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Sam Boal

Opinion St Patrick's story should make us consider how Ireland treats refugees

Author and medieval historian Elizabeth Boyle writes that tomorrow we should reflect on how we can write a new chapter of Ireland’s history.

THE WRITING OF Irish history begins with St Patrick’s first words to us: My name is Patrick, a simple country person and the least of all believers. I am looked down upon by many. In many respects, it has become a familiar story: Patrick was kidnapped ‘along with thousands of others’ by Irish slave-raiders at the age of 16.

He escaped his enslavement in Ireland and returned to Britain, where a religious experience led him to return to Ireland as a missionary, attempting to convert people to Christianity.

Tomorrow we celebrate his feast day in a way that would have horrified him. The copious amounts of Guinness and the general hedonism that is now integral to St Patrick’s Day festivities show us just how much some aspects of society have changed since Patrick wrote his earnest, indignant and often self-righteous testimony.

If we return to his own words, we see that he describes himself in his old age as profugus – someone who has fled their homeland, someone who is exiled. In the classic English translation of Patrick’s words, Ludwig Bieler rendered it ‘refugee’.

The writing of Irish history begins with a refugee. The Russian invasion of Ukraine has thrown refugees back into the spotlight of Irish society, and it has been heartening to see evidence of a warm reception for those fleeing violence and oppression.

But what of the thousands of refugees who are in Direct Provision centres at this very moment? Those who have fled violence and oppression in Syria or Afghanistan or other conflict zones around the world. It is long past time to end the inhumane Direct Provision system and work towards making a more humanitarian society.

‘You well-educated people in authority, listen’, writes Patrick. Patrick returned to Ireland, a country which had enslaved him, because he wanted to make a difference. He tells us that it was the most oppressed in society – women and the enslaved – who flocked to hear his message and convert to this new faith, with its promise that the poorest on earth would be the richest in the hereafter. It would be easier to pass a rope through the eye of a needle than for a rich man – someone who profited from the misery of others – to enter the kingdom of heaven.

Ruling dynasties

Fierce Appetites Jacket

The most powerful ruling dynasties in early medieval Ireland were the Uí Néill, those noble families who traced their lineage back to Níall of the Nine Hostages. When their centuries-long domination of Irish political life was weakening, with the rise of Munster-based Brian Boru in the early eleventh century, an author sat down and constructed an origin story for them.

He wrote that their great ancestor, Níall, was the son of an enslaved princess, the daughter of an English king, who had been kidnapped and taken into slavery in Ireland. Her son grew up to free his mother from her enslavement, and beat his half-brothers to become heir to his royal father. Those who claimed descent from him would go on to rule vast swathes of the island of Ireland for hundreds of years.

The story of Níall’s rise to kingship reminds us, just as much as the historical realities of Patrick’s life, of the long histories of oppression and resistance that characterise Irish history. St Patrick’s Day can be great fun, and I for one enjoy any celebration that involves a public holiday and a chance to drink pints.

But perhaps we also need to take time to consider why we celebrate this day as our national holiday and what darkness lies beneath it: the kidnap, enslavement and exploitation of other human beings.

Patrick had the capacity to record his ‘hardship and troubles’ for posterity, but how many voices have been lost?

And in considering that history, we should also consider the present. Patrick’s story is an opportunity for us to look around us. Who is profiting from the Direct Provision system? What does it say about us as a society that it exists at all? Let us seize the good in our welcome for those fleeing Ukraine – the offer of sanctuary and support and safety – and extend it to all those who are, like St Patrick, a profugus, a person who has fled, a person exiled from their homeland.

We can write a new chapter of Ireland’s history. One in which those who manage to escape violence, persecution and war find not more ‘hardship and troubles’, but rather a society in which they can rebuild their lives and make their own contributions to local and national life.

St Patrick knew and wrote about ‘the cost of leaving homeland and parents’. It is indefensible to make that cost even greater for those who have reached our shores. It’s time for us to end Direct Provision now.

Elizabeth Boyle was born in Dublin, grew up in Suffolk and returned to live in Dublin in 2013. She is a medieval historian specialising in the intellectual, literary and religious culture of Ireland and Britain. A former Leverhulme Early Career Fellow at the University of Cambridge, she now works in the Department of Early Irish at Maynooth University. She recently published Fierce Appetites, her debut collection of personal essays.

