Impartial Reporter

Watching famine in Gaza connects with young voters here

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They are not part of a ‘disconnect’ they are connected, savvy, registered and waiting to remind political parties that votes have to be earned, and so far, most politician­s aren’t really making the cut.

The ‘Independen­t vote’ might well be a feature of Northern elections, when they finally turn up.

THE Department for Communitie­s had no good news when published its annual report on poverty last month, on ‘Good Friday’

I have no idea why the day is called ‘Good’ Friday. It is not the happiest days in the liturgy or ritual commemorat­ions of the Christian churches.

I guess it maybe started out as ‘God Friday’, in much the same way that “good bye” started life as “God be with you”.

In any event, it was probably not a bad day to quietly publish a report that made sorrowful reading. I doubt anybody in Fermanagh or further afield will be shocked to discover that a lot of people were even poorer last year than they were the year before.

It is poor consolatio­n to find that it isn’t only you.

The report informs us that, on average, for every £1.00 coming into each household in 2021/22, there was only £0.95 coming in, in 2022/23.

Those of us residing in the outback of the wealthy Kingdom were five pence in the pound poorer before we even spent a penny of our income last year.

The cost of living was and is still rising, so the value of the pound in our pockets was less than £0.85 compared with the year before.

The average for the rest of the UK was a drop of only one penny in the pound in household income.

None of that comparison arose from the existence real or perceived of a sea border.

Children and working adults experience­d the greatest increase in poverty, with almost one child in every four living in relative poverty and almost one in five in absolute poverty.

The ‘triple lock’ policy protected pensioners. It requires the state pension payments to increase at the same rate as the highest cost increase, which was inflation.

That helped ensure that there were fewer pensioners living in poverty, which is of little comfort to those who were.

Meanwhile, The Guardian reported that the richest person on the planet 75-year-old Bernard Arnault had a 10 per cent increase in his income on last year.

A total of $70trillion is expected to be inherited by the next generation (of idle rich kids who didn’t earn it) over the next 20 years.

In what kind of world is that financial disparity anything but obscene?

A 75 per cent Inheritanc­e Tax for billionair­es would go a long way towards solving world poverty, without impoverish­ing the brats.

WE HAVEN’T yet heard from the new Communitie­s Minister about an urgent timetable for bring forward an Antipovert­y strategy with a prevention of Child Poverty at its core.

That should have been the first priority. Children going hungry and cold are unacceptab­le vistas in a State that has so much money to throw into weapons manufactur­e, supporting genocide and prolonging wars.

WELL now, Fermanagh! What about the most westerly county in the UK and the most rural in Northern Ireland being home to the Best Weekly Newspaper in The UK?

Congratula­tions to the Editor, and the whole team at The Impartial Reporter, on their very recent success in scooping that accolade, who bring such diversity of content into one whole, cohesive paper together every single week.

It is not as stress-free as they make it look.

 ?? ?? Humanitari­an aid is airdropped over Gaza City, Gaza Strip to Palestinia­ns on March 25. Image: AP Photo.
Humanitari­an aid is airdropped over Gaza City, Gaza Strip to Palestinia­ns on March 25. Image: AP Photo.

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