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...nationless socialist revolutionary activist, anthropologist, computer geek, unionist...

 

22/05: Who is really progressive in Northern Ireland? (2/3)

I recently went to Northern Ireland, to the city of Belfast. The Left has generally supported those pro-catholics, who are working for a united Ireland as a part of a national liberation struggle from London rule. I decided to interview representatives of progressive parties on either side on the issues that socialists should really care about -- social issues -- to see how different they really are in their day-to-day politics in these current times of peace. This is the second of three parts, me interviewing Paul Maskey, member of the Northern Irish Assembly for Sinn Fein, in his office in Western Belfast. Part three with the conclusion will follow tomorrow.



Paul Maskey (Sinn Fein) claims to represent progressive republicanism.
Paul Maskey (Sinn Fein) claims to represent progressive republicanism.


Johannes Wilm



  • Ehm, yeah, the first thing is I noticed when walking around
    there was quite a bit of graffiti against gentrification.


Paul Maskey



  • ok


Johannes Wilm



  • ehm, there are apparently apartment buildings that eh... are
    for the let's say those who have more money.


Paul Maskey



  • mhm


Johannes Wilm



  • Ehm... whereas others complain about lack of public
    housing.




Paul Maskey



  • mhm


Johannes Wilm



  • What's your policy on that?


Paul Maskey



  • Well, my... our policy on that it's... I mean there needs to be
    more social housing.


Johannes Wilm



  • yeah


Paul Maskey



  • Ehm... there is clearly not enough. In West Belfast there is an
    area which I represent, there's almost 3000 people on the waiting
    list. And it's gone up year on year. Ehm, so them figures keep on
    increasing, so we're arguing and lobbying... ehm, the government
    department follow it, to create more social housing, ehm... and to
    reduce the waiting lists, and they need to do it in a number of
    manors and a number of ways, and it-it it's not, I mean you will
    see ehm... private apartments, private houses going up, and that's
    OK. We're not arguing against that, well, we argue because a lot of
    the stuff that's happening now is a lot of cargo[?] space being
    taken away from our community


Johannes Wilm



  • mmm...


Paul Maskey



  • wherefore[?] there could have been houses are being demolished,
    to put up where you maybe had 1 or 2 houses maybe 30 or 34 or 36-40
    apartments, which is a clear case of over-development, because to
    create... it's not about building houses, it's about building
    communities, that's where we want to be, because if there's homes,
    there need to be schools, there needs to be shops, there needs to
    be employment opportunities, there needs to be doctor surgeries,
    there need to be dentists. You need to build communities, so there
    has to be more thought put[?] into areas and communities, because
    we have areas in West Belfast under British direct rule, we have
    areas like Trimble and Pulgas, that're just thousands of
    houses put up, no amenities, no facilities, not one child park
    within the emares[?] for kids to play in. And it's a disgrace. So
    we should not allow that to happen and we are trying now to say if
    you're going to mend[?] and you wanna develop in our areas and in
    our communities, then you have to show us the plan. But not a plan
    for just the homes, for the other amenities from... that's obvious,
    we're very strong advocates for that.


Johannes Wilm



  • How about public unding funding for infrastructure like roads
    and public parks and so on.


Paul Maskey



  • Yeah, I mean that quite important. There's many different
    government departments. The problem is, they all work in
    isolation. They work like a sailor-defact[?] where one department
    will do this and another department will do that. There's not
    enough crossover between inter... ehm.. work between different
    government department. What I'm trying to urge all government
    departments, is that they need to work collectively, because
    there's no point in... If I'm one government department providing
    houses, there's no point in me working in isolation from health or
    social development or-or whether it's interesting for trade and
    stuff. You have to work together and show each other plans so you
    know the communities of, to make sure that the roads for example are
    not... because if want to build a thousand homes, then there need
    to be that proper road infrastructure, needs to be taken out[?],
    and there needs to be the proper bus links, is there rail links, is
    there.. ehm a rapid transit system needs to be put in to reduce the
    ehm... the cars going o our roads every day. So all that has to be
    worked together. So yes, we are very much urged all government
    departments to inter... eh. interlink to ensure that all them
    problems are addressed from a very early stage. We cannot build a
    housing estate with a thousand homes in it and then think about
    everything else. That has to be incorporated in it.


