
Woman (70s) dies after two-vehicle collision in Co Donegal
The incident happened on the R245 at Bunlin Bridge in Milford.
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A female driver, aged in her 70s, was pronounced deceased at the scene. Her body has been removed to Letterkenny University Hospital where a post-mortem examination will take place in due course.
The driver of the van, a man in his 50s, was taken to Letterkenny University Hospital for treatment of non life-threatening injuries.
There were no other injuries reported.
The road remains closed at this time pending examination by Garda Forensic Collision Investigators. Local diversions are in place.
Gardaí are appealing for witnesses to this incident to come forward.
Any road users who may have camera footage (including dash-cam) and were travelling in the area between 7.15pm and 7.45pm are asked to make this footage available to investigating gardaí.
Anyone with any information is asked to contact Milford Garda Station on (074) 9153060, the Garda Confidential Line on 1800 666 111, or any Garda Station.
Gardaí say investigations are ongoing.
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Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
MMA fighter Conor McGregor speaks out after blaze tears through his £2million Dublin pub
Conor McGregor has broken his silence after his Dublin pub was engulfed by flames yesterday morning in an incident that has seen police launch a 'criminal damage' investigation. The 37-year-old MMA star bought The Black Forge Inn for around £2million and the latest fire is not the first time it has been seen fully ablaze in the years he has owned it. In 2022, thugs attacked the pub with petrol bombs just hours after the former UFC world champion was there. And on Friday morning footage emerged of the building on fire again, with bright flames and thick plumes of smoke seen billowing out of the entrance. Several firefighters descended on the pub on Drimnagh Road in Crumlin, a southern suburb of the Irish capital, as they battled to put the fire out just after 3am. Garda officers were also called to the scene. Now, McGregor has taken to social media to thank the fire service for their 'incredible' and 'swift' response time as he shared a picture of the pub staff holding a cake outside the premises today. He wrote on X: 'Happy fourth birthday to the best pub in the world. I wish to extend my sincere thank you, respect, and appreciation to our Dublin Fire Brigade, who were so incredibly impressive and swift in their response time! 'Record breaking Dublin Fire Brigade! Thank you! I also wish to thank my internal team, who sprung so quickly into action to defend, mend, and repair our world and way of living, that even I jumped! Bravo all round!' McGregor concluded the post by writing 'Up the Forge, Vote McGregor' in what is seemingly a nod to his audacious bid to become the President of Ireland, which he first announced in March. A Garda spokesman told MailOnline after the blaze yesterday: 'Gardaí attended the scene of an incident of criminal damage at a licenced premises on the Drimnagh Road, Crumlin that occurred at approximately 3:00am on Friday, 25th July 2025. 'The fire was extinguished by Dublin Fire Brigade. No injuries have been reported. The scene is currently preserved and a technical examination will be conducted in due course. Investigations are ongoing.' Dublin Fire Brigade said it was called at 3.08am, where firefighters found a 'small fire at the front of the building'. 'Using a high pressure hose reel, one fire engine dealt with the incident and no injuries were reported,' a spokesman added. 'The scene was handed over to Gardai.' MailOnline contacted The Black Forge Inn and McGregor's representatives for comment. McGregor is often seen hosting celebrities at his Dublin boozer. American rapper 50 Cent celebrated his 50th birthday there ahead of his performance at Longitude Festival earlier this month. The blaze also follows a tumultuous period for McGregor who has been embroiled in another scandal amid claims he has cheated on fiancée Dee Devlin. Firefighters were seen battling to put out the blaze at McGregor's pub in Dublin yesterday McGregor found himself in controversy this month when he was photographed kissing a mystery brunette woman on a beach in Fort Lauderdale. With his partner Dee - whom he has been engaged