulted in one of his representatives visiting the farm. The inter-departmental 'committee has
come to nothing. At a recent County Council meeting Senator Michael Ferris said that if there was anything the
council should be doing about the situation and which they were not, they should now do so. "If something happens
afterwards we should never forgive our management team or ourselves for sitting by," he said.
Once more with Feeney
This is what John Feeney wrote in his column in the Evening Herald on Monday June 27: "But towards the end of the
evening (a function in honour of Brian Lenihan), Brian Lenihan, accompanied by exMinister Gene Fitzgerald,
approached Bracken's leader, Mick Gilmore, and demanded republican songs. Gilmore refused claiming that his
group were serious musicians playing their own repertoire. There ensued a disagreement in front of several
hundred which was resolved when Gilmore agreed to play two pieces to placate Lenihan.
"But when 'Bracken' played A Nation Once Again and a ballad to James Connolly Lenihan refused to vacate the
stage and with both fists stuck in the air led the audience in wild republican cries. Mr Lenihan left the stage in
Mulhuddart only after issuing some very loud political remarks at the end of A Nation Once Again.
"One often wonders at how different political parties are behind closed doors - would FF behind closed doors
recognise its own public facades."
First of all John Feeney was not at this function in Mulhuddart. Secondly, several people who were at the function
have confirmed that it was not held behind closed doors either literally or metaphorically. Anyone who paid £1 could
get in and the doors were left open due to the warm weather.
Brian Lenihan and Gene Fitzgerald did not demand republican songs. No disagreement ensued. Lenihan did not
refuse to vacate the stage. He did not lead the audience in "wild republican cries".
The editor of the Evening Herald was informed of these inaccuracies on July 7. The paper has not as yet printed any retraction.
Feeney had a story about Eric Clapton on Monday August I. He refers to Clapton as "millionaire leader of The
Animals" and informs his readers that "The Animals are currently enjoying quite a boom and a revived cult of their
biggest ever hit 'The House of the Rising Sun'." Eric Clapton? The Animals? Wrong again, sonny.
A serious issue
One of the phonemena of the present Dail is the attempt of the Ceann Comhairle Tom Fitzpatrick to ensure that the
chair is listened to, that the chair is respected, that the chair is obeyed. The following sequence is a wonderful
example of Tom Fitzpatrick at his best. It is a report of what happened in the Dail on the morning of May 11.
As usual, the Taoiseach announced the business of the day. Brian Lenihan popped up to demand that a statement
be made on . . . But Brian had been missing yesterday, when the matter had been dealt with. Silly Brian. TDs chortle.
Brian sits down.
"More cock and bull stories", cracked the eloquent Alan Dukes.
They kicked things around for a while, then Jim Tunney got up. There was an issue he wanted to raise on the
Adjournment later on. He had tried twice before, but each time the Ceann Comhairle had allocated the Ad-
journment half-hour to someone else.
"I think, in so far as I have asked twice to have this matter raised and you refused, that you do not appreciate the
gravity of the matter." Now, Gentleman Jim Tunney doesn't usually get stroppy, doesn't descend to gutter level with
Alan Smartass Dukes. But he was now about to say something that would set the very foundations of democracy
atremble: "Two Fine Gael colleagues got matters on the Adjournment and I failed to get one."
"The Deputy", said the Ceann Comhairle, "will withdraw that remark."
What remark? one might ask, as indeed did Gentleman Jim. He had, he said, made a simple statement of fact. "I
cannot withdraw a statement of fact." Sounds reasonable.
Jim: "If my stating that the last two matters on the Adjournment were matters raised by my two Fine Gael colleagues
offends the Chair, I will withdraw it." Good man.
"It is not a question of offending the Chair. The Chair interprets it as an attack on the Chair - and I ask Deputy Tunney to withdraw it."
"I did not intend it that way."
"Deputy Tunney will give an unqualified withdrawal."
"An unqualified withdrawal of what?"
"Of the allegation that the Chair has not been fair in calling matters on the Adjournment."
At this point Gene Fitzgerald, who finds it hard to sit still for very long, piped up: "On a point of order, the Deputy
never said that."
But the Ceann Comhairle was insistent. Then Gentleman Jim rose to his feet and spoke nothing but the truth. "Since I
came to the House I have always been one who respects Standing Orders. I made a simple statement to you, Sir, as
the records will show, that the last two matters raised on the Adjournment were raised by colleagues of mine in the
Fine Gael party."
"That is an obvious reflection on the Chair and I am asking the Deputy to withdraw it." Note that word "reflection". A
moment ago we were discussing an "allegation". It has suddenly become a "reflection", but none the less for that it
must be withdrawn.
At this point Charlie Haughey came in, using restrained and diplomatic language, genuinely attempting to cool things
down and get the Dail to work. Haughey is sometimes quite good that way.
"What Deputy Tunney is saying could perhaps be interpreted as meaning that events have resulted in Fine Gael
having an undue preponderance of Adjournment time, by accident or by other means. But there is no necessary
reflection on the Chair."
"I want any reflection on the Chair withdrawn."
Haughey, patiently: "I wish to suggest that the matter is open to an interpretation which is not a reflection on the Chair."
"In so far as there is a reflection on the Chair I want it withdrawn."
Tunney, compromising but honest: "If the Chair regards it as a reflection on the Chair I withdraw it. But I do not
regard it as a reflection." Good man, Jim.
Have you ever seen a dog with a bone? "Is the Deputy withdrawing it in so far as a reflection on the Chair has been
made?"
Keep your cool, Jim: "If the Chair is sensitive to what I have said and regards it as a reflection, then I have no
hesitation in withdrawing it." Can't say fairer than that.
"I am taking it that the Deputy is withdrawing it in so far as he made a reflection on the Chair?" Now, in some
neighbourhoods we would say that this guy is pushing his luck.
"I", said Gentleman Jim, "made no reflection on the Chair."
"I am not letting this go.
I am not worried about myself, but I am asking Deputy Tunney, in so far as he made a reflection on the Chair, to
withdraw it."
"The Chair", said the weary Jim, "is more than hypersensitive to what I said."
"The Chair is not."
Tom Fitzpatrick then announced: "In the context in which Deputy Tunney said that, I am ruling that it constitutes an
attack on the Chair and I ask him to withdraw it."
Tunney: "If the Chair thinks so, then I withdraw it. "
It will be noted that this withdrawal, which satisfied the Ceann Comhairle, is substantially the same qualified
withdrawal which he had refused to accept earlier.
Later on that day there was a row about potatoes and Ray Burke was thrown out.