Johannes Wilm



  • Ehm, now industry over the last twenty years, you have had sort
    of a rapid decline in...


Paul Maskey



  • yeah...


Johannes Wilm



  • I think Harland & Wolfe, Shorts, Mackies...


Paul Maskey



  • yeah...


Johannes Wilm



  • is there anything the government should do about that?


Paul Maskey



  • Yes, [?] area where I represent in west Belfast, including the
    Shankill, where there is a lot of areas that are in social need. If
    you live in West Belfast, you're more likely to be unemployed than
    you do in other areas. If you live in West Belfast you're more
    likely to die earlier than you do in other areas. So all that
    factor has to be factored in so, and employment is a great
    opportunity, so yes, I do believe that the government needs to be
    looking at creating industry, and there's different facets...
    industry has many different facets, where we can look at for
    example in areas of West Belfast, they need to be... If it's
    foreign direct investment they need to be steered toward areas of
    social need, because that's where it's gonna have the best effect;
    that's where it's gonna lift communities to the level of everywhere
    else and that creates employment opportunity. There's different
    levels of... and I say, and I look at West Belfast, for example in
    the Shankill industry, I count tourism as an industry. Tourism is a
    massive industry, if we get our act together. People [?] places in
    West Belfast cause there's thousands and thousands of people every
    year coming to see West Belfast, because they've seen it on TV;
    they've all seen the Falls road; they've all seen -- maybe for the
    wrong reasons or the real one[?], whatever the reason is, but
    they've seen it anyway, so there's a curiosity factor between the
    Shankill and the Falls Road area. And many thousands of people will
    come to see those two roads. But there's not one hotel int he two
    areas. So the tourists will come in, but they can't stay, so they
    can't spend more money in that community, so the local shop can't
    benefit from it, the local restaurant can't benefit from it, the
    local bars can't benefit from it, because people come in and they
    got a bowl... or what you call a face bowl scenario, where you
    buses driving in thousands of people, people looking at the
    windows and then driving back out again. The local community can't
    benefit from that. So government need to get real, when it's coming
    to tourism. They need to start looking at locating hotels within
    our areas where people can stay. That's one part, and then we're
    gonna see what's gonna happen. Because in Belfast alone, tourism
    sustains 16000 jobs. Now we want some of them jobs to be sustained
    in West Belfast.



Deprivation is deprivation, no matter whether republican or loyalist.
Deprivation is deprivation, no matter whether republican or loyalist.


Johannes Wilm



  • OK, ehm. Another issue: the NHS..


Paul Maskey



  • mhm


Johannes Wilm



  • do you feel that it's good enough...


Paul Maskey



  • no


Johannes Wilm



  • as it is?


Paul Maskey



  • It's not good. Ehm... some areas of it are very good and some
    areas are very poor. My own father was in the hospital, just over a
    year ago with a chest infection, and get taken out two weeks later
    dead because of all the infections that they get in hospital. Now
    that's very very poor. It's very poor where people who can go in
    the hospital and come out either sicker than what they went in or
    in fact dead in many cases. Now that's very poor, and that's basic
    medication stuff. Some of our medical services are second to none.
    In fact some of them are world class. But you can have all your
    world class facilities, but your people can die due to nearly[?]
    uncleanliness and bugs what they're catching when they go in to
    the hospital. So that has that effect on it. So, the waiting lists
    are coming down, some of them are gone with, but there is a fact
    where you can wait for maybe a year for minor surgery, but it's a
    service which there is an acute need to be overhauled. It needs
    to be improved. And I do believe that under the fourth[?]
    government, which we have now, we'll actually make that happen.
    Cause the local minister, the minister for health, is somebody from
    Belfast. We can argue with him, we can have a word on a daily basis
    and tell him: 'you must improve this'. So I think it will get
    better. It need to improve. But it's a sad indictment on the health
    service, when people can die, coming to the hospital.


