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Seanad: Order of Business. (13 Nov 2003)

Mary Henry: I am confused with a lot of people but I have never been confused with Senator Joe O'Toole.

Seanad: Order of Business. (13 Nov 2003)

Mary Henry: I support Senator Brian Hayes's call for a debate on stem cell research. As the Leader knows, I have been asking for this for quite some time. Indeed, I called for it on the Marian Finucane show some weeks ago.

Seanad: Order of Business. (13 Nov 2003)

Mary Henry: I will not mention her again even though she is apparently having trouble with her ratings.

Seanad: Order of Business. (13 Nov 2003)

Mary Henry: I hope when we address this issue, we will also look at the issue of the treatments which may emerge from embryonic stem cell research because while good progress is being made in adult stem cell research, there are degenerative diseases, about which listeners to the show this morning will have heard, that cause great grief to people. We want to be honest and say we will not allow these...

Seanad: Broadcasting (Funding) Bill 2003: Report and Final Stages. (13 Nov 2003)

Mary Henry: I support the case so eloquently made by Senator O'Meara. I hope the Minister will be able to accept this minor amendment.

Seanad: Broadcasting (Funding) Bill 2003: Report and Final Stages. (13 Nov 2003)

Mary Henry: I also congratulate the Minister on his approach. As Senator Quinn has so frequently said, Iris Oifigiúil is not light reading for much of the general public, and of course they do not have access to the Library of the Houses of the Oireachtas. This covers the whole situation very well. Amendment agreed to. Amendment No. 3 not moved.

Seanad: Broadcasting (Funding) Bill 2003: Report and Final Stages. (13 Nov 2003)

Mary Henry: I congratulate the Minister on this Bill. I hope that community radio stations, in particular, will be looked on favourably in this fund. I received a copy of the Bill in the week when the Oireachtas was said to be on holidays. I was sick in bed at the time, so I had the benefit of reading the Bill and listening to radio programmes at the same time. Some people on the radio were complaining...

Seanad: United Nations Mission in Liberia: Statements. (13 Nov 2003)

Mary Henry: I welcome the Minister to the House. Naturally I am most supportive of this effort in conjunction with the United Nations. It is wise to remember, however, that as Senator Brian Hayes said, this is a peace-enforcing exercise. Senator Moylan mentioned the Congo, the only other peace enforcing exercise in which we have been involved where we suffered serious losses. Our troops are facing danger...

Seanad: Address by Ms Mary Banotti, MEP. (13 Nov 2003)

Mary Henry: As all Senators have to declare their interests when they speak in the House, I must do so now. I walk along the South Wall in Dublin with Ms Mary Banotti most Sunday mornings. We settle all EU matters as part of our conversations. I am to blame, therefore, for some of the problems in which she has been involved. I thought it was interesting when Ms Banotti mentioned that although there are...

Seanad: Courts and Court Officers (Amendment) Bill 2003: Second and Subsequent Stages. - National Drugs Strategy: Motion. (12 Nov 2003)

Mary Henry: I welcome the Minister of State to the House. I wish to concentrate on that part of the motion calling for a reversal of what it terms "the savage cutbacks" in community employment and jobs initiative schemes and which have reduced the capacity of the voluntary and community sector. Sometimes I wonder if the right hand of the Government knows what the left hand is doing, as there seems to be...

Seanad: Adjournment Matters. - Architectural Heritage. (11 Nov 2003)

Mary Henry: I thank the Minister of State for coming to the House. Some decades ago I was on holiday in Bolgheri, on the west coast of Italy. One evening we were talking to some of the locals, who told us they had just averted a national catastrophe. Naturally, we were eager to hear about this. They pointed to a lovely avenue of cypresses going up into the hills. The Minister may know the splendid...

Seanad: Order of Business. (5 Nov 2003)

Mary Henry: I also support the call for debate on stem cell research. We have encouraged the biotechnology industry to come and invest heavily in Ireland. Therefore, we must be sure what will be promoted here. It may not be research being done here that causes a problem but the techniques which are brought in for production in the factories.

Seanad: Humanitarian Issues in Post-War Iraq: Statements. (4 Nov 2003)

Mary Henry: I welcome the Minister of State to the House and compliment him on his speech. He and his officials have applied intelligence to the situation because there is no good in being sentimental about it. We are all deeply upset. It is like the joke where a man is asked for directions and he answers that he would not start from here. None of us would have started from here in trying to help Iraq...

Seanad: Order of Business. (23 Oct 2003)

Mary Henry: Ireland has strict laws relating to the detention of persons who are accused of crimes but, unfortunately, this is not the case everywhere. The issue of the detention of people in Guantanamo Bay has been raised previously. It is totally in contravention of international law and people are also being held in Iraq in a similar manner. A freeman of the City of Dublin, Aung San Suu Kyi, is also...

Seanad: Order of Business. (22 Oct 2003)

Mary Henry: I support everything Senator Brian Hayes has said about Northern Ireland. I agree to the Order of Business. We will soon have a debate on the Hanly report. I commend the content of the order concerning Simpson's Hospital to other small hospitals around the country. It is good to see the board of a hospital deciding to change the modus under which it operates if change if required. Many...

Seanad: National Task Force on Medical Staffing: Statements. (22 Oct 2003)

Mary Henry: I welcome the Minister to the House and while I welcome the report, I regret it has been so belated. At the end of his speech, the Minister said we must now proceed to implementation. To implement even the EU directive on NCHD working hours before next August will be extremely difficult. It is not true to say we must have EU directives to drive us to do anything that would obviously be for...

Seanad: National Task Force on Medical Staffing: Statements. (22 Oct 2003)

Mary Henry: I know, but the Minister's proposal will cost a fortune. Will radiographers stay in this country if it takes six years to train when it only takes four years to train in England? It is the same for physiotherapists. In addition, the Hanly report also rightly points out how long it takes here to train to become a specialist. The Minister for Education and Science's proposals would add on...

Seanad: National Task Force on Medical Staffing: Statements. (22 Oct 2003)

Mary Henry: The elimination, let us say, of St. Colmcille's. That is a very difficult situation because St. Vincent's has a very small casualty department, although it is the only one I have been in for years where the waiting time was not excessively long, unlike the Mater, Beaumont, and so on. That will be more difficult to address. Huge investment must be made in the pre-hospital emergency services so...

Seanad: Irish Nationality and Citizenship and Ministers and Secretaries (Amendment) Bill 2003: Second Stage. (22 Oct 2003)

Mary Henry: It is an honour to second Senator Quinn's proposal. Irish passports are extraordinarily valuable documents, as any of us who have travelled abroad know. It is no wonder the review body that looked into the sale of passports received so many adverse comments from the public who was shocked at the way the scheme was administered, perhaps inadvertently. When we go abroad with an Irish passport...

Seanad: Irish Nationality and Citizenship and Ministers and Secretaries (Amendment) Bill 2003: Second Stage. (22 Oct 2003)

Mary Henry: I am sure we will have this argument again. When we were poor they could stay but now that we are rich, they cannot. They must go home.

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