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21 Comments
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    Mute QuirkeAlan
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    Jan 31st 2013, 8:39 AM

    What they’re saying is nobody will help you with your mortgage but if you had a heap of loans we will restructure them and stretch out the payments to 5 years or something. A little relief for the person making the payments but it means more interest to the banks. Who are they helping exactly?

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    Mute Mik Kershaw
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    Jan 31st 2013, 8:23 AM

    There is a legal way of dispatching this debt.
    You decide what you can pay back monthly
    Inform the debtor of your intention to pay and your committed monthly payment.
    Attach your cheque and write official offer on the rear of the letter diagonally
    You know have a new legal contract
    But you must legally maintain your offer
    Every month
    Do not make it a stupid amount but what u can afford
    More info on you tube

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    Mute SeanNorris
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    Jan 31st 2013, 9:48 AM

    Vaguely true insofar as if you do this a judge will be very reluctant to give any judgement to enforce the original contract. The diagonal writing though?

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    Mute Will
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    Jan 31st 2013, 10:04 AM

    Dangerous, misleading rubbish.

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    Mute Ryan'O
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    Jan 31st 2013, 10:16 AM

    Please explain why Will.

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    Mute Will
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    Jan 31st 2013, 12:01 PM

    Happy to oblige, Ryan. Mik’s advice, if followed, will have absolutely no legal effect on one’s obligations and liabilities, and most certainly will not result in “a new legal contract”. Such unilateral action is far more likely to result in services being withdrawn/cut off and debt collection proceedings. Short of bankruptcy, debt restructuring is only possible with the agreement of one’s creditors. Following Mik’s advice is the path to ruin. Negotiate with your creditors, because you can’t dictate to them.

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    Mute Cpm
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    Jan 31st 2013, 12:51 PM

    That doesn’t rhyme, Mik

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    Mute Kenny Sullivan
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    Jan 31st 2013, 2:07 PM

    @Mik

    Hi Mik

    Did you read the book by a man called Darrell O’Dea who challenged the banks on his mortgage and won?
    I read it there a few weeks ago. It was poorly written, kind of rush job, but to be fair to the man he pretty much documented his whole experience in great detail.
    There’s a great section in the book where he calls out bank of ireland on their fake debt collector and also how he handled extremely aggressive phone calls from bank of ireland’s solictors.

    It would give hope to the people who think they have no hope. I’m not yet in that situation, but if my choices were this or repossesion and being chucked out on to the street I would definitely go down the road of challenging the bank. Kenny

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    Mute Will
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    Jan 31st 2013, 6:51 PM

    @Kenny: my comments above on Mik’s guff are just as applicable to that “book” you mention. Even more so, in fact.

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    Mute Michael Burke
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    Jan 31st 2013, 8:57 PM

    @Will

    I also read ‘that book’ and it would be guff only the guy lawfully discharged his mortgage and there’s no police or solicitors chasing after him. He’s living in his house mortgage free at the present. Did you actually read the book or just spewing know it all nonsence?

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    Mute Mik Kershaw
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    Feb 1st 2013, 6:26 AM

    Exactly kenny it’s a way of keeping your roof over your head but u still owe your debt just extending it over a much longer time
    Any roof is better than no roof .

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    Mute Mik Kershaw
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    Feb 1st 2013, 6:27 AM

    Who do u work for will viper debt collectors lol

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    Mute Will
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    Feb 1st 2013, 8:08 AM

    @Michael – if you believe that, I have some magic beans to sell you…

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    Mute Will
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    Feb 1st 2013, 8:11 AM

    @Mik – Any chance you could engage with the substance of my post, rather making daft personal digs?

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    Mute Ciaran Whyte
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    Jan 31st 2013, 8:20 AM

    New initiative but no details…. Wow bet loads of people are feeling the relief on the back of this

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    Mute Steve Murphy
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    Jan 31st 2013, 10:27 AM

    We were told the same last year and the year before nothing ever gets done.easy to know noone in the dail needs a mortgage or they would be free with every pint in the dail bar

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    Mute FlopFlipU
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    Jan 31st 2013, 8:20 AM

    Wow look what they discovered a child in the street knew that particularly a hungry one I suppose they will give themselves a rise now

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    Mute Paul Minogue
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    Jan 31st 2013, 8:35 AM

    Commas and full stops are your free. Use them.