to since 2020 - nowhere in sight, questions were raised about their relationship. Rapper Azealia Banks then added to the furore as she took to X - formerly known as Twitter - to accuse McGregor of sexual harassment. Last week, Ms Banks, 34, shared nude photos which purported to show McGregor, which she claimed he sent to her unprompted. Amid the storm, McGregor and Devlin have firmly brushed off the criticism by continuing to show their affections for one another, and put on a very cosy display in one outing. The couple have been enjoying time in Sardinia together to celebrate McGregor's 37th birthday - which was on July 14. But it is the latest embarrassment to hit the sportsman's relationship with his partner Dee, who was ever-present by his side throughout his sexual assault court case last year. In 2024, Conor lost a civil case as jurors at the High Court in Dublin found him liable of raping Nikita Hand, 35, in a Dublin hotel on December 9, 2018, with the judge awarding Hand €250,000 in damages. Azealia Banks set the internet ablaze after sharing alleged nude photos of Conor that she claims the disgraced star sent unprompted (pictured in 2022) But despite the verdict, Dee emphatically made it clear that she intended to back McGregor - attacking Nikita in a series of posts on Instagram at the time. In the posts, she wrote: 'Conor and I dealt with these issues privately many years ago, as should be done in a relationship and we have come out stronger than ever. 'We have four beautiful children now whose smiling faces and happy hearts are a testament to who he is and who we are!' The pair have been together for 15 years and got engaged in August 2020 after Conor proposed while they were celebrating his birthday. The couple met as teenagers at a nightclub in 2008 and Dee has been a key player in the MMA star's story, supporting him when he was jobless and focused on making it as a professional fighter.


The Review Geek
an hour ago
- The Review Geek
Trigger – K-Drama Episode 4 Recap & Review
Kyung-sook Episode 4 of Trigger starts where we left off at the police station, where Lee Do is forced to shoot Won-seong to save the police officers. The reporter who took a video hands it over to his superiors, who are impressed by the exclusive scoop and ask him to keep following up on the case. Elsewhere, Gyu-jin watches the shooting case on the news, which gives him the idea of buying a gun. He makes a quick internet search, and the first website that pops up claims to be giving out free guns. After the incident, Lee Do is held in the interrogation room for questioning by the disciplinary committee. They bring up his time in the military and how he has taken out 99 targets, insinuating that he decided to kill Won-seong to add to his list, making it 100 targets. Suddenly, Chief Yoon enters the interrogation room and stops the enquiry. He orders Lee Do to follow him, claiming that he saved the police officers — something the disciplinary committee is unaware of. He calls the committee cowards and asks them to arrest him first if they are looking for a scapegoat. Chief Yoon asks Lee Do to go home and rest. Many reporters are waiting outside the police station, so Hyun-sik leads him out and drives him home. At school, Yeong-dung is forced by the bullies to attack his friend Gyu-jin. Yeong-dung finds him studying at his desk and punches him. He then orders Gyu-jin to bring his mother's ID to school. Following the incident, Lee Do is suspended for three months. Before leaving the station, he asks Officer Jang a follow-up on U-tae, but another officer stops him since he is suspended. Hyun-sik comes to his rescue and, under the pretence of needing the information, they update Lee Do that U-tae was rescued. The number plate of the van is the same as the one Lee Do had run into when delinquents were going through delivery boxes. Lee Do learns that U-tae was recently released from prison and was doing odd jobs for Glory Gang leader Seok-ho. He tries calling Seok-ho, but he does not answer. Lee Do gets his whereabouts from Detective Seo and visits him. Lee Do wants to know if Seok-ho is dealing guns, but he proves that all his boys only use knives, and none of them have been out with guns. Lee Do tells Seok-ho that he is gathering evidence about the case, and he warns that he will not spare Seok-ho if he finds out that he was involved in the