
'Concerning' misinformation online after attack on garda
'Unfortunately we see it every day, and we have some people with their own agenda trying to use incidents like this to inflame situations for their own ends. We would always say to people to make sure that they get their information from credible media sources.
Advertisement
"Very inaccurate misinformation and disinformation went out online after this incident very quickly. So it is concerning and we would ask people to make sure that the source of their information is credible,' he told RTÉ radio's Morning Ireland.
Mr Cleary commended both members of the force involved in the incident for their courage and professionalism 'in the face of such an unprovoked attack.
"The garda did receive a wound to his upper right arm in the tricep area. His official issue stab vest sustained some stab impact damage. So that's a good job.
'I've appointed a senior investigating officer. It's crucial that, in addition to gathering the evidence to bring the offender responsible to justice, we also want to understand the motivation behind the attack and any learnings we can take from the investigation of the attack.
Advertisement
"I'll ensure that we consider those learnings in our future planning and policing operations.'
Mr Cleary said that assaults on members of the force would never be accepted or tolerated. Welfare supports were available to any member at any time and he had listened to concerns expressed by representative bodies.
'I will meet again with the representative bodies.I have introduced in the last few months a new high visibility strategy in the city and I've been able to get 174 new guards for this high visibility strategy to provide reassurance to the communities in the cities and the business communities and people visiting and socialising in the city and basically it takes the form of members on high visibility patrols in areas of the city where we have identified from crime location data and from feedback that they need to be.
'So we have received positive feedback for this initiative. It's a permanent high visibility strategy and we will be adding to it and we'll be expanding it.
Advertisement
"We have more guards coming out from Templemore in August and as the year goes on we'll expand it and including out to the suburbs. So we are moving in the right direction.'
Pay and conditions
The vice president of the Garda Representative Association (GRA), Niall Hodgins has said that the attack on a garda in Capel Street in Dublin on Monday was a reminder of why garda pay and conditions had to reflect the dangers and uniqueness of their role.
Speaking on RTÉ radio's Morning Ireland, Mr Hodgins extended well wishes to the injured garda and wished him a speedy recovery.
The attack served as a reminder of the dangers that are faced by Gardai each and every day, he said. 'But this is not just Dublin North Central. This could be any village across the country because, unfortunately, the precedence of attacks on our members is occurring on a daily basis. There's an increased amount of violence being perpetrated against our members daily.'
Advertisement
The issue needed to be addressed 'by all facets of the State' he added. That included the judiciary and the government with regard to legislation and penalties.
'There's a myriad of issues and remember these attacks lessen the morale yet again when we don't see that our members are getting support.
"What I'd also say there now, this attack is a reminder that the pay and conditions have to reflect the dangers and the uniqueness of the guards, of being a member of the force.'

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Guardian
29 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Trump orders nuclear submarines moved near Russia after threatening tweet from Dmitry Medvedev
Donald Trump has said that he has deployed nuclear-capable submarines to the 'appropriate regions' in response to a threatening tweet by Russia's former president Dmitry Medvedev, suggesting that he would be ready to launch a nuclear strike as tensions rise over the war in Ukraine. In a post on Truth Social on Friday, Trump wrote that he had decided to reposition the nuclear submarines because of 'highly provocative statements' by Medvedev, noting he is now the deputy chairman of Russia's security council. Medvedev had earlier said that Trump's threats to sanction Russia and a recent ultimatum were 'a threat and a step towards war'. 'I have ordered two Nuclear Submarines to be positioned in the appropriate regions, just in case these foolish and inflammatory statements are more than just that,' Trump responded. 'Words are very important, and can often lead to unintended consequences, I hope this will not be one of those instances.' Medvedev, who was sidelined when Vladimir Putin returned to the presidency in 2012, is also an avid fan of X, formerly Twitter, where he often posts aggressive and curiously worded attacks against western countries and leaders in the evening in Moscow. Earlier this week, Medvedev had attacked Trump for shortening his timeline for Russia to make progress toward peace with Ukraine from 50 days down to just 10, saying that he was ready to impose sanctions and other financial penalties against Russia if it didn't comply. 'Trump's playing the ultimatum game with Russia: 50 days or 10,' Medvedev wrote in a post. 'He should remember 2 things: 1. Russia isn't Israel or even Iran. 2. Each new ultimatum is a threat and a step towards war. Not between Russia and Ukraine, but with his own country.' 'Don't go down the Sleepy Joe road!' he added, referring to the former US president Joe Biden. Sign up to Headlines US Get the most important US headlines and highlights emailed direct to you every morning after newsletter promotion Trump has voiced frustration with Putin, who he said had been stalling on Trump's efforts to broker a ceasefire between Russia and Ukraine, a campaign promise that he said that he could achieve in just 24 hours. 'I go home. I tell the first lady, 'You know, I spoke to Vladimir today. We had a wonderful conversation.' She said, 'Oh, really? Another city was just hit,'' he said in at the White House last month. Putin has not responded to Trump's ultimatum. On Friday, he said he wanted a 'lasting and stable peace' in Ukraine but gave no indication that he is willing to make any concessions to achieve it, after a week in which Russian missiles and drones again caused death and destruction across Ukraine. 'We need a lasting and stable peace on solid foundations that would satisfy both Russia and Ukraine, and would ensure the security of both countries,' said Putin, speaking to journalists on Friday, a week before a new deadline imposed by Trump for hostilities to cease.


