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Friday, August 9, 2019

Time to end culture of Omerta in Irish prisons and ensure proper oversight before it is too late

Time to end culture of Omerta in Irish prisons and ensure proper oversight before it is too late: Sources at every level within the Irish Prison Service have contacted the Irish Examiner over the years to express concerns, ranging from sexual harassment to malpractice in the investigation of deaths in custody, writes Michael Clifford

1 comment:

  1. Things We’ve Always Wanted to Tell You review: Thought-provoking look at the Irish class system
    Dublin Fringe Festival: Scottee directs a carefully choreographed and amusing discussion that upturns class assumptions
    Things We’ve Always Wanted to Tell You: taking the mickey out of privilege. Photograph: Holly Revell
    Things We’ve Always Wanted to Tell You: taking the mickey out of privilege. Photograph: Holly Revell
    Deirdre Falvey
    about 7 hours ago

    THINGS WE’VE ALWAYS WANTED TO TELL YOU
    Cube, Project Arts Centre
    ★★★★☆
    The physical metaphors are strong in this teasing out of class differences and attitudes in Ireland. The audience is separated from three self-described working class actors – Felicia Olusanya, Jade O’Connor and Neil Watkins – by what seems like a one-way mirror. We can see them, but apparently they cannot see us. Moments when the audience lights go up, and they gaze at us, and when they part the wall to briefly step out, feel significant. Neither a play (“We just got you in on that pretext,” says Watkins) nor the billed dinner party, director Scottee creates a carefully choreographed tossing around of ideas and personal experiences, about the complexity of class definitions and acknowledging “you grow up quick when you grow up like us”, without an automatic safety net. Thoughtful and thought-provoking, often amusing in upturning preconceptions and taking the mickey out of class assumptions and middle-class privilege, there is righteous anger here too. “Their parents say no [to what their children want] to teach them about the world. Our parents say no because they have to.”

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