case. Later, Lee Do heads to Dongwol Industry to ask about Moon-baek. His card shows that he is a technical sales manager at the company. However, the company is a defence contractor and is not authorised to give any information about its employees. Lee Do gets a call from Officer Jang with Moon-baek's home address. He heads to the apartments and gives Moon-baek a call, asking to meet. At the same time, Jung-man and his boys get more information about the guns from Mr. Kim. It turns out that Jung-man decided to keep him alive and lied to Seok-ho. Mr Kim tells them how the guns are delivered as parcels. He thinks it is a genius idea since Koreans have a high respect for other people's parcels. Mr. Kim says that he was approached to distribute the guns. The people in charge had a truckload of guns, but Mr. Kim was given half. He has no way of contacting them since they only reached out via telegram, and Seok-ho took his phone. The guns are still locked in the storage room, and Seok-ho has not found them either. For now, their only option is to collect guns from the people on the address list. Jung-man sends out his boys to collect all the guns. Elsewhere, Ms. Kyung-sook continues her solo protest outside the company she believes is responsible for her son's death. The CEO continues to ignore her as he drives past the gates. Meanwhile, the bullies continue to threaten Gyu-jin, demanding that he give them his mother's ID. Later that night, Gyu-jin receives a package and inside is a gun. Lee Do meets up with Moon-baek and asks for more information about the gun and bullets. Moon-baek says that he wanted the gun to kill himself. Moon-baek has cancer, and the doctors say he only has six months left to live or less. He shows Lee Do the scars, indicating that he has had three surgeries. About how he got the bullets, he says that he looked online and saw a site offering free guns and clicked to get one. After receiving his parcel, the site disappeared. As for the list of addresses, Moon-baek says he threw it away but can remember the addresses by heart. Lee Do asks him to write down the addresses, and one of them belongs to Ms. Kyung-sook. Upon seeing Kyung-sook's name, Lee Do rushes out, and Moon-baek follows. On the way, he tries to call Kyung-sook but gets no answer. At this time, she confronts the CEO, who has been ignoring her since her son's death. The CEO is still arrogant and orders his driver to run over her. However, when she pulls out the gun, the driver runs away, and the CEO starts begging for his life. Kyung-sook shoots the CEO, then answers Lee Do's call. She tells him that she shot the CEO and knows she has to answer for her actions. She asks Lee Do to let her make one last meal for her son. Kyung-sook heads home and waits for Lee Do to arrive. Unfortunately, U-tae and the boys arrive at the house first. They force their way into the house and ask Kyung-sook to hand over the gun. When Lee Do arrives, he sees a car with similar number plates parked outside her house. He asks Moon-baek to keep an eye on the car as he heads into the house. U-tae is arrogant at first because he is holding the gun, but Lee Do easily snatches the gun from him. The boys try to fight, but they are no match for him. Outside, Moon-baek finds the events happening around Lee Do exciting, so he helps him by subduing the boys left in the car. At the end of Trigger Episode 4, Lee Do and Moon-baek rush Kyung-sook to the hospital. She was hurt during the confrontation with U-tae and the boys. The Episode Review The availability of guns affecting a person close to Lee Do adds an emotional curve to the story. It is now personal, and Lee Do will come after the gang. It also foreshadows the next conflict, which may arise from a high school student, Gyu-jin. While the bullies continue to suffocate him with physical abuse and online bullying, Gyu-jin stumbled upon the website and received a gun. It seems like all the people that the civilians target end up dead. Will Gyu-jin kill Seong-jun and the other bullies? What will happen to his friend Yeong-dung? Will Lee be able to stop any of the civilians from killing their targets? Who are the people circulating the guns, and what is their agenda? More questions continue to arise with the mystery compelling us to keep watching. Previous Episode Next Episode Expect A Full Season Write-Up When This Season Concludes!


