
Paul Murphy defends March to Gaza participation
Paul Murphy has defended his participation in the Global March to Gaza, stating, 'people in the public eye, with public positions, should do whatever they can to draw awareness.'
The People Before Profit TD returned to Ireland on Wednesday after being detained in Egypt twice during his participation in the march, which featured up to 4,000 people.
Recalling his time in Egypt, Mr Murphy admitted he thought the group would 'get further than we did get.' Paul Murphy has defended his participation in the Global March to Gaza, stating 'people in the public eye; with public positions should do whatever they can to draw awareness.' Pic: Ireland AM/ Instagram
Speaking on Ireland AM on Thursday morning, Mr Murphy recalled how the group had to get out of cars to be met with police at their meeting point.
'They took our passports immediately,' he told presenters Muireann O'Connell and Tommy Bowe,' Then a few hours later tried to force people, and eventually did successfully, physically move people to get them onto buses.
'Some people, not me, were hurt or kind of beaten by the police in trying to do so,' he claimed. View this post on Instagram
A post shared by Ireland AM (@irelandamvmtv)
The Dublin politician explained that the groups were put into buses and small vans and taken to the airport, going a long route which took up to seven hours.
'We got back to Cairo Airport on this Saturday morning and then, we were expecting to be deported at this stage, but they just let us go,' he said, 'The police had disappeared. The airport police didn't know what to do with us, and then we were able to make our way back into Cairo and attempt to regroup.'
Tommy then questioned the TD on what he had actually expected to come from the march, as he note,d 'you didn't get far at all.' Tommy then questioned the TD on what he had actually expected to come from the march as he noted 'you didn't get far at all.' Pic: Ireland AM/ Tommy Bowe
Responding to criticism from fellow TDs called it the march for publicity for the 42-year-old, rather than for Gaza, Mr Murphy confirmed he was a late-comer to the group.
'I want to use my position, yes, to have publicity,' he said, 'Not on me, but on what's happening in Gaza because, particularly, now with Iran and Israel's assaults' on Iran and the threat of regional war, there's a danger that eyes go off what's happening in Gaza when actually it's getting worse.
'I think Israel is using the cover of Iran to increase the number of daily killings taking place and think everybody really, but in particular people in the public eye; people with public positions should do whatever they can to draw awareness to this and to build pressure on Israel and our own Governments.'
Social media users were full of praise for the father-of-one, with one person writing: 'Well done Paul for creating awareness.'
Another added: 'Well done Paul. You are a man with integrity and an inspiration to all. Thank you for raising awareness.'

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


Irish Daily Mirror
7 hours ago
- Irish Daily Mirror
Boris Johnson wife Carrie hospitalised weeks after giving birth
Boris Johnson's wife has issued a cautionary message to fellow mothers following her two-night hospital stay this week. Carrie and Boris Johnson celebrated the arrival of their baby girl, Poppy, on May 21, marking Boris' ninth child. The couple, who tied the knot in July 2021, are also parents to sons Wilfred, five, and Frank, one, and daughter Romy, three. Just over a month after welcoming her fourth child, Carrie Johnson found herself being treated in hospital for "severe dehydration, a little over a month since welcoming her fourth child. Carrie revealed on Friday how she had been rushed in for treatment and warned fellow mums to "eat and drink enough in this heat". Taking to Instagram stories, she penned: "Being hospitalised for two nights for my severe dehydration was not on my postpartum bingo card. Breastfeeding mums make sure you eat and drink enough in this heat. Especially if your babe is clusterfeeding." The 37 year old continued: "This week has honestly been brutal. Mastitis (me), reflux (her), dehydration (me). What a pair we are! But thank you for all the kindest messages, especially all the brilliant advice on reflux. Really appreciate it and made me feel way less alone going thru it all," reports the Mirror. Mastitis, an inflammation of breast tissue, is a common condition among breastfeeding women. The former Tory Prime Minister has consistently declined to discuss his personal life, but it's widely believed that he is the father of at least nine children, four of whom are with his current wife, Carrie. He has been down the aisle three times, first with Allegra Mostyn Owen, whom he met during his Oxford University days. After a six-year marriage, they divorced and he married lawyer Marina Wheeler in 1993. Their union lasted a quarter of a century before they parted ways in 2018 amidst whispers of his affair with Carrie, who had previously worked as a Tory PR expert. The couple moved into No10 together following Mr Johnson's ascension to PM in 2019. There's a significant age gap of 24 years between the ex-PM, now aged 60, and media consultant Carrie, who offers glimpses into their private life via her chic Instagram account. On the surface, the pair appear quite dissimilar. Carrie, 37, is a trendy modern mum fond of sharing posts about idyllic family holidays, second-hand Vinted treasures, and lunch dates with her extensive group of friends. In contrast, Boris is renowned for his more conventional preferences - his admiration for classics, Shakespeare, and legendary leaders like Winston Churchill has earned him the label of a British eccentric. On May 29, 2021, Carrie and Johnson exchanged vows in a hush-hush ceremony at Westminster Cathedral, opting for an intimate gathering of just 30 guests due to Covid-19 restrictions. Sharing a photo of herself in her budget-friendly €50 rented wedding dress, Carrie expressed her immense joy, stating she was 'very, very happy'. A year on from their initial nuptials, in the summer of 2022, Johnson and Carrie exchanged vows again in a boho-chic style ceremony. The event took place at a Grade I-listed property in the Cotswolds, owned by one of the leading Conservative Party backers, JCB chairman Lord Bamford. Guests were treated to an open-air banquet, with Carrie adorning a garland of white flowers.


