
Shocking domestic violence data adds further urgency to new strategy
It has carried over to the current Coalition as well, with Minister for Justice Jim O'Callaghan on Tuesday launching the final implementation plan for its 'Zero Tolerance' strategy aimed at tackling such violence.
But while tolerance levels among the politicians may have been at zero for years,
Women's Aid
has revealed that it received the highest number of disclosures of domestic violence and abuse in its 50-year history last year.
As Mary Carolan outlines in
our front page story
, more than 41,000 women reported abuse by their partner or ex-partner, and more than 5,000 reported abuse of children.
READ MORE
The 2024 figure for disclosures, up 17 per cent on 2023, included reports of assaults with weapons, constant surveillance, relentless put downs and humiliations, sharing intimate images online, complete control over all family finances, sexual assault, rape and being threatened with theirs or their children's lives.
Five women, the Women's Aid report notes, died in violent circumstances in 2024.
The number and nature of the abuse disclosures is 'utterly appalling' but is 'just the tip of the iceberg', said Women's Aid chief executive Sarah Benson.
Specialist services are 'overstretched and underfunded' and resourcing by Government and implementation of the Third National Domestic, Sexual and Gender-Based Violence Strategy remains 'crucial' to effectively reduce the scale and impacts of violence against women and children in Ireland, the organisation said.
The final implementation plan for that strategy published yesterday sets out 95 actions, including expansion of refuge accommodation.
Mr O'Callaghan said the plan 'provides a focused roadmap to deliver on the whole-of-government commitment to a zero-tolerance approach to DSGBV (domestic, sexual and gender-based violence)'.
He added: 'I am committed to building on what has already been achieved, and to strengthening implementation and identifying the actions we need to take now and where we need to go next to prepare a clear pathway toward the fourth national strategy.'
A test of whether the Government's efforts to tackle the scourge of domestic violence are having an impact will be the kind of data published by Women's Aid, and whether the shocking level of abuse the most recent data details falls instead of rises to new record levels.
Tentative ceasefire between Iran and Israel appears to hold
International events and the tentative ceasefire between
Israel
and
Iran
are the topic of
today's lead story
by Jack Power.
There were accusations from both sides of violations in the hours after the ceasefire came into force.
United States president
Donald Trump
's frustration at the situation boiled over as he spoke to reporters in advance of travelling to a Nato summit.
Mr Trump described Israel and Iran as two countries 'that have been fighting so long and so hard that they don't know what the f**k they're doing'.
In a later online post, the US president said 'both Israel and Iran wanted to stop the War equally! It was my great honour to Destroy All Nuclear facilities & capabilities, and then, STOP THE WAR'.
It was reported on Tuesday night that an initial classified US assessment of the US strikes on Iran's nuclear facilities says they did not destroy two of the sites and were likely to only set back the Iranian nuclear programme by a few months, according to two people familiar with the assessment.
The report produced by the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) – the intelligence arm of the Pentagon – concluded key components of the nuclear programme, including centrifuges, were capable of being restarted within months.
The White House disputed the intelligence assessment, which was first reported by CNN. 'The leaking of this alleged assessment is a clear attempt to demean President Trump, and discredit the brave fighter pilots who conducted a perfectly executed mission to obliterate Iran's nuclear programme,' White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said in a statement.
Best Reads
The Government will make a decision on whether to include services in the
Occupied Territories Bill
based on advice from the Attorney General, the Taoiseach has told the Dáil. The issue was raised in the Dáil after Tánaiste
Simon Harris
brought the legislation to Cabinet on Tuesday. The Israeli Settlements Prohibition of Importation of Goods Bill will make it an offence under the Customs Act to import goods from Israeli settlements in the Occupied Palestinian territories. There is pressure on the Government from the Opposition to include services as well.
Marie O'Halloran, Jack Horgan-Jones and Martin Wall report
.
Amid a debate in the Dáil on the high cost of groceries,
Miriam Lord imagines
what would happen if Taoiseach Micheál Martin did the weekly shop. 'He'd refuse to look at a biscuit, the house would be awash with broccoli and you'd die for the want of a cheese and onion crisp. The man cannot be allowed near a shopping trolley.'
