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The New Long Fella

He is the grandson of Éamon De Valera – one of the founding fathers of the State and a former Taoiseach and President. So has his unique lineage had anything to do with the success of EAMON Ó CUÍV? These and other issues are teased out in a remarkable interview with Ireland’s Minister for Community Affairs.

Jason O'Toole, 22 Sep 2009

The actual percentages that use drugs are small. Obviously, younger age groups have a higher incidence and then certain areas have a much higher incidence – in particular, heroin is very much linked to social disadvantage.

For many young people, Curran’s comments jar with the anecdotal evidence. There’s festivals on every weekend at which thousands of people are going to go along and get off their faces on pills.

I have children. They’re adults now, but this was a discussion and I’d have known the nightclubs they’d have gone to. [To] the question, ‘Are there drugs in the nightclub?’, they’d tell you, ‘Of course there are.’ What they seemed to say to me was: yes, there would be, no question, and if you wanted to you’d get them with very little difficulty but if you didn’t want them they weren’t pushed on you. But to think that the vast majority of kids are into illegal substances, it certainly isn’t borne out in the surveys.

You were involved in a scuffle at NUI Galway with anti-fee protestors.

About 20 students invaded my office when I wasn’t there, and my staff rang me. I was a bit annoyed, in that it was a bit unfair to enter my office, particularly when I was in Dublin. There are four female staff working in my office. They rang me and we got the Guards, and they left peacefully about half an hour later. The following week I was in Galway with Minister Batt O’Keefe and I arrived in the square in the Quadrangle in NUIG after Batt. When I went to go in the door with one of the girls who had been in the office, they charged and blocked our way. So there were two security men there, and they led us over to another door, and there was a wheelchair ramp up to the door with a railing on the outside. They were coming in over the railing and I grabbed one of them by the arms and I stopped him climbing over the railing. Now, they were all going to pour in after us. We were going to get cornered.

The student said you man-handled him...

Well, I did. I grabbed him by the lapels and I shook him. Now, as somebody who has been on the odd picket in my time, if 50 people are coming charging at you – some of them up the ramp and some of them over the railing and you are restrained – well I think that’s fair game. I wasn’t going to allow my secretary to be squashed or pushed into a corner and I don’t think I used undue force. I had the right to restrain him from climbing over the barrier.



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