Irish Examiner
15 hours ago
- Irish Examiner
Séamas O'Reilly: Hope is not just the radical option — it's the only one
I awoke on Wednesday to the cheering news that Zohran Mamdani had won the Democratic primary for mayor of New York. That I cared one way or the other about this might strike some of you as strange. This time last year, it would have seemed preposterous to me as well. In fact, in all my time online, I can't remember following — or even being aware of — the election of a New York mayor in real time. This one, however, was different. Mamdani is just 33 years old, and was up against the 67-year-old former governor, and Democrat party grandee, Andrew Cuomo — as powerful an establishment figure as can be imagined. Name recognition from his time as governor made Cuomo every pollster's clear favourite as recently as two weeks ago, despite said office ending in his resignation after multiple women alleged that he sexually harassed them, and despite a litany of allegations related to bribery and corruption involving his staff during that same time. Nevertheless, Cuomo seemed anointed. The former governor went into this election with a war chest of $35m — more than the next six candidates combined — and ringing endorsements from party titans such as Bill Clinton and Michael Bloomberg. He was, it seemed, the company man being given his rightful dues, and he duly topped every poll from the moment he entered the race. Mayor Cuomo appeared to be nothing short of a fait accompli, not least since the eventual winner went into this race with just three years' legislative experience and barely any name recognition. Mamdani would not, in fact, reach double digits in any poll until late March. What changed all of this was one of the best-run, and most inspiring, political campaigns we've seen in many years, and one from which we can all take heart, even if we wouldn't ordinarily care who gets to cut ribbons and set bin collection ordinances in a city 3,000 miles away. Mamdani, a self-described socialist, ran a deeply empathetic campaign, laser-focused on making New York more affordable for its residents, and taking aim at the old guard Democrat elites he charged with failing in this task. His campaign promised rent freezes, affordable housing, childcare provision, and making buses entirely free to use. To the centrist pundits, this seemed childishly utopian. To his band of supporters, it seemed increasingly achievable for one of the richest cities ever sited on planet Earth. To those of us who might live in far-away places with similar issues, this alone should be a reason to prick up our ears. Mamdani's campaign was a revelation in modern electoral politics. His short, witty Instagram reels and X posts had clear and concise messaging, free of vague platitudes or lordly condescension. They were also fearless, unafraid to call out the racism of ICE raids and immigration orders, and standing in unequivocal solidarity with the people of Palestine, and the LGBT+ community, at a time when huge swathes of the Democratic Party were happy to keep schtum in the face of Trump's attacks on all such enemies, while avidly backing a mayoral candidate credibly accused of sexual harassment. As Mamdani's following, and approval, began to soar, his social media presence was often branded a faddish symptom of his youth and inexperience. Without much by way of actual analysis, those within the highest ranks of the Democratic establishment posited his catchy, short-form videos as proof of his unseriousness. Why exactly short video ads magically attain adult respectability once they are broadcast on television, at a cost of millions of dollars, went unexamined. Some Democrat elites already seem determined to learn precisely the wrong lesson from all this: that short form video is what won it for Mamdani. It didn't. He was simply the charismatic candidate their base has been crying out for all this time, in touch with their concerns about the economy, immigration and Palestine, a genuinely progressive candidate with heart, teeth and a backbone. That's the lesson they should be taking from this upset, and one we'd do well to apply wherever we are. Mamdani is not yet mayor. The actual vote takes place in November, with the Democrat nominee almost mathematically preordained to win — but not quite guaranteed. His victory over Cuomo is, at root, one of decency over cravenness, of ambition over inertia, of the future over the past. It serves as a small, life-giving crumb of hope in an American political landscape that's seemed so often bereft of it, and an inspiration to all of us. And, entirely selfishly, I'm glad it happened for another reason. Séamas O'Reilly: writer's final column for the Examiner. Picture: Orfhlaith Whelan I wanted to sound a small, hopeful note this week because, after three happy years, this is my last column for