On the Opinion pages, Kathy Sheridan asks:
should influencers and politicians share photographs of their children online?
Irish farmers have welcomed tentative moves by the
European Parliament
to restrict 'cynical' vegetarian and vegan food producers from using words such as sausage, burger and schnitzel to sell their products.
Conor Pope reports on this issue
.
'I sleep easier here': The makeshift homeless community under the M50 –
Kitty Holland outlines the plight of people
living beneath Dublin's ringroad.
Playbook
The
Dáil
kicks off with an opportunity for TDs to raise topical issues at 9am.
Independent TDs have a motion on legislative and structural reforms to accelerate housing delivery which is to be debated from 10am.
Leaders' Questions is at noon.
Government Business in the afternoon includes a motion on the Offences Against the State (Amendment) Act, 1998.
There will also be a committee stage debate on the Mental Health Bill, 2024, from 5.44pm.
Legislation to bring in changes to the Local Property Tax regime is to be debated from 6.44pm.
The weekly Dáil votes are due to take place at 10.45pm.
In the
Seanad
there will be a debate on the Supports for Survivors of Residential Institutional Abuse Bill, 2024, from 12.45pm.
Various
Oireachtas committees
, including health and transport, will be considering revised funding estimates for their relevant departments on Wednesday.
The committee on social protection will be considering the Social Welfare (Bereaved Partner's Pension) Bill, 2025, from 9.30am.
The committee on climate will meet the Climate Change Advisory Council on the topic of the carbon budget at 12.30pm.
The committee on arts, media, communications, culture and sport will examine the future of the An Post network, also at 12.30pm.
The committee on education will be considering education for children with special needs from 6.30pm.
The full Dáil, Seanad and committee schedules can be found
here
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Irish Times
2 hours ago
- Irish Times
Catherine Connolly launches presidential bid saying she wants to ‘empower people to find their own voices'
Independent TD Catherine Connolly has launched her bid to become president, saying 'we're at a critical state in our country' and she is standing to 'empower people to find their own voices'. The Galway West TD made the announcement outside Leinster House on Wednesday, flanked by politicians from the Social Democrats and People Before Profit as well as Independents who are set to nominate her to appear on the ballot paper. During a press conference she spoke about her vision for the presidency, defended her record including a trip she took to Syria during dictator Bashar al-Assad's time in power and spoke about her nomination of journalist Gemma O'Doherty for president in 2018. Announcing her election bid, Ms Connolly said: 'I do so with the deep conviction that together, we can make this country better, and that we can make this country live up to its name, the Republic, and show that there is a different way.' READ MORE She said: 'We're at a critical state in our country', and added she was standing 'to enable people, to empower people to find their own voices, to stand up and be counted, to say there is a different way'. Ms Connolly said: 'We must deal with climate change. We must be a voice for peace. We have to stop the normalisation of war and violence. We have to stop the normalisation of homelessness. We have to say that these problems are not inevitable.' She added: 'They are man-made, policy driven, and we can have a different type of country and a different type of world. 'That is what motivates me'. Syria trip Since it emerged last week that she would be throwing her hat in the ring, a trip she took to Syria in 2018 along with then-TDs Clare Daly , Mick Wallace and Maureen O'Sullivan has resurfaced. At the time, al-Assad was still in office and engaged in a brutal civil war. Asked about the visit, she said she funded the trip herself, its purpose was 'fact-finding' with fellow TDs and activists and she 'met no member of government'. She said she visited a refugee camp outside Damascus and 'saw firsthand the destruction of a whole city', adding: 'I mean, my idea, up to then, of a refugee camp wasn't up to scratch really.' Ms Connolly said they were shown around by Palestinians and 'we stayed with them all of the time'. They travelled to Aleppo and met the Chamber of Commerce and also had a meeting with Unicef as well as visiting a convent. Catherine Connolly launching her presidential bid outside the Dáil on Wednesday. Photograph: Alan Betson Catherine Connolly answering questions from members of the media outside the Dáil on Wednesday. Photograph: Alan Betson Catherine Connolly with supporters as she launches her presidential bid outside the Dáil on Wednesday. Photograph: Alan Betson 'On no occasion had I anything to do with the government, nor did I ever utter one word of support for Assad,' she said. Presidential salary The salary for the presidency is approximately €350,000 and the current office-holder Michael D Higgins has waived a portion of it as well as Oireachtas pensions over the course of his two terms. Ms Connolly said she will 'look at the salary' and is 'open to ideas on that' adding: 'I'm certainly going to use it for the common good.' She said she would discuss it with her team and set out how she would use the salary 'in due course'. Northern Ireland On her position in relation to