Mediation rules unveiled but five Rossport men still wait on
court fate
AS the fate of five landowners from Rossport, in north Mayo, remained
in the balance on Monday evening last, the continuing Bellanaboy
stand-off between Shell-to-Sea campaigners and representatives of Shell
E&P Ireland Ltd (SEPIL) showed no sign of resolution.
Four members of the so-called Rossport Five, along with up to 20
supporters, were in the High Court on Monday morning last, when
President of the High Court, Mr Justice Joseph Finnegan, again
postponed his decision on whether Willie Corduff, Micheal Ó Seighin,
Brendan Philbin, Philip McGrath and Vincent McGrath should return to
prison.
The five, who served 94 days in Cloverhill Prison last summer, will
discover on April 7 if they are to be punished for contempt of court.
Mr Justice Finnegan will consider if the High Court is in a legal
position to deliver punishment in a situation where a court order no
longer exists. An order committing the five men to prison was lifted
last September when Shell applied to lift the temporary injunction,
which had restrained interference with pipeline works at Bellanaboy.
Counsel for the five have argued that a punitive sanction is
unnecessary considering the term served behind bars last summer.
Meanwhile, SEPIL has described as ‘unreasonable behaviour’ continued
blockades and threatened blockades at the entry to the Bellanaboy
terminal, which have prevented Shell staff and contractors from
accessing the site to commence installation of further water treatment
equipment. This resistance was continuing on Monday afternoon last.
“Shell plans to bring some equipment on site related to the testing of
additional equipment on the Roadbridge, and plan to bring a digger and
dumper on site to prepare the foundations for the proposed extension of
the Axonics plant,” explained spokesperson Christy Loftus.
Shell has also expressed ‘grave concerns’ about what it describes as ‘a
major incursion’ onto the Bellenaboy site by more than 20 Shell-to-Sea
protesters on Wednesday last.
“Shell-to-Sea were putting themselves, including very young children,
in danger by refusing to obey site safety rules. Furthermore, this
incursion was a breach of a long-standing agreement that SEPIL had with
Shell to Sea whereby two accredited protestors would come on site at
any one time,” a spokesperson commented.
Shell-to-Sea representatives, meanwhile, brought their campaign to the
Traveller’s Friend Hotel in Castlebar on Sunday, where Minister Noel
Dempsey was officiating at the Fianna Fáil selection convention. Up to
20 campaigners bore placards and distributed leaflets, urging the
Minister for Communications, Marine and Natural Resources to ‘stop
hiding’ the long-awaited, independent Advantica report on the Corrib
controversy.
“Noel Dempsey is directly responsible for this dangerous and
unprecedented project, which is not only endangering people’s lives
but, through the deal, is robbing this country of its precious natural
resources. Our message for the minister is that it is not acceptable to
put our lives in danger so that Shell can profit,” explained
spokesperson for Rossport Solidarity Camp, Eve Ní Chathmhaoil.
Members of the Rossport Five and SEPIL are expected to hold independent
talks with Mr Peter Cassells this week in a move to advance the
mediation process, after the ground rules were unveiled last week.
Independent mediator, Mr Cassells, has issued a five-part description
to both parties, including the deployment of Minister Dempsey as ‘a
consultative partner as required’. All other parties will be excluded
from formal mediation, absolute confidentiality will be maintained and
neither side will report to a third party during the process. The
methodologies for the mediation will be discussed and agreed.
“The mediation will be carried out properly, professionally and in an
independent manner in accordance with these ground rules,” said Peter
Cassells. “The overall task of the mediation will be to reconcile the
two interests of bringing the gas in the Corrib gas field to market and
ensuring safety. For mediation to work both of these objectives must be
achieved.”
Mr Cassells has proposed that the parties may set down core non- negotiable issues.
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