the Irish Examiner. I've enjoyed writing about everything from royal deaths to the half-remembered summer holidays of my childhood, but the past year or two has also meant cataloguing so much of the degradation and horror we see around us every day — from the ongoing genocide in Gaza, to the march of the far right in America, Britain, and right here at home; the miasma of scams and racism taking over social media platforms, and the abject bankruptcy of the push to insert AI into every part of our lives. Throughout, I've tried to sugar the medicine, adding what insight I can, what hope I can muster, and what jokes I'm allowed. It's been a true joy to discover I was allowed pretty much everything, and for that I have the Irish Examiner to thank. Now, at the risk of peddling sentiment, I'll leave you with my takeaway from this week, and this entire three years: We should take strength from whatever good news comes our way, because hope is not a luxury. In a world conditioned to engender hopelessness, hope is not just the radical option, but the only one. And no matter how things pan out in a world that seems to burn more violently every day, it's one I choose to continue looking, and writing, toward. Thanks to Séamas for three years of insight and good humour, from all of us at the Irish Examiner features desk.


The Irish Sun
a day ago
- The Irish Sun
Playboy model from iconic Pulp album cover has chilling link to Putin
A PLAYBOY model who featured on an iconic album cover has a surprising link to Russian tyrant Vladimir Putin. Advertisement 4 The presenter and politician transformed her image Credit: East2West 4 She used to be known as a party mag in London Credit: East2West 4 She became known for being on the cover of Pulp's album Credit: Wikipedia But the glamorous socialite ditched her party-ways and remade herself into a journalist and liberal politician who has been accused of being a "Kremlin stooge" by opposition activists. She is Putin's goddaughter and the offspring of one of his first political mentors - the ex mayor of St. Petersburg, Anatoly A. Sobchak - who put him on the path to presidency. The unlikely pair have known each other since the 1990s when her dad launched Putin's political career. However, she has been vocal about being against the Ukraine war - and insists she helps residents of Russian border regions displaced by Ukrainian shelling. Advertisement READ MORE ON PLAYBOY She and the President have reportedly have not spoken since the war began, nor seen each other. Sobchak now works as an influencer on YouTube , interviewing critics of the war. arrests of antiwar activists. In a conversation with her 9.5million Instagram fans about the conflict, she said: 'I believe that this is a horrific situation, but we're going to get through this time, we'll get through it together with our audience.' in the 2018 election - in place of banned candidate Advertisement Most read in Celebrity accused her of being a puppet opposition candidate to Putin - to give the illusion of democracy. She said at the time: "In a system created by Putin, it is only possible for Putin to win. Scheming Putin's tactics to help Iran attack the West REVEALED as Tehran vows revenge "I am realistic about who will become the president." Sobchak was hit by further controversy in her media career in 2022 when she was hunted by Russian police over claims of extortion and tax fraud. Advertisement At the time she claimed it was a "politically motivated move" when three of her former employees were accused of trying to extort money from the head of state-owned defense conglomerate Rostec. After fleeing cops in Moscow, she escaped to Lithuania via Belarus after police arrested her business partner. 4 Russian President Vladimir Putin Credit: Reuters However, after returning to Russia , Sobchak visited the Rostec office to reconcile with boss Sergey Chemezov for the "actions of colleagues" accused of extortion and said "their fate will be decided by the court ". Advertisement When the three ex-employees were jailed for seven years, their former boss slammed the verdict as 'way more than injustice.' 'I've done everything we had agreed to get leniency [for Kirill Sukhanov, Arian Romanovsky and Tamerlan Bigayev],' she wrote in a statement. 'Why are you ruining people's lives? 'Why the disproportionality? Just as revenge?' Advertisement Her despair over the Ukraine war sparked a popular YouTube show in which she deals with stories that Russia's state media usually turn a blind eye to. Her interests include the arrests of antiwar activists, violence committed by soldiers returning from the front and human rights abuses in the southern region of Chechnya. Speaking of the Ukraine war, "We are all locked in this situation now. There is no way out.' Ksenia - who was once named the 22nd most influential woman in Russia - was the Advertisement