logo
Killing of pregnant Co Down woman (27) has left ‘deep wound' on family and community, funeral hears

Killing of pregnant Co Down woman (27) has left ‘deep wound' on family and community, funeral hears

Irish Times10-07-2025
The killing of pregnant mother-of-two Sarah Montgomery has left a 'deep wound' on her family and the community where she lived, her funeral has been told.
The service of thanksgiving for Ms Montgomery and her unborn son Liam Arthur at Donaghadee Parish Church also heard that she was a born carer with a heart of gold.
Ms Montgomery (27) died at her home in Elmfield Walk in the
Co Down
town last month. A man has appeared in court charged with her murder.
Her death led to renewed focus on the rate of violence against women and girls in Northern Ireland and hundreds of people attended a vigil in her memory last week.
READ MORE
The service of thanksgiving on Thursday followed a family service of committal earlier in the day.
Rector of Donaghadee Rev Ian Gamble told the service: 'The tragic death of Sarah and baby Liam has left a deep wound on a close and quiet family in our town.
'It has left a deep wound on the community up in Elmfield and across Donaghadee.
'Sarah Montgomery was a quiet and much-loved Donaghadee girl. A young mother, sister, a loving daughter to her late parents and a cherished granddaughter,' he said.
She had many friends from her days at school in our town and she was very much a part of our local community, he said.
Rev Kathy Couchman, who officiated at the service, said the family has been 'totally overwhelmed' by the support they have received from Donaghadee and further afield.
She added: 'Sarah grew up in Donaghadee; this is where she spent her life and where she was so involved in the life of the town and her community.'
Rev Couchman said Sarah was a 'born carer'.
'Her friends and family have all spoken of how she had a heart of gold, of how caring she was, not only towards people she knew, but to anyone who needed help,' she said.
Ms Montgomery's two daughters had been the 'centre of her world', she said, adding that she was 'so looking forward to being a mummy also to her baby, Liam Arthur'.
'She had everything ready to welcome him to this world, to her family and to her girls. Thoughtful as ever, Sarah had had clothes prepared for Liam Arthur, embroidered with his name,' she said.
'Sarah and Liam Arthur and his sisters should have a future ahead of them, but that future has been brutally and unjustly snatched away from them, and from their family and friends.
'This isn't right; this isn't how it should be, and we must not lose sight of the fact that it is neither right nor is it in any way excusable,' she said. —PA
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Omagh bombing inquiry: Survivors and families seek representation at closed hearings
Omagh bombing inquiry: Survivors and families seek representation at closed hearings

Irish Times

time36 minutes ago

  • Irish Times

Omagh bombing inquiry: Survivors and families seek representation at closed hearings

Survivors and families of those killed in the Omagh bomb have asked to be represented by a special advocate in closed hearings at the public inquiry. Omagh bombing inquiry chairman Lord Turnbull is hearing arguments around various applications during dedicated hearings this week. Paul Greaney KC, counsel to the inquiry, which is examining whether the 1998 dissident republican bomb attack could have been prevented, said it will hear some sensitive security evidence in closed hearings. A total of 31 people, including unborn twins, died and hundreds were injured when a car bomb planted by the dissident republican group the Real IRA exploded in the centre of the Co Tyrone town on August 15th, 1998. READ MORE Speaking during hearings in Belfast on Monday, Mr Greaney said the inquiry's legal team recognises that survivors and the bereaved have spent 25 seeking the truth. He said some may be 'suspicious or even cynical of the UK state's willingness to engage in a way that is straightforward and wholehearted with this inquiry'. 'We acknowledge too, that the idea of evidence being heard in circumstances in which the families and survivors will be excluded is one that they will find difficult to accept, to say the least, and accordingly, we regard it as entirely understandable that some, although not all, have suggested special advocates should be appointed to represent their interests in any closed hearings, and have made applications for that to occur,' he said. Mr Greaney last month said the inquiry would not begin examining the atrocity itself until next year due to the 'pace of disclosure'. He said chapter three of the inquiry, which 'will consider the bombing itself', would commence in March of next year. The inquiry, which opened last year, was ordered by the UK government in the wake of a court judgment to examine whether the atrocity could reasonably have been prevented by British state authorities. During a four-week sitting in the Strule Arts Centre in Omagh earlier this year, the inquiry heard emotional testimony from bereaved relatives who delivered pen portraits of their loved ones, as well as from the injured and first responders. – PA

