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Protesters call for Chelsea Manning to be released at the US Embassy in Ballsbridge in 2013 Niall/PA

Column 'I do not know what Chelsea Manning will do next. She owes the world nothing'

On the day of Chelsea Manning’s release from prison, campaigner Ruairí McKiernan reflects on the Irish campaign for her freedom.

DURING 2013 I was going through a bit of a hard time when suddenly I started thinking about Chelsea Manning. Chelsea was then a 25-year-old US army analyst who was three years into a thirty-five year prison sentence for revealing files that included evidence of US war crimes.

I wrote Chelsea’s name on a post-it note beside my desk as a reminder of those that are suffering, those that have lost their liberty, those whistle-blowers who like Chelsea, risk their personal freedom for the greater good.

I thought about this young transgender woman and the bullying she had experienced as a child in Wales, the struggles she had faced with her sexuality, the moral challenge of having seen evidence of the slaughter of innocents, and her struggles in prison.

Hosting her family

Life sometimes works in mysterious ways and just days after I wrote on the post-it note Joe Murray at Afri called, asking if I could host Chelsea Manning’s Welsh mother, aunts and uncle for an afternoon during their visit to Ireland.

I’ll never forget that Sunday afternoon at my home as they spoke fondly of Chelsea and her Irish ancestry, her Dublin-born grandfather, and her grandmother who used to constantly say to her, “If you can’t tell the truth, then don’t bother talking.”

The Manning family visit was to cement deep and lasting bonds that have continued over the years. The work of Ciaron O’Reilly, who had previously been on trial over a protest at Shannon Airport, alongside playwright Dónal O’Kelly and campaigner Genny Bove and many others ensured that Ireland was to become a key part of the international campaign for her release.

In the midst of the campaign it transpired that I shared a birthday with Chelsea. This caused me to reflect on what it must be like for Chelsea, ten years younger than me, to mark her birthday in a military prison, far from friends, family and freedom. This in turn led us to hosting an annual Chelsea Manning birthday vigil at the GPO in Dublin each December 17.

Annual Chelsea Manning birthday vigil

There was tremendous strength in this coming together. Representatives from Afri, Amnesty International, Transparency International, Uplift, the Migrant Rights Centre, and LGBT groups joined politicians that included TDs Thomas Pringle, Clare Daly, Catherine Murphy, Maureen O’Sullivan, Joan Collins, Mick Wallace, and Joe Higgins, MEP Luke Ming Flanagan, and Senators David Norris and Alice Mary Higgins.

The outpouring of support also led to the creation of the Afri supported Manning Truthfest, a celebration of Chelsea in her family’s hometown of Haverfordwest in rural Wales led by Dónal O’Kelly and Irish musicians RoJ Whelan, Joe Black, Robbie Sinnott, Imogen Gunner and Paul O’Toole.

It is this type of campaigning and solidarity that has helped keep Chelsea and her family going. It has helped keep her cause in the media and on the political radar, and they inspired solidarity efforts in other countries. There are now calls (see petition) for Chelsea Manning to be given the freedom of Dublin.

Why had the Obama administration so aggressively targeted whistle-blowers?

News last January that President Obama had commuted Chelsea’s sentence to time served of seven years was met with relief. That she would be free come May was something to celebrate and a testimony to the activism that led to Obama being forced to listen.

There was also a bittersweet element to this. Why had the Obama administration so aggressively targeted whistle-blowers in the first place? Surely Chelsea, alongside so many other truth tellers, should have instead been recognised for her moral courage.

“When I chose to disclose classified information, I did so out of a love for my country and a sense of duty to others.” Chelsea once said in a statement that had echoes of Martin Luther King.

Thanks to the files that Chelsea Manning leaked we now know more about how the world really works. We know about US opposition to a $5 per day minimum wage in impoverished Haiti, where many corporations have manufacturing sweatshops. We know more about the torture of Guantánamo Bay camp. We know more about US support for oppressive Arab regimes.

In discussing her actions, Manning told Amnesty International:

Humanity has never had this complete and detailed a record of what modern warfare actually looks like. Once you realise that the co-ordinates represent a real place where people live; that the dates happened in our recent history; that the numbers are actually human lives – with all the love, hope, dreams, hatred, fear and nightmares that come with them – then it’s difficult to ever forget how important these documents are.

