LAST UPDATE
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4 hrs ago
A NUMBER OF Dublin councillors will boycott a ceremony that will see Barack Obama conferred with the Freedom of the City today.
The former US president will receive the highest and most prestigious award Dublin City can bestow from Lord Mayor Ray McAdam in the Mansion House.
But there are mixed views on whether Obama should be awarded it due to measures he took as president, including the authorisation of drone strikes and large scale deportations.
In a statement, the Independent Group on Dublin City Council – Cieran Perry, Nial Ring, John Lyons, Mannix Flynn, Pat Dunne and Kevin Breen – called on those invited to boycott the event.
They said this was due to Obama’s support for “the terrorist regime in Israel, his murderous foreign policy in Libya, Yemen, Somalia and elsewhere and his expanded deportation programme during his terms of office”.
“We consider him a war criminal,” the group said.
They said Obama’s administration granted Israel a military aid package of $38 billion in 2015 – the highest ever aid package from the US to any country – despite the country’s “war crimes in Gaza and relentless settlement expansion”.
“His administration objected to Palestine joining the International Criminal Court and opposed any ICC investigation of grave crimes by Israeli officials,” they added.
Sinn Féin councillors will not be in attendance at the event. The party’s Dublin City Council group leader Daithí Doolan told The Journal: “This is in line with the position we took during the vote on granting President Obama the Freedom of the City in 2017 and our position hasn’t changed since then.”
People Before Profit councillor Conor Reddy said he has refused an invitation to attend the event and encouraged Dubliners to join “any protests that may be called” around the ceremony.
Reddy said Obama is ”not a symbol of peace or freedom but of US imperialism and war”.
To roll out the red carpet for him in Dublin, at a time when Palestinians are being slaughtered with US weapons, is shameful.
Dublin City councillors decided in 2017 to confer Barack Obama and former First Lady Michelle Obama with the honour following a close vote.
Councillors voted 30 to 23, with four abstentions, in favour of granting the award.
Opponents at the time argued that measures Obama had taken as president, such as the authorisation of drone strikes, large scale deportations and his cabinet’s support to overthrow the Honduran government, disqualified him from the award.
On Friday, Obama will take part in an interview in Dublin’s 3Arena with Irish Times columnist Fintan O’Toole.