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    Mute Declan McCabe
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    Jan 31st 2013, 8:44 AM

    Correction fail.

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    Mute Paul Minogue
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    Jan 31st 2013, 9:00 AM

    Damn autocorrect.

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    Mute Norman Hunter
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    Jan 31st 2013, 9:12 AM

    Paul,step away from the shovel.

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    Mute Steve Murphy
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    Jan 31st 2013, 9:57 AM

    Last time I checked auto correct won’t add in words

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    Mute GatheringYourMoney
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    Jan 31st 2013, 11:01 AM

    More Lies form the Irish Banking Federation!
    5 years on nothing done for the victims of corrupt/criminal bankers.
    The Irish Banking Federation, A Private Members only club for Snout Nosed Champagne Quaffing Schiesters.
    You Bust the country you should be in jail!!
    Not pretending to assist your victims!!

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    Mute Patrick Lyons
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    Jan 31st 2013, 9:09 AM

    Do not pay! Everything should be free – free houses, free electricity, free gas, free health, free cars, free road tax, free insurance, free fuel. Print more money and we will all be rich.

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    Mute Norman Hunter
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    Jan 31st 2013, 9:15 AM

    Sarcasm?

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    Mute Norman Hunter
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    Jan 31st 2013, 9:17 AM

    If everything was free,they’d be no need to print money.:-)

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    Mute Patrick Lyons
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    Jan 31st 2013, 9:32 AM

    Good point Norman. And with the money we saved on not printing money we could have even more free stuff.

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    Mute Norman Hunter
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    Jan 31st 2013, 9:42 AM

    You wouldn’t save anything since as you suggested everything is free.But i degress read the article,nowhere does it state debtors will or should walk away from their debts.

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    Mute Mik Kershaw
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    Feb 1st 2013, 6:33 AM

    Exactly the way it is for all our TDs
    Oh wait they get a massive salary and 5m worth of a pension too after 4 years
    What’s good for the goose

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    Mute Andrew Dunne
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    Jan 31st 2013, 8:43 AM

    Just like ireland and the the ecb , there’s gonna be no debt write down just stretching it out

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    Mute Fools
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    Jan 31st 2013, 8:34 AM

    Restructuring means still having to pay. .It is basically kicking the can down the road.

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    Mute Martin Mac
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    Jan 31st 2013, 1:53 PM

    Yes and that’s the way it should be. Do you want a something for free and get to keep it at a reduced price? Would you offer any free profit of your house if it continued into profit? Would you give back 200,000 to the tax payer if your house was worth more? No you would not! You would probably re mortgage buy a few buy to let apartments and get a couple of new cars and holidays and live it up like a king and treat your tenants like 2nd class citizens caus they wee not clever enough to buy obnoxiously over priced houses in a little dreary island . But when it’s the other way around its everyone else’s fault and I want my Nama and don’t want all the debt anymore !!! Not saying everyone is like this but plenty are.

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    Mute Shaun the Sheep
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    Jan 31st 2013, 9:00 AM

    Why should someone get to keep an asset they cannot pay for? Makes no sense to someone who can’t even get on the property ladder despite paying 1250/mth rent for last 3 years. Sell up and give the rest of us a chance

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    Mute Norman Hunter
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    Jan 31st 2013, 9:14 AM

    Why are there no houses for sale at the moment?Are you confusing asset with a “family home”?

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    Mute John O'Brien
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    Jan 31st 2013, 9:20 AM

    Problem is Sean, the assets are worth a fraction of what they originally where. The majority of borrowers entered contracts in good faith! Banks, builders and estate agents were supposed to be the professionals. The banks were complicit in a lot of bad borrowing yet they get bailed out? and poor auld Joe Soap has to pay the penalty on his own? The government and banking community will continue to divide and conquer unless somebody, everybody stands up and objects!

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    Mute Karolyn Cassidy
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    Jan 31st 2013, 12:14 PM

    What else do u want, hard working people who wanted a family, who have found themselves in a difficult situation to be kicked out in the streets, then claim full rent allowance because we’ll have to put them somewhere, then say I don’t know 4-8 years come up and they get the council house which is bought for them by the council €€€. Do u see the dept of your statement. Kicking people out only furthers the problem and quite possibly cost the state much more.