The Guardian
31 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Deal or no deal?: world leaders walk tightrope in tariff negotiations with Trump
It was grip-and-grin time for Ursula von der Leyen as she sat across from Donald Trump in Scotland last week, with the two announcing a deal for 15% tariffs on European imports that would avert a transatlantic trade war – but came at a stiff price for the 27-country bloc. After committing to a unilateral US raise on tariffs that came on the heels of a Nato commitment to increase defense spending to 5% of national GDPs, von der Leyen then thanked Trump 'for his personal commitment and his leadership to achieve this breakthrough'. 'He is a tough negotiator, but he is also a dealmaker,' she said, as the US president beamed. The EU was one of just a number of parties to strike a deal with Trump before his temporary pause on new tariffs came to an end this week. And like many others, the guiding principle for the EU appeared to be: it can always get worse. 'This is clearly the best deal we could get under very difficult circumstances,' Maroš Šefčovič, the EU trade chief, said. Others had a far bleaker interpretation of the dynamics, as Trump has wielded the threat of sky-high tariffs to cudgel his trading partners into submission. 'It is a dark day when an alliance of free peoples, brought together to affirm their common values and to defend their common interests, resigns itself to submission,' wrote the French prime minister, François Bayrou. Hungarian prime minister Viktor Orbán put it another way: 'It was Donald Trump eating Ursula von der Leyen for breakfast,' he said on his podcast. Later, he called her a 'featherweight'. World leaders have been forced to adopt a position of appeasement and pragmatism as they've approached the Trump administration, which has swung between imposing staggering tariffs on imports and then announcing last minute pauses and exclusions that suggest there is little rhyme or reason to the White House's tariff strategy. But the key factor for Trump appears to be taking whatever he can get. Countries across Asia exporting to the US were quickest to begin negotiating new trade deals with the White House. Vietnam was desperate to cut a 46% tariff imposed on the country, and Trump early last month announced that he had negotiated a 20% rate with Vietnamese negotiators. Except, it turned out, they believed that they had negotiated an 11% rate, Politico reported. And treasury secretary Scott Bessent this week admitted that he had never seen the deal, which the Vietnamese authorities have never confirmed. Trump reportedly used the trade threats along with other incentives in order to broker a recent peace between Thailand and Cambodia after fighting broke out along the border between the two countries. He soon announced a 19% rate – a significant cut from 49% for Cambodia and 36% for Thailand – which appeared more motivated by international politics than trade considerations. But while many countries in the region will breathe a sigh of relief as they avert sky-high tariffs, some see a new danger in the arbitrary redrawing of the US's trade relationship with the world. 'What we felt during this negotiation is that the US trade environment is fundamentally changing,' South Korean trade minister Yeo Han-koo said shortly after a deal was made to tariff imports at 15%, down from a threatened 25%. The two sides had made a verbally agreement but had not made a formal draft, he said, because the deal had to be struck so quickly. 'I think we are entering a new normal era,' he said. 'So, although we have overcome this crisis, we cannot be relieved, because we do not know when we will face pressure from tariffs or non-tariff measures again.' Leaders who have stood up to Trump are having the hardest time. Among others, Trump has focused his ire on Canada, which he has blamed for the fentanyl crisis in the US, a charge that Canada's prime minister Mark Carney has rejected. Trump on Friday announced that he would raise tariffs on Canada, a top trading partner, to 35%, as tough negotiations between the two sides continued. Carney, who had coined the elections slogan 'Elbows up, Canada' as a signal of defiance against Trump's tariff and annexation threats, said he was 'disappointed'. 'While we will continue to negotiate with the United States on our trading relationship, the Canadian government is laser focused on what we can control: building Canada strong,' Carney said.