Johannes Wilm



  • Ehm.. And in education, currently there has been a debate about
    the 11+ exam


Paul Maskey



  • yeah


Johannes Wilm



  • Ehm... Where you in Northern Ireland have had a somewhat
    different system than what one has had in most of England


Paul Maskey



  • yeah


Johannes Wilm



  • What's you position on that?


Paul Maskey



  • Well, my position is that the 11+ doesn't work. It hasn't
    worked; it's failed. It works in some areas. But again I have to go
    back to areas, including the Shankill, in the year 2001, 1 child --
    and now it is an area of social deprivation. It's an area of need.
    One child in the Shankill in the year 2001 passed the 11+. So I
    have to say: why does on one one child pass that? Because it tells
    you that there's needs going in there, it also tells you that
    that's... it failed, it might work in some areas, but it fails many
    people from the areas like what I represent in West Belfast,
    including the Shankill. And other areas also. Because people cannot
    afford extra tuition for their kids, so if you come from a working
    class or a middle class background you can't afford for your child
    to get extra education[?] on a Saturday or some evenings. But if
    you come from an area where there's social need and you can't
    afford to do that and then your child goes automatically ehmm.. I
    suppose disenfranchised, because you can't give that. So that tells
    you that if you come from a rich background, the 11+ is good,
    because you can get your child higher. But if you come from a
    poorer background, you can't give your child the best bargain. So
    what I want to do is to ensure that everybody at that age has
    equal... because equality is central to having sustainable futures
    and sustainable development for us all. And equality in that is
    that every child at eleven... because remember it's called the 11+,
    I have two... I've had two kids who would do, who have done the
    11+. But they've done it at the age of ten, so the fact that it's
    called the 11+... All kids who do it are ten, there's very few of
    them who'll actually be eleven ears of age. They're eleven when
    they leave primary school to go secondary school. But they've done
    their test many, many months prior to it. So most of them are ten,
    so I can't see how you can decide the child's future at the age of
    ten, to say that's the school you're gonna go to, you'll work at
    that school and that's the best school for you. It's very hard, and
    I think it's unfair on many of our children and it's indictment. I
    think the change.. there is a radical change, needs to be happening
    within our education, because too many kids are coming out of
    school, even secondary school, worse than what they've been before
    in primary school. So there is a lack of basic skills, and I think
    that the current minister, CaitríonaRuan, will go along the
    way to change it. She is currently consulting every... and the most
    important thing about the 11+ is, every parent who's child is
    coming up will get a chance to feed in to the constipation process.
    So every parent will have a say. Every child will have a say. And
    every school will have a say, cause all the areas are different and
    all the areas will demand difference in education, and that's the
    way it should work, because area based education system will
    probably work out better than one size, that's all


Johannes Wilm



  • Ok, but mainly that is then importing the English... the
    English version of it, isn't it?


Paul Maskey



  • Well, I mean. Ok, all I'm saying is there can be many versions
    of it. Also, what I'm also saying, there's different parts of West
    Belfast might need a different education system from other parts of
    West Belfast, so we shouldn't have necessarily the bigger picture
    anywhere up. We know what we need. Our school doing emphitament[?].
    Most of them will exactly know what demands are of the communities,
    and they should be able to put in area based plans to actually move
    into the future, because we need our kids... And I think this will
    be a radical overhaul. I think, if done right, other countries can
    actually learn from this model, if done right, wearing simple
    members[?].



Focusing on social issues (here: hunger) has a longer tradition amongst republicans. Comparatively, today's living standards are great (man in car).
Focusing on social issues (here: hunger) has a longer tradition amongst republicans. Comparatively, today's living standards are great (man in car).


Johannes Wilm



  • Ok, staying in the area of kids. The. your local paper here
    writes about that there is an excessive amount of anti-social
    behavior and drug abuse.


Paul Maskey



  • Yeah, I mean that's local papers writing. I'll have to say that
    Belfast is no worse off than any other city in the world. In fact,
    you can go back three or four years ago, Belfast was thought the
    third safest city in the world, even for visitors to come to see,
    so it's no worse than anywhere. So in fact it's a lot safer than
    most of the other cities throughout the world. Which is...