Pensioner fatally assaulted outside home had ‘heart of gold', funeral hears
Pensioner fatally assaulted outside home had ‘heart of gold', funeral hears

Irish Times

time3 days ago

  • Irish Times

Pensioner fatally assaulted outside home had ‘heart of gold', funeral hears

A man who died after he was fatally assaulted outside his home had a 'heart of gold' and was funny, 'loyal and kind', his funeral Mass has heard. Michael 'Mikey' Hayes (72) died after he was found with critical injuries outside his home at St Michael's Court, Watergate, Limerick, on July 10th. Retired Irish Army and United Nations soldiers, dressed in uniform, performed a guard of honour as Mr Hayes's coffin, draped in the Tricolour, was brought inside St John's Cathedral in the city on Friday. In a tribute, one of Mr Hayes's four sons told mourners: 'Mike brought smiles, he told stories, he made memories, but behind the craic and the spoofs was a man with a heart of gold. READ MORE 'He would help anybody, no hesitation, no questions asked. If you needed him, he was there, that kind of loyalty and kindness is rare, and he gave it so freely. 'He loved the drink, a laugh and being around people. More than that, he loved his family, his friends and his community, and we loved him deeply and truly.' He said his father's sudden death had paralysed his family in grief, saying: 'It's impossible to come to terms with how his life ended, but we will carry his spirit. 'None of us will ever understand it, but what we do understand is the impact he made while he was here, and that's what we're here to remember.' He described his late father as 'an unforgettable man'. 'Our dad was a kind man, a proper character – if you knew him you'd know he was some man to make up a story, and not just any story, but a full-blown 'Mikey-spoof',' the son told mourners to laughter. 'He could spin a tail from nothing, and he'd have you in stitches before you realised half of it was made up. 'They would be one of those stories you wouldn't believe about a neighbour, cousin or some poor stranger that probably never existed at all. 'But the magic was, you didn't care because when Mikey told a story you listened and you laughed.' His father was also known by many for his time selling ice-cream at football matches and concerts. 'That's where you'd find him with a cheeky grin, a quick joke and a '99 in each hand.' Finishing his eulogy, the son said: 'Rest easy, Dad. You were one in a million and we'll be telling your stories for the rest of our lives.' Afterwards, the late Mr Hayes, who is survived by his four sons, Tom, Michael, Brendan and Joe, was laid to rest at Mount St Oliver Cemetery, Limerick. At Limerick District Court on Saturday, Phillip Ambrose (43), of no fixed abode, was charged with Mr Hayes's murder.

Keir Starmer was quick to condemn Kneecap, but strangely silent on Moygashel
Keir Starmer was quick to condemn Kneecap, but strangely silent on Moygashel