Times
2 hours ago
- Times
My son died in the Air India crash. They sent back the wrong body
Amanda Donaghey stood by the blackened, burnt-out trees, birds still tweeting eerily in their branches, and stared at the wreckage of Air India flight 171. The plane, now twisted pieces of melted metal strewn around a college campus in Ahmedabad, had been carrying her son. Fiongal Greenlaw-Meek, 39, and his husband, Jamie, 45, had been returning to Britain after celebrating their wedding anniversary celebrations in India when the plane crashed, less than a minute in to the flight. An investigation is currently focused on why the fuel to the engines was cut — possibly by one of the pilots. Donaghey had known immediately she needed to travel here from her home in France — it was both a grim pilgrimage to the place where her son died and a mother's last duty to bring his remains home. 'Visiting the site and seeing it was something I felt like I had to do. I wanted to understand what had happened,' she said this week. 'I remember all these burnt trees. The trees were scorched black. But there were still birds and squirrels in those trees, which I found quite profound. It was like a bomb site. You would think it was from a war scene, but there were still these small birds twittering,' she recalled. The crash had been devastating; the aircraft had broken up before erupting in a fireball. She was determined to help find Fiongal's remains and gave blood in the hope of finding a DNA match. After three days, just as she was losing confidence in the search, Donaghey was told there was a 'match' for her son. It meant she could finally bring his remains back to the UK, where she hoped to be able to lay him to rest next to Jamie, whose body had already been identified and sent home. 'I arrived back in London Gatwick with the assurance that Fiongal was in the casket,' she said. But just as the family were planning for the funerals of the two men, the police got in touch. The British coroner had run a second DNA test: the remains in Fiongal's coffin were not his. 'It was heartbreaking,' said Donaghey. 'We don't know what poor person is in that casket. This is an appalling thing to have happened.' And it was not an isolated mistake. Last week, Miten Patel revealed that 'other remains' had been found in the coffin he believed contained the body of his mother, Shobhana, 71, who was killed in the crash alongside his father, Ashok, 74. They were finally able to bury her earlier this week in the UK. Donaghey has spoken to The Sunday Times as she asks the British and Indian authorities to do whatever is necessary to find the remains of her son and bring him home. Fiongal Greenlaw-Meek had 'always been a free spirit' with 'a certain charisma that is hard to explain', according to his older brother. Interested in fashion from a young age, he studied at the Royal College of Art and worked as a fashion designer, heading up design houses in London and Asia. Later he delved into spirituality, reiki and yoga, and set up a business in London in 2018, the Wellness Foundry, to 'share my findings, teachings and gifts with others.' He and Jamie married in 2022. Fiongal and Jamie were among the first victims of the Air India crash to be named. On their last night in India, the couple had posted on social media about their 'magical experience'. Smiling in the airport lounge, they posted another short video just before they boarded the aircraft with the message 'Goodbye India'. Donaghey, 66, who moved to France from Cambridgeshire 22 years ago, had not immediately realised her son was on the plane. She had heard about the crash before going out for a horse ride, but thought he had flown home two days earlier. She returned to a call from Fiongal's father. 'He told me the boys were on that plane,' she said. 'And that's when I knew.' Immediately, she decided to travel to India. It was a complicated trip from her home in the south of France and she flew out two days later. In Delhi, she boarded a chartered jet provided by Air India and arrived in Ahmedabad, in Gujarat, western India, on June 17. She was met by a crisis management team from the British High Commission. Family members of victims could take a DNA test at the city's Civil Hospital so the remains could begin to be identified. 'I hadn't slept for two or three days,' Donaghey said. 'They gave me the option to go to a hotel and rest but I decided I wanted to go straight to the hospital and get the test done. I remember thinking, 'the sooner I get tested, the sooner I can get the two boys on the plane and bring them home'.' A DNA sample had already been taken from a family member of Jamie's in the UK and sent to India. Donaghey was taken to the hospital by a female member of the British crisis team and met the helpers, whom she calls 'angels', provided by Air India to support the relatives. She was taken to a converted schoolroom with bench-style seats, where she filled out paperwork and a doctor took her blood. 'I was told, 'the blood test will be analysed to track down Fiongal and that could take up to 72 hours to happen'.' Afterwards she checked into a hotel. While she waited for news, a member of the British crisis team took her to the BJ Medical College hostel, which Flight 171 had hit. Donaghey said: 'It was devastating for the aircraft. Obviously they had a series of cordons and I wasn't allowed to pass the last cordon because the tail of the aircraft was still stuck in one of the buildings and it was dangerous.' While she was going through her search, Miten Patel was doing what he could to bring home his parents, Ashok, a financial advisor, and Shobhana, a retired microbiologist. Married since 1970s, the couple had travelled to India for a Hindu religious trip known as a yatra, which helps people find peace when they eventually die. Miten had flown out from the UK within 24 hours with dental records and DNA samples to help with identifying his parents' bodies. 