Johannes Wilm



  • yeah


Paul Maskey



  • Which is very important because of where we come from. We came
    from a war-torn society, and we're only recently over that. And we
    are still a suicide[?]. But however, there is anti-social behavior
    and drugs...


Johannes Wilm



  • it's the Anderson Town News


Paul Maskey



  • Yeah, yeah, in the Anderson Town News yeah. And there is... And
    we can't deny there's drug dealing, and there is car crime. There
    is. People die through the car crime. But I have to say this: The
    British government has allowed it to go on for too long, under
    direct rule. They have allowed... Because what they've done is...
    And I know what they've done, and even in Belfast city center for
    example, where you've people who've maybe caught where you've
    people maybe drinking in Belfast city center. The PSNI, which is
    the police service, will have pushed them out of the city center
    into areas like West Belfast, and they had a... they didn't cur[?]
    and they didn't try to say 'no, you shouldn't be drinking, now you
    should move out[?]'... So what they were doing was they were
    funneling[?] people in from other parts of the city, city center,
    into areas like West Belfast, and say: well, that's good enough for
    them and that was the mentality behind our police service here for
    many, many years. But now people are saying: no, we've had enough.
    We're not gonna allow it to happen. We're not gonna allow West
    Belfast to be treated anywhere else... than any other part of the
    city. But again, employment opportunities... we re... if you come
    from an area of social need and you come from an area, you will
    find that there's always more crime and more anti-social behavior.
    There's more drug problems, there's more socializers providing more
    alcoholics. But we have to remember we have come from a war, many
    people from this community, that I represent, fought in that war
    for many, many years. Many of our young people, who are now coming
    to da[?], father's and mother's fought against Britain. And, so
    them side, where some of the young people are saying, well my mo...
    my parents may have done that, what am I to do? You know. And so
    there's attitudes where other people are coming through, in the
    other end of a war saying: we need to walk... move into the future.
    But I think it's very, very important to always remember that under
    direct rule, Britain... British ministers who were imposing part[?]
    here, didn't occur. They didn't invest. There was no massive
    employers in West Belfast. Like you had in East Belfast. You had
    Harland & Wolf, and you mentioned earlier on, in it's heyday
    they had between 40 and 50000 working that place. Most of them are
    from protestant communities, very few were from nachments[?].
    Mackies, as well, was another protestant site. Shorts, the majority
    of people worked there, were protestants. People from this area,
    would never have had a chance to get a job in some of them places.
    And yet, government didn't try to promote... or even try to promote
    any other investments in these areas; neglected them, so we're
    still trying to come out of the other end of that. And we will do,
    but it will take a while for that to happen.


Johannes Wilm



  • eh, somewhat related, the BBC recently reported on a dramatic
    increase in teenage suicides in Northern Ireland. What's your
    response to that?


Paul Maskey



  • Well our response to that is ehm we have... in fact Gerry Adams
    in an MP for West Belfast who has worked perilously regarding trying
    to get a strategy. And even to try to get a strategy built up, that
    came against opposition from British direct rule ministers. they
    didn't want to put investment into it. They didn't want to look at
    it. as... So I mean Gerry... Gerry Adams has lobbied very very
    strong on behalf of that. We now have a couple of places in West
    Belfast. But there's one in the Falls Road called Suicidal Worlds,
    it's open 24 hours. People who are feeling suicidal can now call in
    say, a drop-in center, people can call in, the can lift the phone
    up and speak to us[?] on the other end of the phone. An that's now
    happening. And that's where we're at so... But it's not enough. The
    policy and the strategy, because I know some of the places you may
    touch on later on as we need... because Ireland is a fairly small
    country, and we're gonna have a policy which may work in 26
    counties, which is... between the Republic[?] of Ireland and
    policies here. We need an all-Ireland approach to it. We need to be
    serious about that issue because the same issues are affecting
    people who are living in Dublin as well. The suicide rate has gone
    up. So what we wanna do is make sure we're capping[?] on them
    issues. Because we're gonna learn from other places and what
    they've done as well. So we need an all-Ireland approach. We need
    funding on an all-Ireland basis. We need to insure that all the
    mechanisms are being put into place. And again, employment
    opportunities as well. Because young people who don't seem to have
    a future, in their own mind don't have a future. So there's
    goodmoon-bloom[?]in some of the young people's minds. So it's about
    lifting it, it's about giving them equal opportunities, giving them
    employment opportunities, education opportunities a whole lot and I
    think hopefully you can help address that issue. But it needs to be
    done on an all-Ireland basis.