Times
44 minutes ago
- Times
Holy orders vs EU borders: how ‘church asylum' is blocking deportations
At first glance, the Church of the Holy Trinity in Steglitz, a middle-class neighbourhood in south Berlin, appears more like a youth hostel. The church's grounds are buzzing with young men who sit together in groups, play pool, or read the Bible in the garden. The pastor, Gottfried Martens, calls the scene his 'monastery', where people 'pray and work'. But the 'monks' here are refugees from Afghanistan and Iran, many of whom have converted to Christianity, and who Martens is protecting from being deported. As the German government attempts to crack down on irregular migration and increase deportations, Martens and four Afghan members of his congregation have triggered a fierce political row over the practice of 'church asylum' and how it obstructs national and EU law. Churches in Germany have given temporary shelter to refugees for decades under a special privilege that has no firm legal basis, but which grew out of Christian traditions. By convention, churches can flag cases of particular human hardship to regional authorities, and ask for them to remain in the 'shelter of the church'. In Berlin, Martens successfully applied for four Afghan members of his congregation to remain in this way, although they were due to be deported. • Merz: Strict asylum policy needed to stop Germany becoming overloaded The young men had arrived in Germany earlier this year from Sweden, where they had faced being sent back to Taliban-run Afghanistan. Upon arrival in the northern city of Hamburg, the authorities there wanted to return them to the Scandinavian country, which was still responsible for handling their claims, according to EU law. But the men travelled on to Berlin, where last month local police declined a request from Hamburg to enter the church and arrest them. The stand-off escalated into a row between the mayors of Germany's two largest cities, with Peter Tschentscher, Hamburg's mayor, denouncing 'systematic abuse of church asylum' in the capital. His own city has been especially hostile to church asylum, as it claims that churches 'systematically undermine the application of European law' by preventing deportations even to other European countries. Of the four men at the centre of the storm, only two are still sheltering at the church. One was arrested this week by police officers when he briefly left the church's grounds, and therefore invalidated his claim to sanctuary there. Another had spent six months in Germany, allowing him to leave the church without facing deportation to Sweden as his asylum claim is now reviewed in Germany. The other two men are hoping they can stay long enough with Martens to also earn a legal right to remain. Martens, 62, a Lutheran, insists he never aimed to become a 'refugee pastor' and only learned about the public row over his congregation members when he was asked to comment by the press. When he started more than 30 years ago, the congregation at first included many Germans from Russia, who from 2013 were followed by an influx of Iranian migrants, many of whom converted from Islam. 'Our people are incredibly active missionaries,' he added. He now offers services in the Persian language which has boosted the congregation to 1,700 members, predominantly of Afghan and Iranian background, including a few refugees who received church asylum. While overall numbers of church asylum cases are low — rising from 2,703 granted claims in 2023 to 2,966 last year, out of some 250,000 total asylum applications — the heightened scrutiny on places of worship giving sanctuary to refugees reflects hardening attitudes towards immigrants in general. The German chancellor, Friedrich Merz, has vowed to step up deportations, including to Afghanistan, and to turn all asylum seekers away at the border, in response to rising public pressure after a series of violent attacks linked to migrants in recent months. It is a stark contrast from the days of Angela Merkel, his predecessor as leader of the Christian Democrat Union (CDU), who voluntarily took in thousands of migrants as a humanitarian gesture in 2015 and 2016. Günter Krings, the CDU's lead spokesman in the Bundestag on home affairs, said that although the party backed the principle of church asylum, it was 'increasingly used to circumvent legally binding decisions' in particular for internal European deportations He argued that churches should restrict their claims to 'exceptional cases again'. Martens insists that his parishioners had been judged unfairly both by Sweden, where the minority government, backed by a hard-right anti-immigration party, is trying to deport Afghan asylum seekers in particular, and by the Hamburg authorities. Germany has also made an effort to resume deportations to Afghanistan, with the first return flight in over a year taking off earlier this month. • Friedrich Merz's economic cure for Germany, the sick man of Europe• Why Germany's border gambit threatens the EU's asylum rule book Amir, 24, one of those sought for deportation, previously lived for a decade in Sweden and was working as a hospital nurse when he was caught under a new policy specifically targeting young Afghan men. A member of the Hazare minority which has faced repressions from the Taliban, he felt he had no option but to flee, leaving behind his elderly parents who were legally settled in Sweden. If Amir were to return to Afghanistan his life would be at risk, argued Martens, who said he was aware of two Christian converts who were murdered by the Taliban after they were deported from Germany. Martens, whose views on migration are nuanced but conservative, hardly fits the image of a left-wing hero. He said, however, that he has also rejected attempts by the hard-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) party to instrumentalise his pro-Christian activism. His own health is suffering from the stress of offering sanctuary, and his doctor told him he was 'mad' to do so, he said. But, he added, 'when I see these wonderful people, I can't leave them alone'.