Irish Times

time14-07-2025

  • Irish Times

Keir Starmer was quick to condemn Kneecap, but strangely silent on Moygashel

It's hard to avoid images and scenes that provoke disgust these days, but the burning of effigies of people in a boat atop a bonfire in Moygashel in Co Tyrone last week is an especially grotesque brand of racism. Stormont's First Minister Michelle O'Neill referred to 'openly racist displays that are sickening and deplorable' and called for political leadership. Where is that leadership? And how can it effectively tackle these annual expressions of unhinged hate? Where is the Secretary of State for Northern Ireland, Hilary Benn , on this? Keir Starmer found the time to speak about an Irish band playing Glastonbury , making interventions that exerted huge political pressure on the festival. Why did he not have anything to say about the premeditated, explicit and threatening racism on display in Moygashel last week? In June Starmer condemned the racist violence in Ballymena . In May Starmer made his Enoch Powell-esque 'island of strangers' speech. Note the singular 'island'. Starmer is especially well-placed to speak on the North given that he was a human rights adviser to the Northern Ireland Policing Board, yet he said nothing. READ MORE Yvette Cooper declared Palestine Action a 'proscribed' group, turning a bunch of people protesting against genocide into 'terrorists' in the eyes of the law (and rhetoric) overnight. Expressing support for Palestine Action is now illegal in the UK – a ludicrous, dangerous situation that frames those desiring peace and an end to war crimes and mass murder as the enemy. There was not a peep from her on Moygashel either. Kemi Badenoch accused the BBC of 'rewarding extremism' by broadcasting Kneecap's Glastonbury set. On Moygashel's spectacle of actual extremism, however, she has been silent. Those who have called it out for what it is deserve credit. They include John McDowell, the Church of Ireland Archbishop of Armagh and Primate of All Ireland. He described it as 'racist, threatening and offensive. It certainly has nothing whatsoever to do with Christianity or with Protestant culture and is in fact inhuman and deeply sub-Christian'. Sinn Féin's Colm Gildernew labelled it a 'clear incitement to hatred'. UUP leader Mike Nesbitt described it as 'sickening, deplorable and entirely out of step with what is supposed to be a cultural celebration'. Amnesty International's Patrick Corrigan called it a 'vile, dehumanising act that fuels hatred and racism'. Claire Hanna, the leader of the SDLP, called it 'disgusting' and 'a deeply dehumanising provocation'. On Friday, Taoiseach Micheál Martin said he 'was dismayed' by the display. 'Archbishop McDowell made a strong comment on it and he's right – it's racist, threatening, and offensive and it's unChristian and lacking in any appreciation of human dignity.' [ 'Clear incitement to hatred': Calls for removal of migrant effigies in boat placed on loyalist bonfire Opens in new window ] The PSNI eventually said they were investigating the 'material placed upon a bonfire' as a 'hate incident'. The PSNI did not dismantle another bonfire in Belfast when a city council committee voted that such action should be taken, and asked the PSNI to assist contractors in doing so. The request to have it removed was rooted in concerns that the electricity supply to Belfast City Hospital and Royal Victoria Hospital was at risk due to the proximity of that bonfire to a substation, and because there is asbestos at the bonfire site. The decision to let it burn regardless was driven by the potential for violence. The decision is understandable in operational terms – had the PSNI set about dismantling it, riots were inevitable, and everyone knows that threat of violence ultimately emanates from the UDA and the UVF. Northern Ireland's Environment Minister and Alliance Party MLA Andrew Muir also told the BBC that 'the removal of asbestos is very complex and delicate. It requires the site to be completely vacated.' He asked people 'not to light this bonfire if they could.' Year in, year out, the burning of effigies, hate slogans and flags is accepted. Were it not, effective action would be taken to end it. The reluctance to interfere – by politicians and police – is unacceptable when there are lives at risk, both from direct racist violence and the incitement of it. This is a tired cycle, the playing out of a pathetic desire for negative attention. Perhaps there is even a subconscious – or a tacit – understanding that the Britain those making such effigies are loyal to barely thinks about them. This reality may be so painful that it produces a desire to burn something. Anything. Anyone. Boats, mannequins, effigies, flags. I take no issue with bonfires as spectacle and community events celebrating culture. In a pluralist society, expressions of identity, community, and the rituals and traditions that accompany them are important. But there is something rotten about leveraging what is supposed to be an expression of long-standing culture and tradition for contemporary expressions of racist hate, with phraseology borrowed from the likes of Nigel Farage (a man who once got paid a few quid to say 'up the Ra' during his pathetic hustle selling personalised video clip messages via Cameo). It's a pity the imagery of this bonfire did not make the front pages the world over. Maybe then, the blind eye could open to confront a spectacle of festering racism and red hot hate.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store