Johannes Wilm



  • Right, also, another thing that young people do is
    joy-riding...


Paul Maskey



  • yeah...


Johannes Wilm



  • apparently, which is that you make stunts in your car and then
    you film it and put it on the internet


Paul Maskey



  • yeah


Johannes Wilm



  • Which is apparently a trend here


Paul Maskey



  • Yeah, it's trend... It was wore going back many years ago, back
    a number of years ago. So it's actually started to reduce. But
    there's been a number of people killed through it, and I wouldn't
    call it joy-riding. The term I in all honesty would put on it is
    death riding. Because death riders have actually killed a number of
    people, including children within our communities. I think it's a
    scourge; I have no time or sympathy sometimes with regards to it.
    But however, we need to look at where's actually [?] with it. It
    has reduced. And the unfortunate thing with modern technology can
    bring many odd things to haunt us, because kids can now use this as
    a tool -- their phones. As a [?] they now can put on their Bebo
    sites and get it done. They get a kick out of this. And they get,
    so... I mean some times modern technology is great in many aspects,
    and... unfortunate, most of us can't live without our blackberries
    or mobile phones or computers and even your tape recorder -
    mp3-player and stuff, we can't really live without them now. But
    it's sometimes a bad, because it gives people the easier
    opportunities, whether they're trying to get young people to do
    internet sex, or whether whether they're taking video recordings of
    bad things happening to get a kick out of it. So... but we need,
    obviously, to have [?] in place. Thankfully joyriding has reduced,
    but it's not, it's not stopped completely.



Parts of the Falls Road could be anywhere in Europe -- only the store names give its location away.
Parts of the Falls Road could be anywhere in Europe -- only the store names give its location away.

Johannes Wilm



  • Ehm, and yet, local media reports that in the draft budget of
    the department of education , the budget for the Youth Service will
    be reduced by 4.8%?


Paul Maskey



  • No, it's actually... Well, it was. And the minister actually
    fought very hard in the program for government. And that was a
    draft, on the real one, that's been brought back. It's got
    embasement 4.8 million pound in that budget, which is exactly the
    amount that that equates to. So that's now back, as long, cause
    minister CaitríonaRuane fought very hard with it with her
    colleges on the executive to ensure that that... because youth is
    very , very important to us. So, that is now back. But, we need a
    long-term strategy, and again, go back to the point we were talking
    on earlier on, cause education is only one point of youth services.
    Other government departments need to be coming buying[?] the
    service of youth service because youth service really is to combat
    anti-social behavior, it relates to our kids being brilliant people
    for the future. It can relate to... it can help address, the issues
    of avoiding suicide. It can help many, many issues, but so other
    government departments have to buy in, because government
    departments only have so much money as well, but if they would buy
    in collectively from other agencies within government, and the will
    have to address that.


Johannes Wilm



  • Ehm, we sort of touched it before, but what's your general idea
    about the police. Do you have... As they are now, do you have
    confidence and trust in that they're concerned about your areas and
    your issues?