Northern Ireland she said: 'I think we're going to have United Ireland very soon' but it would not be 'immediate'. She said the Belfast Agreement 'has set the framework for that. Tremendous work has been done on the ground, with cross-Border bodies, and I look forward to the day when we have a United Ireland.' Ms Connolly added: 'There must be consent. I absolutely value the diversity, and we must value the different backgrounds in Northern Ireland.' Ms Connolly was among a number of Oireachtas members that indicated they would support Ms O'Doherty's bid to get on the presidential election ballot paper in 2018. Ms O' Doherty was unsuccessful in her attempt to win enough nominations to run and she subsequently became involved in far-right and anti-immigration activism. Ms Connolly said she does not regret making the nomination in 2018 saying Ms O'Doherty 'had done some good work as an investigative journalist.' She added: 'I didn't know her personally, but I knew her role, and I gave her a nomination when the time came. That didn't mean I was supporting her.' Ms Connolly said: 'Do I regret what's happened to the relation to her? Absolutely. Do I support her in any way? Not at all.' Political style Asked about a perception that she has a combative political style, Ms Connolly said she disputed that and said she would 'rephrase' it, adding: 'I think I've been very straight, honest and direct. I think I'm a very hard worker.' 'If as a society we don't value hard work and straight and blunt talking without any spin, then we're in trouble. 'I don't think I've set out to stir things or to be that type of politician.' She pointed to her time as Leas Cheann Comhairle in the last Dáil, saying: 'I've shown that I've been fair, that I'm able to put aside my strong opinion and function as a Leas Cheann Comhairle.' She said: 'I'm a democrat to my fingertips.' Earlier, she told RTÉ Raidió na Gaeltachta's Adhmhaidin programme that she did not make the decision to contest the election overnight and was doubtful enough about the move, but was convinced by correspondence she got from people asking her to run. 'I was taken aback by the support I received, I wasn't expecting that level of support from people across the country, in English and Irish,' she said speaking in Irish. McGuinness nomination On Tuesday, Fine Gael's Mairead McGuinness became the first official nominee in the presidential race to replace Michael D Higgins after his term comes to an end in the autumn. Ms McGuinness, who was a TV presenter and farming journalist before becoming an MEP and EU commissioner, is the nominee to become Fine Gael's presidential candidate. [ Profile: The outspoken left-wing campaigner running for president Opens in new window ] The election to succeed Mr Higgins is set to take place in late October or early November. Prospective candidates need the support of 20 Oireachtas members to get on the ballot paper. Fianna Fáil has not clarified if it will run a candidate and is to make a decision in the early autumn. Sinn Féin leader Mary Lou McDonald has also refused to rule herself out of the running. Connolly profile Ms Connolly has received the backing of the Social Democrats and People Before Profit, with the Labour Party 'very seriously' consider backing her. Ms Connolly worked as a barrister and a clinical psychologist before becoming a councillor for 17 years and spending a term as Galway mayor until 2005. She resigned from the Labour Party in 2006 after being turned down to be a running mate of then incumbent TD Mr Higgins. She was first elected to the Dáil as an independent candidate for Galway West in 2016. - Additional reporting PA


Irish Times
2 hours ago
- Irish Times
Political opposition hinders electricity projects
Political opposition continues to hinder projects designed to guarantee electricity supplies and aid the Republic in hitting climate targets, TDs and senators heard on Wednesday. Noel Cunniffe, chief executive of industry group, Wind Energy Ireland, told the Joint Oireachtas Committee on Climate, Environment and Energy, that Eirgrid's north-south interconnector, which has cleared all planning hurdles, continued to face opposition. 'There is a general consensus that investment in national grid projects is good, but when it comes to local level, that gets challenged,' he said. Mr Cunniffe pointed out that both Dáil deputies and councillors tended to oppose electricity projects at local level. READ MORE Justin Moran, the organisation's director of external affairs, argued that 'opposition to grid projects is not a victimless crime'. He was responding to committee members who raised this week's news that families cannot move into new homes in Portlaoise, Co Laois, because their estate does not have electricity connections. [ Electricity squeeze hits grid projects Opens in new window ] Mr Moran pointed out that while EirGrid received permission for plans to boost the national electricity grid supplying Laois and Kilkenny in 2014, continued opposition meant that work was only under way now. Nicholas Tarrant, managing director, ESB Networks, said 'there are places on the network where there is limited capacity, and we are working on that'. They include Portlaoise, other similar towns along with areas such as Dublin north and west, according to the State company boss. Regulators are weighing proposals to allow ESB Networks to spend €11.6 billion up to 2030 on boosting the systems that supply electricity to homes and businesses.


