Ireland's abortion laws are some of the toughest in the world. Time to change: http://t.co/jB92Hi8QZC #Repealthe8th pic.twitter.com/0ekKMhCjTw
— Amnesty UK (@AmnestyUK) June 9, 2015
An Amnesty UK campaign launched today.
Ireland's abortion laws are some of the toughest in the world. Time to change: http://t.co/jB92Hi8QZC #Repealthe8th pic.twitter.com/0ekKMhCjTw
— Amnesty UK (@AmnestyUK) June 9, 2015
An Amnesty UK campaign launched today.
FAI chief John Delaney and partner Emma English at the Aviva Lansdowne Road Nua yesterday
Anything good in The Washington Post?
But of course there are questions of legal and ethical impropriety in this arrangement. For one, the payment was kept confidential, and Delaney claims he had to abide by a confidentiality provision.
On the other hand, his spontaneous public confession suggests otherwise, and he didn’t have to agree to the confidentiality provision in the first place.
Why would a nonprofit sporting organization and one of its member nations think that keeping this payment secret was a proper way to conduct business? Losing teams are always unhappy, and lawsuits almost never provide satisfaction, so FIFA had very little to fear in a courtroom.
Yet this secret deal — with both the amount and the entire arrangement kept clandestine — still struck both parties as perfectly reasonable. If further investigation determines that these private parties agreed to commit public wrongs, the deal might not be a shrewd bargain so much as an illegal conspiracy.
More troublingly, why was the payment characterised as a “loan” to build a stadium? If that description turns out to be inaccurate, then the creative bookkeeping might have been an effort to hide the hush money.
So even if Delaney was right to accept the money and to stay quiet about it, football fans of Ireland might still consider this accounting ingenuity a firing offense. If not for Delaney, then perhaps for the auditors…..
Prof. William Birdthistle, professor of law at Illinois Institute of Technology
Famine In Irish Football (Washington Post)
(AP)
Alternatively…
Unpalatable as it may seem, €5m in cold hard cash was an extraordinary coup. In one fell swoop, Delaney made up for much of the shortfall in corporate ticket sales for the Aviva, and did so without being in any way beholden to Fifa.
When all the posturing and righteous indignation has died down, people will see that John Delaney actually managed to deliver what our actual team has conspicuously failed to achieve in recent times. A result.
BOOM.
Innit?
England-born Irish football internationals of yore reminisce.
Declan McKeown writes:
“This is a little video we made in Setanta Sports for the Ireland V England game yesterday. If ever we needed more reasons to love Gary Breen. We all dream of a team of…”
Any excuse.
Mmf.
This afternoon.
St George cross-festooned away end at The Aviva Lansdowne Road Nua ahead of Ireland’s soccer friendly against England.
FIGHT!
Via Adrian Weckler
Update:
Roy Keane just asked if john Delaney is a distraction…laughs “isn’t he always!”
— Paul O’Hehir (@paulohehir) June 5, 2015
This morning.
Roy Keane on the ‘cash for no questions’ row at the FAI’s training grounds in Malahide, Co Dublin.
Pic via Damian Spellman
Eamon Dunphy (top) and John Delaney in Poznan Slovakia, Poland in 2012
“I think it suggests it was a bit late to the Sopranos. Tony decides that this fella is annoying me, he is giving me grief. He reaches for the cheque book, signs the cheque. There’s $5m, we’ll make it a loan. If you don’t qualify for the next World Cup, will you shut up?
“And John Delaney took it. If John Delaney was chancing his arm, and I think he was, then I think most Irish people would say fair play to him provided the money went into Irish soccer.”
Eamon Dunphy on the ‘Hand of Wad’ controversy.
Alternatively…
“How could anyone with any soul or simple respect for their fellow-man put a price on the heartache suffered by Dunne, those fabulous fans and a sport craving probity? How could the FAI consider with a straight face investing that Fifa “loan” into any stadium used by players who dream of reaching a World Cup?
As somebody remarked the day after the game: “It’s not about money. This is about sporting integrity.” Who said that? Step forward John Delaney, chief executive of the FAI…”Henry Winter, Daily Telegraph Football Correspondent.
Fifa corruption crisis: pressure mounts on FAI over €5m payment – live (Guardian)
How John Delaney Sleepwalked Into Fifa Crisis (Goal.com)
Yesterday The Fifa Palm-Off
BREAKING: FIFA President Sepp Blatter says he will resign from his position amid corruption scandal (via @AP) pic.twitter.com/u1KrlFaduy
— New York Post (@nypost) June 2, 2015
More as he gets it.
They hatin’.
Laura, of Amsterdam Gaelic Athletic Club, writes:
Just some of the photos the girls took of Danish General Election posters. It should be noted that all the candidates are ridiculously good looking and young, not one TD type between them…
Thanks Laura
The Guardian: Danish cowboy bares all in bid to be prime minister