I do not know what 29-year-old Chelsea Manning will do next. She owes the world nothing and deserves a life of happiness and peace. What I do know is that she has given the world a powerful example of moral courage at a time when so many leaders are failing us. She has offered us a light in the dark, a flame to carry forward for the challenging times ahead.

This coming Saturday May 20 members of the Manning family will participate in the 30th annual Afri famine walk in Doolough, Co Mayo. On Sunday from 5.30pm-8.30pm they will be guests of honour at the Celebrating Resistance event at the Teacher’s Club in Dublin. Ruairí McKiernan is an award-winning social innovator, campaigner, member of the Council of State and host of the Love and Courage podcast. His website is www.loveandcourage.org.

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25 Comments
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    Mute Micheal D. Lynch
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    Sep 11th 2011, 12:22 PM

    My gun safe is under my bed. If an intruder was in my house I’d pull the trigger first and ask questions after. He has absolutely no business there only to rob or do my family harm.

    74
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    Mute Cormac Flanagan
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    Sep 11th 2011, 12:26 PM

    As the saying goes it’s better to be judged by 12 than carried by 6.

    74
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    Mute Mark Dennehy
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    Sep 12th 2011, 2:33 AM

    Your CPO signed off on having your gun safe under your bed instead of attached to a structural wall as required by law?

    3
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    Mute Liam Byrne
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    Sep 11th 2011, 12:01 PM

    I think confronting such a scumbag would depend more on how many of them there were than simple courage.

    46
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    Mute shane mc fadden
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    Sep 11th 2011, 1:03 PM

    The only reason cavan people are the most likely to stop inturders is because they are to scabby to lose anything

    42
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    Mute Brian Daly
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    Sep 11th 2011, 12:03 PM

    "not to become complacent"?

    It’s my home not a prison, I am not going to live my life in fear of something that has very little chance of ever happening.

    Besides, I would mangle anyone who tried it :)

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    Mute jumpthecat
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    Sep 11th 2011, 12:20 PM

    You haven’t got enough "stuff"…

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    Mute Randy savage
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    Sep 11th 2011, 2:20 PM

    Thank god my gun safe is in my room, i keep it loaded and the door locked so as to give me time to get it and point at the door. Anyone that enters my home illegally is leaving in a bodybag regardless of whether their armed or not. No apologies to lefts will be made.

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    Mute Lousie Burke
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    Sep 11th 2011, 2:31 PM

    Got my gun under my bed ready in case of burglars, too right, I’d protect myself and family, shoot to kill I would

    21
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    Mute Brian Doherty
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    Sep 11th 2011, 2:01 PM

    A lot of break ins in my area in the last few months. all of them in the morning when people are at work and houses are empty. most of these scumbags are looking for a nice handy rob. the best deterrent is a good savage dog.

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    Mute Guinness Follower
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    Sep 11th 2011, 3:07 PM

    I’m not married.

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    Mute Itchy Brain
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    Sep 11th 2011, 3:58 PM

    All I have is pepper.

    Option A
    Restained a burglar and call the guards.
    For starters I would probably have to wait for about an hour or more for them to come. The guards finally arrive, take him to the station, maybe accuse me of assault. Let him out within a day informing him he will recieve a summons.
    Meanwhile hes angry and wants to get revenge. Maybe come back and harm my family when I’m not there.

    Option B
    Restain him, Kill him

    14
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    Mute John Thomas
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    Sep 12th 2011, 12:08 AM

    Had he cleaned the stain before you restained him, before killing him? :)

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    Mute John Mack
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    Sep 11th 2011, 12:44 PM

    the worse thing about these polls is that they show scumbags there is a 10% chance of being injured if they rob houses in Clare, Dublin or kildare. must encourage my neighbors to answer that question with yeah I’d kill them if they even step on to my land… and beat them up if they throw papers in the street.:) if they know there is a good chance of not getting caught or not getting killed then the odds are in their favor.

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    Mute Jim Daly
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    Sep 11th 2011, 1:33 PM

    Do they say how many of the respondents were scumbags? That could skew the results.

    8
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