TaraWatch makes UN Complaint
Irish Mail on Sunday
Sunday 2nd January 2009
TAX-PAYERS face paying hundreds of
millions of Euros if a series of
new challenges against the M3 motorway
succeed, campaigners warned
last night.
Lawyers representing anti-M3
protesters trying to save the Hill of
Tara from the motorway have lodged a
complaint with the United Nations
against the Irish government.
This has
been lodged with the UN’s Commission on Human Rights on the
grounds that
construction of the motorway through such an historic
site breaches both the
Irish people’s right to enjoy their culture and
live in a healthy
environment.
Such tactic has proved successful in the past, for example in
1980s
in cases taken against the Australian government over
inappropriate
development of sacred cultural sites.
The UN approach is
being backed by writer Seamus Heaney and artists
Jim Fitzpatrick and Louis Le
Brocquy, who have both donated paintings
to be auctioned off to raise
funds.
TaraWatch lawyers are also to challenge M3 contractor
Ferrovial’s
involvement in the UN Global Compact (UGC) - the ethical
practices
charter the company signed up to in early 2000.
A similar
challenge took place in 2007, when a Ferrovial
motorway-building project
through an EU Special Protection Area was
halted after an EU Court of Justice
challenge.
The Spanish-based construction company is one of 5,000 firms
and
organizations from over 130 countries worldwide who have
committed
themselves to ten UGC principles.
These cover good corporate
practice, human rights, the environment and
anti-corruption.
Ferrovial has
described its commitment to the UGC principles as being
‘one of the pillars
of its corporate responsibility policy.’
All of the challenges under way by
TaraWatch’s legal team - which
includes legal experts from Trinity College
Dublin and the Human
Rights Centre at NUI Galway - have previously proved
successful in
legal challenges to the development of other historic sites
around the
world.
They are the latest in a series of moves by protesters
against the
controversial €800m motorway that cuts through the Hill of
Tara, which
runs between Navan and Dunshaughlin, in Co Meath.
Last March
one of the protests saw Lisa ‘Squeak’ Feeney chain herself
to an
underground tunnel in a bid to stop work on a section of the M3
at Rath
Lugh.
Other celebrities to lend their opposition have included actor
Stuart
Townsend and his wife Charlize Theron, and Tudors star Jonathan
Rhys
Meyers.
TaraWatch Lawyer Vincent Salafia said last night: ‘This
new series of
legal challenges stand a very realistic chance of success,
especially
as this approach has worked elsewhere before.
"˜It's not too
late for the government to get the M3 re-routed, and at
a relatively low
extra cost.
˜But if it perseveres, and Tara gets World Heritage Status,
it"s tax
payers who are going to end up having to cover the extra
costs
involved in a future re-routing.
"In the UK, the estimated cost of
re-routing a road at Stonehenge hit
more than €500m."
Another strand
of TaraWatch's bid to save the Hill of Tara is to get
it listed as a UNESCO
World Heritage Site.
They are urging everybody to write to the Environment
Minister Gormley
and to ask that Tara be listed.
Salafia said last night: "˜The Hill of Tara complex qualifies for World
Heritage status as a natural
and cultural landscape of outstanding
universal value, due to its unique
cultural significance, and the
extent of the surviving remains.
"˜Tara
covers a much larger area than that the 100 acres of State-owned
land on the
summit of the Hill, and the M3 passes through the middle
of the area to be
protected."
If the Hill of Tara is listed, then the M3 could have to be
re-routed
around the site - something that the UK government has had to
spend
millions trying to achieve.
It is currently facing censured by
UNESCO for its failure to relieve
traffic congestion at the site.
The
UN's cultural body warned the UK government it would have to sort
the
problem " caused by holiday traffic " when it awarded Stonehenge
World
Heritage Status in 1986.
A road passes just 150 yards from the stones and
plans to solve
congestion with a dual carriageway in a tunnel were recently
scrapped
by the UK government because of the estimated €500m
cost.
However, the governmentâ€"s failure to comply with UNESCO’s
warnings
more than 22 years ago have already cost of €30m in failed
road
development surveys and it faces having Stonehenge taken off the
list
of World Heritage Sites, which will cost the country in terms
of
prestige and tourism revenue.
The Irish government faces a similar
problem if the Hill of Tara â€"
which is on the World Monuments Fund's
latest List of 100 Most
Endangered Sites - gets World Heritage
Status.
Ireland signed up to the World Heritage Convention in 1991, and
in
doing so, committed itself to protecting and conserving national
and
international world heritage sites.
It also undertook to maintain a
Tentative List of potential sites for
World Heritage Site nomination, and to
nominate national heritage
sites on this list to the World Heritage Committee
for World Heritage
listing.
The last time it produced such a list was in
1992.
The Hill of Tara, which is considered the ceremonial and
mythical
capital of Ireland, is the centrepiece of a large
archaeological
landscape with hundreds of significant sites.
It is said to
be the location of St. Patrick's conversion of the Irish
to Christianity in
the early fifth century.
It is also the coronation site of Irish kings
between the sixth and
twelfth centuries.
see www.tarawatch.org