Paul Maskey



  • Well, I have to say they're not fully concerned about, but
    we're gonna make them concerned about. We're gonna... cause we've
    taken on a job now within, within this last year, let's say where
    we're gonna go on to the boards, policing boards, we're gonna go on
    to the district policing partnerships. We're not gonna be
    spectators, like everybody else was on them prior to it. We're
    going on to give a lot of finger pointing to people and say: 'You
    have a job to do, and you better start doing it! Because if you're
    not gonna start doing it, then there will be a prize to pay!' And
    the thing to say in the communities I represent: very few people
    trust the police; even just the... And we're now saying: 'right,
    we're bringing the PSNI in, and I meet them as well on regular
    basis to tell them the issues and that they don't meet them issues,
    and they don't meet their targets, and then the question is put to
    them: 'Why have you not met that target before?' So we're there to
    tell them to. We're not there to be spectators; we're not there
    watching them and saying 'yes, you've done a great job'. We're
    there to tell them to[?] and we will continue to do that, until
    they start to get it in their own head. That we need to be doing
    this; we need to be working, cause policing is best suited at
    community level. The community must be involved at all levels of
    policing, because I think we come back[?] to the education issue --
    there's nobody who knows this community like the people who live in
    this community. They know what the issues are. They how some tend
    to tackle them issues, so the police face now needing to listen to
    the community to actually move forward. And that's what we've
    fosessed[?] on, that's what we've embarked on, and that's what
    we're gonna continue to do, until we get it right. Policing will
    never be right; policing is always wrong, and there'll always be
    crime. You can't stop crime by 100%, but we will lurk[?] that they
    make sure, that they help address the issues in our
    communities.


Johannes Wilm



  • Ok, and very last question: Do you feel that the working class
    is sufficiently politically represented as it is today?


Paul Maskey



  • Well, yes. I mean I come from a working class background. I'm a
    socialist; I represent the socialist party. I... In West Belfast
    for example, there's 6 MLAs, 5 are from SinnFein. The MP for the
    area is a socialist. So, I mean we are using them uble[?]., because
    I talked to you earlier about areas of social need, right? The
    couple of ministers working together. I raise areas of social need
    at every single level, I can do so at the assembly. Any commite I
    will run, I will speak of areas of social need, as well as other
    areas as well. But I... But before, that was never challenged and
    never pushed. So what we're doing now as a party is actually
    represent the area. For me as a socialist for example, I have to
    represent the area, but I have to live by my socialist values. When
    I look at the assembly for example, there's a wage of 30-40,000
    pounds in times[?] leading up to 50,000 pounds. I don't take that;
    the party gets my wage. So the party simply take my wage, and they
    give me a living wage, just as a small wage. So I'm not a big
    career politician, I'm here because I wanna represent the people in
    the area where I live and the people who I know and love so much.
    And that's where my feeling is.. I-I give my money away, and I take
    a living wage. The party take that and give me a living wage. Other
    people: I get the same amount of money that Gerry Adams gets, as
    the party president. As a minister, there's ministers, we have a
    number of ministers in the assembly. They get the same wage as me.
    Somebody working in this office, they'll get the same wage as me,
    and the same wage as .. there's no difference. So we have to
    look... That's all equal. So we will insure, that any issues what
    we're drawn out of that, that's socialists. And we will have to
    insure that them policies are brought into the assembly as well.
    And I love that, and I want that, any stuff I wanna argue for is on
    them same principles. I do admit the fact that we have to be
    economic, the economic evolvement of the North is very crucial
    point. And inv... Even private investment is very important for
    the long term sustainability of Ireland. So I do recognize that fact
    as well. And we have t work on them sectors as well. It's very,
    very important whether that incorporates, but I represent a working
    class community will do so and we do represent cases on behalf of
    my constituency on a daily basis.


Johannes Wilm



  • Ok, Thank you very much




I go outside with Maskey to take his picture on the stairs outside his office. Finally I ask him: "So -- if you're socialist, and you happen to be protestant… what party do you vote for?" Two seconds of silence, then Maskey says "puh, well then there is the PUP, right?" He goes on to tell me how various protestants have come to his office to ask for help with various bureaucratic things, but still he concludes that they would not likely vote for SinnFein anytime soon. And, as he concludes before we part, what he really wants to see is "a united Ireland". And after all, the Provisional Irish Republican Army (IRA) that is connected to them, who for several decades fought an armed struggle, involving many civilian casualties.

I walk on, and back to the university area where I'm currently staying at. Tomorrow, I'll publish my conclusion.

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