Alan Dukes: Ex-Irish minister criticised over border community remarks

Image source, Getty Images

Image caption, A锘縧an Dukes made the comments in a documentary about businessman Sean Quinn
At a glance
  • Former Fine Gael leader A锘縧an Dukes said people in border communities have violence "in their blood"
  • T锘縣e remarks were made in a documentary examining the life of businessman Sean Quinn
  • P锘縪liticians have condemned the remarks
  • M锘縭 Dukes has since described the phrasing as "ill-chosen"

A锘 former Irish government minister has been criticised for saying people in border communities have violence "in their blood".

F锘縪rmer Fine Gael leader Alan Dukes made the comments in an RT脡 documentary about the businessman Sean Quinn.

A锘 Fianna F谩il politician in a border constituency called on Mr Dukes to retract the claims.

M锘縭 Dukes has since described the phrasing of the comments as "ill-chosen".

S锘縫eaking in the documentary Quinn Country, Mr Dukes said: "Border people have it in their blood.

"They are living in communities that have a long history of violence of different kinds.

"They will more easily turn to it than anybody else will.

"锘縄鈥檓 not saying they鈥檙e different animals from the rest of us but, you know, whether they have provo links or B-Special links or whatever.

"It鈥檚 something that鈥檚 nearer to the way they think than it would be to somebody in south Tipperary or anywhere like that."

T锘縣e term "provo" refers to the Provisional IRA while the B-Specials were part of the Ulster Special Constabulary - a reserve police force from the 1920s to 1970.

Brendan Smith, who represents the Cavan-Monaghan constituency in the D谩il (lower house of Irish parliament), said the comments were outrageous and ill-informed.

"What he said last night is the very definition of tarring everyone with the same brush," Mr Smith said.

"To say that border people turn to violence more easily than anyone else is an atrocious comment to make."

M锘縭 Dukes served in various posts in the Irish government in the 1980s and 1990s.

'锘緽order communities suffered violence'

R锘縠sponding to the criticism, Mr Dukes said the remarks were not as "elegantly phrased as it might be".

鈥淚 am not saying by any means that the people in border counties are violent people. I am conscious of the fact that they have suffered from violence more than most other parts of the country," he told RT脡 Radio 1.

"I feel that if people have been offended by that, I just ask them to accept my statements that I don鈥檛 for a moment believe that people in the border areas are violent people," he said.

T锘縣e documentary examines the rise and downfall of Sean Quinn, who at his peak was Ireland's richest man and employed 8,000 people in the Fermanagh and Cavan border area.

In 2011聽he lost control of his business empire聽after he made a disastrous investment in Anglo Irish Bank following the collapse of the Irish economy.

In 2014 the businesses were bought by local businessmen backed by United States investment firms, who brought back former Quinn senior management to run them.

Mr Quinn later said he had been forced out and that his family had been "stabbed in the back" by their former company.

But he has聽repeatedly condemned attacks聽on property belonging to the owners of his former businesses.