'It was the first thing on my mind: Mum and Dad are coming home,' he said. While he waited for confirmation of their remains, he was given back some of his parents' belongings from the wreckage — his father's shirt and his mother's swan pendant necklace, which his daughter Amira will now inherit. On June 20, three days after arriving, Donaghey was told a DNA 'match' for Fiongal had been found. The next day she met with representatives from the hospital, the British High Commission and an officer from Avon & Somerset police, sent over from the UK as a disaster victim investigator. 'I was told they had found part of Fiongal but not all of him,' Donaghey said. 'I said I wanted to stay until they had finished looking.' By this time Jamie's body had been found. He was returned to the UK in a coffin on June 26. Jamie had been sitting beside Fiongal, who was in 22A, on the left-hand side of the aircraft. The sole survivor of the crash, Vishwash Kumar Ramesh, was a few rows in front of them in seat 11A. Donaghey returned to the crash site a second time. 'I was starting to be told by the emergency workers searching the crash site, 'There is nothing left to find'.' The families were told that human remains less than 5cm long would not be recovered. Other remains were sent to a pathology lab in India to be tagged and logged. From there, the remains would be transferred to a coffin. Donaghey then heard from British officials that one of the coffins already returned to the UK had been investigated by a coroner and found to contain the remains of multiple people. This would turn out to be the coffin belonging to Shobhana Patel. 'That was when I was really starting to worry about the recovery process,' Donaghey said. On June 28, she decided to return home with Fiongal's coffin. Time was of the essence, since conditions at the hospital for preserving remains were not up to British standards. The coffin came with paperwork and Fiongal's hospital DNA reference number: A339. Her only option was to travel back with his remains on an Air India flight to Gatwick. Back in Britain, Fiongal's remains were handed over to the senior coroner for Inner West London, Dr Fiona Wilcox. Donaghey returned to Cambridgeshire to be supported by her sister, as well as family liaison officers from Cambridgeshire police. On July 4, family liaison officers asked Donaghey for a meeting the next day with Fiongal's father, sister and brother. That was when the officers told them: 'We don't have Fiongal. We have carried out the DNA tests and we do not have Fiongal.' Donaghey said: 'I had my doubts but to be told that was heartbreaking.' The families realised their hopes of laying Fiongal and Jamie to rest together were no longer possible. 'We have spent every day since then on the phone to the Foreign Office, trying to get a response on where Fiongal is,' Donaghey said. 'All the time, I feel like I'm just standing on the edge of a black hole thinking, 'Has he been disposed of?' 'We would like to be able to do the rites necessary for Fiongal in order for us to move on as a family. And that is what is missing. We don't know what poor person is in that casket. This is an appalling thing to have happened. And we would now like the British government to do everything in its power to find out, and bring Fiongal home.' Of the 242 people on Air India Flight 171, 53 were British. Many of them were of Indian heritage and so were buried in India. Only 12 sets of remains were returned to Britain. It is these that would have undergone the second round of DNA testing. The other 10 were all matches. For Miten the most important thing was to make sure that only his mother's remains were buried. 'There may have been a mistake done. But for religious reasons we need to make sure my mother is my mother and not somebody else's remains,' Miten said. 'Knowing 100 per cent that it is mum is very important to us.' A small comfort was that his father's wedding ring was also finally returned. 'It's a miracle to get it back,' said Miten. Questions remain over whether the remains of those who were buried in India without a second round of tests were correct. James Healy-Pratt, an international aviation lawyer and partner with Keystone Law, who is representing 20 of the bereaved families affected by the air disaster, said the families were in contact with Sir Keir Starmer, the prime minister's office and David Lammy, the foreign secretary. Narendra Modi, the prime minister of India, visited Britain last week. Healy-Pratt said: 'Losing a loved one in an air accident is traumatic in itself. These families deserve answers about how this co-mingling of DNA and misidentification of remains occurred. Discussions are ongoing with the UK police and the Foreign Office.' A government spokesperson said: 'We understand that this is an extremely distressing time for the families, and our thoughts remain with them. Formal identification of bodies is a matter for the Indian authorities. We continue to liaise with the government of Gujarat and the government of India on behalf of the Inner West London senior coroner to support the coronial process.'