Irish Times
2 hours ago
- Irish Times
Man inspired by 1970s New York art caused more than €60,000 damage by spray painting trains
A man inspired by a 1970s New York art movement caused more than €60,000 worth of damage by spray painting train carriages, a court has heard. Sean Cullen (22) pleaded guilty to two counts of criminal damage and one of common assault of an Irish Rail employee. Marc Thompson, prosecuting barrister, told Dublin Circuit Criminal Court that Irish Rail faced significant clean-up costs. Mr Thompson said the prosecution is holding Cullen accountable for damage costing €60,914. Irish Rail has indicated there have been €40,000 further costs associated with these incidents. READ MORE Judge Martin Nolan on Wednesday remanded Cullen, also known as Cullen-Wilson, of Hope Avenue, East Wall, Dublin 3, in custody until Friday. The judge said he will give his full decision on Friday, adding that Cullen 'deserves a salutary lesson'. An investigating garda said gardaí were alerted to an incident at the Fairview Dart depot on September 25th, 2021. An Irish Rail employee had noticed two men at the depot acting suspiciously and recognised they did not work there. He approached them and grabbed Cullen. There was then a physical altercation during which Cullen pepper-sprayed the worker. Cullen and his co-accused, who is not before the courts, fled the scene. The Irish Rail employee was out of work for a period but has since recovered and returned to his role. Several incidents involving criminal damage by graffiti to train carriages were outlined to the court, with photographs handed in. Others besides Cullen were also involved in some of these incidents, the court heard. On February 21st, 2020, train carriages at the Docklands train station were sprayed with silver and black spray paint. Damage was also caused to the carriage's interiors with SD written using a marker. Another incident took place at Connolly Station on November 22nd, 2021. On June 6th, 2020, an equipment signal container at Merrion Gates, Merrion Road, was spray-painted. Cullen was identified from CCTV and his home was searched in May 2022. During this search, spray cans and other items were found. He was arrested and questioned about these incidents, but nothing of evidential value was obtained. Cullen's fingerprints were identified on certain items by forensic analysis. He has one previous conviction for damaging property. Karl Monaghan, defending barrister, put it to the investigating garda that the second man 'administered thumps' to the Irish Rail worker. Seven references and an award Cullen received from a Garda initiative were handed to the court. Cullen had €2,000 in court as a token of remorse. Mr Monaghan said this was an 'unfortunate series of offending' that has had serious consequences for Irish Rail. He said Cullen became 'fascinated' by graffiti in the East Wall area and was aware of a 1970s art movement in New York, in which some street artists spray painted trains. Counsel said his client knows his acts were criminal, wrong and he accepts full responsibility. A letter of apology from Cullen said he is 'very regretful' for his actions and has not done graffiti since. Cullen has a good work history and is an apprentice electrician, counsel said. Mr Monaghan asked the court to consider ordering a probation report and to direct that his client be assessed for community service.