Mr Rossa Fanning (left), of King's Inns, who took the
individual prize in the final of the Irish Times Debate, with team winners,
Ms Bernadette Quigley and Ms Caoilfhiann Gallagher, of UCD's Literary and
Historical Society.
Photograph: Dara Mac Dónaill
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Dublin dominates
'Irish Times' debate
By Roddy O'Sullivan
Speakers from Dublin colleges took all the honours at this year's Irish
Times Debate final in University College Cork on Monday.
Ms Caoilfhiann Gallagher and Ms Bernadette Quigley, of UCD, brought
the team title to the Literary and Historical Society. Mr Rossa Fanning,
of King's Inns, took the prize for best individual.
Ms Yvonne Campbell and Ms Bríd McGrath, of the Trinity
College Dublin Historical Society, came second in the team competition,
while Mr Eoin MacGiolla Rí made it a clean sweep for the King's
Inns in the individual competition, by taking second prize.
The motion for the debate, "That this house would deport all refugees",
proved difficult to propose. Mr Fanning summed up the discomfort of the
proposition speakers when he compared his task to speaking in favour of
the motions "That fascism deserves another chance" or "That AIB treats
all its customers equally".
Mr Fanning argued that the whole debate on refugees was "dominated
by political correctness to an outrageous extent". Host nations should
consider the effect of the refugee's departure on his or her country of
origin. By facilitating them in leaving, host nations undermined the ability
of the asylum-seeker's home country to deal with its problems in the long
term, particularly when people of working age were allowed asylum for economic
reasons.
Ireland should not even accept asylum-seekers whose lives were
in danger, Mr Fanning said. Instead, it should send them home and warn
the authorities in their country of origin that political and economic
sanctions would follow if they were harmed. Political martyrdom, though
regrettable, often led to dramatic improvements in the political structure
of a state.
Ms Bernadette Quigley argued that Ireland should live up to its
international responsibilities and "accept all those who are living in
intolerable situations" as refugees. Irish people should have learned the
lessons of the mass emigration during the great Famine.
Her team-mate, Ms Gallagher, said the Geneva Convention's definition
of who should be granted refugee status should be broadened to include
those who are persecuted by groups other than the state. Economic deprivation
should also be taken into account by the Irish authorities.
Ms Gallagher and Ms Quigley were awarded the Demosthenes Trophy,
while Mr Fanning took home the Christina Murphy Memorial Prize. All three
will undertake a speaking tour of colleges in the United States later this
year.
The debate was chaired by the Irish Times Education Correpondent,
Mr Andy Pollak. The presiding adjudicator was a barrister, Mr Tim O'Leary.
He was joined on the adjudication panel by the Irish Times Literary Editor,
Ms Caroline Walsh, the Cork Institute of Technology registrar, Mr Brendan
Goggin, Prof James A. Johnson, of the Colorado College in Colorado Springs,
and a UCC marketing lecturer, Mr Don O'Sullivan. |