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    Mute FlopFlipU
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    Jan 31st 2013, 8:42 AM

    You are right Paul ‘ the excitement of the news got to me

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    Mute Marlon Major
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    Jan 31st 2013, 10:17 AM

    Sorry to be selfish here… But…. What benefits, rewards or incentives will we get for not taking out loans we couldn’t afford just to “get on the property ladder”?

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    Mute Norman Hunter
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    Jan 31st 2013, 10:22 AM

    “Peace of mind” unlike the unlucky ones who did.

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    Mute Marlon Major
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    Jan 31st 2013, 10:39 AM

    Fair enough… As long as my taxes doesn’t have to take up the slack!

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    Mute Norman Hunter
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    Jan 31st 2013, 10:49 AM

    Sadly you don’t get to decide where your tax goes and never will.

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    Mute Mik Kershaw
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    Feb 1st 2013, 6:36 AM

    They don’t they take it up for the banks and now will till you and your next 5-6 generations pay for it

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    Mute SeanNorris
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    Jan 31st 2013, 10:04 AM

    While this measure is welcome I wonder how it will work. The banks that have signed up are AIB, BOI,UB, PTSB and KBC. This measure might work if the person needing help has all their liabilities with those banks. In practice I suspect that people have loans (outside of system) as well as a Significant credit card providor MBNA. Additionally, they are saying that the mortgage has to be up to date. Given the way short term creditors Chase their debt they are more likely to be up to date at the expense of the mortgage.

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    Mute Shanti Om
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    Jan 31st 2013, 10:16 PM

    I have a couple of friends who renegotiated with their bank on their mortgages. They made a new deal to pay what they could now that they had been laid off and literally didn’t have the cash any more.

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    Mute Alan Phillips
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    Jan 31st 2013, 3:39 PM

    At last a realisation by the banks that people can only pay what they can pay, during a recession
    getting unsecured debt paid back was always going to be a damage limitation exercise

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    Mute ColindeB
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    Jan 31st 2013, 1:34 PM

    Trouble with these debt write-down schemes is that Brendan Kelly-type landlords with 20 plus properties will be in the same queue as folk with only one property.

    If a family can’t afford to pay rent, then they have to leave and find something that they can afford. Don’t see why mortgage holders have to be treated like they are special.

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    Mute Peter Richardson
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    Jan 31st 2013, 9:57 PM

    That would be fair if there was not a fundamentally dysfunctional and abusive property market. Thankfully I am not a victim but so many people were so badly scammed.

    Principal private residences deserve protection. Buy to lets are different.

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    Mute Peter Richardson
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    Jan 31st 2013, 10:03 PM

    The IBF has been disingenuous, false and irresponsible in its statements. Do not trust the IBF.

    The IBF lavishly entertained the CBI upper echelons and kept the banking regulator sweet. Light touch regulation became collaboration. Wearing the green jersey was the code for back scratching.

    Sadly my comment will likely soon be removed. Speaking truth to power is unacceptable in Ireland.

    The covered institutions are grossly insolvent if real and actual mortgage impairments were to be fully provisioned. Look at the quarterly reports on mortgage impairments given to the CBI. Unreal.

    The IBF is inimical to the public interest.

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    Mute Mik Kershaw
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    Feb 1st 2013, 6:21 AM

    @ Will
    U clearly work for a bank or a debt collection agency or many a solicitor
    I never said it dispatched your debt
    It’s an old law if I acted upon in a very precise and correct manner
    Would restructure your payment to a manageable amount which paid once would have to be paid each and every month till your original debt was dispatched
    One missed payment at the new amount wound render your offer null and void
    It’s a sticking plaster not a con
    To enable people time to educate themselves
    About how their bank operates
    It’s a last resort situation
    But will keep people in their homes with some breathing space
    From the wolves that will sell it for a few magic beans and still hang the debt over your head

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    Mute Will
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    Feb 1st 2013, 8:17 AM

    Mik, the only thing that’s clear here is that you’re definitely not a solicitor, inventing “old laws” and posting misleading rubbish. You would remain bound by the terms of your original credit agreement no matter what you write diagonally.

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