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InterTech is a diversity platform that brings LGBT members of the tech community in Dublin together for social events.

Next Thursday, December 8, at 6.30pm, it will hold a fundraiser for ShoutOut at Oscars Café Bar on Fishamble Street, Dublin 8.

Further to this…

Conor Kavanagh, of InterTech, writes:

ShoutOut is a non-profit that delivers workshops to high-school students in Ireland around how to be a good ally, what homophobia and transphobia really are and how they can manifest themselves.

It’ll be informal drinks, pizza and a raffle with premium tech prizes. As we’ve probably all experienced, there’s no better place to find an ally than in a school corridor. So buy your ticket and join us on December 8th for some after-work drinks, pizza, a raffle and a great cause.

Buy tickets, €11.23, here

ShoutOut

InterTech Ireland

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This morning.

The Four Courts, Dublin 1

Denis O Brien arrivies to appear as the only witness in his action concerning certain statements made about his business dealings in Dáil Eireann by TDs Catherine Murphy of the Social Democrats and Sinn Féin’s Pearse Doherty. The businessman alleges that those statements breached his constitutional right to privacy.

More as we get it.

Rollingnews

Update:
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This afternoon.

Denis O’Brien leaves the court after giving evidence.

To wit:

Denis O’Brien explained why he fundamentally believes the confidentiality of banking details is as important as medical records and that it’s important for the country, as a whole, and for the conduct of business.

He said he sought the court order against RTE in the interest of wider privacy.

He said, in parallel to his solicitors being in court, just two miles away their work was being undone. So, he argued, nobody has any protection of the courts if TDs are to act like this.

Mr O’Brien also said the international perspective in relation to this matter is bad for Ireland. People will take a view that Ireland is risky to invest in. It’s a considerable weakness, he said.

Mr O’Brien said he and his family were threatened and feared for their lives. However, he said he’s not speculating what promoted the threats.

Mr O’Brien said he felt having his personal banking details spoken about in the Oireachtas was wrong and the remedy for this would be to remove the ability to name any name on the floor of the Dáil.

He said personal banking files, belong to him, were stolen and given to a TD and that TD should have gone to the gardaí, instead of reading it out in Dáil.

Mr O’Brien stressed to the court that he was taking the action to ensure this would never happen again – to any citizen.

Mr O’Brien also admitted to deliberately trying to prevent media from reporting Dáil business.

Meanwhile, from Mr O’Brien’s testimony, during which he was questioned by Michael Collins SC, for the Dáil Committee for Procedure and Privileges…

Michael Collins: “You used the word reprove in your legal submission to the court.”

Denis O’Brien: “Censure is my preferred word.”

MichaelCollins: “So, you want court to issue it to TDs.”

O’Brien: “Yes.”

Michael Collins:“You want the court to express its disapproval of the TDs.”

O’Brien: “Yes.”

Michael Collins: “You complain re: motivation of TDs, you say they were trying to subvert court, you want court to investigate their motivation and reach a conclusion on it.”

O’Brien: “Yes.”

Michael Collins: “You complain no branch of government has issued adverse commentary re: TDs’ utterances.”

O’Brien: “That’s correct.”

Michael Collins: “You therefore want judiciary branch of government to deplore what occurred and make adverse comment; finding re: statements made by TDs.”

O’Brien: “Yes.”

In addition, Mr O’Brien also answered questions from the Attorney General’s Senior Counsel Maurice Collins…

Mauirce Collins: “Mr Cush [Denis O’Brien’s senior counsel] said, without any order, this complaint could still be brought by you, do you understand the effect of that would be to greatly restrict Dáil speech and isn’t that the intent of this action?”

O’Brien: “Yes. You’re trying to make victims out of two TDs yet I’m the one being wronged here. My details were stolen and given to them and they chose to release it.”

Maurice Collins: “I’m not trying to make any victims. I’m saying you want punitive actions against 2 TDs.”

O’Brien: “If unsuccessful this would never happen again.”

Maurice Collins: “You would say you were vindicated and TDs have been found wrong.”

O’Brien: “Yes.”

Maurice Collins: “Going froward TDs wouldn’t have privilege.”

O’Brien: “There would be a respect of privacy.”

Maurice Collins: “You want both censure of Catherine Murphy and Pearse Doherty and you want censorship of all TDs going forward.”

O’Brien: “The same situation faced by me would not be faced by others in future.”

Mauirce Collins: “Seems you wanted to sue them personally but if determination in this case clears path, you might.”

O’Brien: “It’s unlikely, though not ruled out.”

Maurice Collins: “Do you accept it was accepted by your own counsel and said by court itself on June 2nd that order never intended to extend to Dáil therefore you accept no breach.”

O’Brien: “They did.”

Mauirce Collins: “But your counsel differs from you on that matter.”

O’Brien: “If you say that then it must be true.”

Laughing in court

Maurice Collins: “Your case is founded on assertions and utterances made recklessly and in bad faith and you want court to endorse that?”

O’Brien: “Yes.”

Maurice Collins: “TDs are not here as individuals yet you’re making personal allegations. It’s not abstract.”

O’Brien: “Yes they acted recklessly and maliciously.”

Maurice Collins: “Yet they’re not here to defend themselves.”

More as we get it.

Pics: Rollingnews

Meanwhile…

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This afternoon .

People Before Profit protestors outside the Four Courts urging Mr O’Brien to move back home from his tax exile in Malta.

Rollingnews

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Conor McGregor has this morning obtained a licence to box in the state of California.

The move follows an exceptional amount of trash-talk in boxing magnate Floyd Mayweather’s direction, with rumours swirling around a match between the two, should contracts and circumstances ever allow.

The once-retentive UFC has loosened up its policies on co-promotion as of late, working with wrestling promotion WWE on crossover talent appearances, which sets a precedent for an event such as McGregor is pitching for.

California State Athletic Commission exec Andy Foster sez:

“I’d love to see him fight in California. It just needs to be the right opponent. Certainly a high-level opponent. We’re happy to license him. We’re happy he’s a California fighter.”

Mayweather’s management remains schtum on any potential superfight. Says Mayweather Promotions boss Leonard Ellerbe:

“It’s all a game, all a calculated effort to gain more fans. Conor McGregor can say anything he wants to, but he has a boss and his name is [UFC president] Dana White.”

H/T MMAFighting

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From top: A roadside billboard in Havana, Cuba; Dan Boyle

Cuba was not, nor is it, a socialist Nirvana. Nor is it a Hades. The Cubans like people anywhere, aspire to better things from life and the society they wished to live in.

Dan Boyle writes:

I had a long held desire to visit the place while Fidel was still in control. As a TD I got to know the Cuban Chargé d’affaires in Dublin. A very impressive woman who was far from being an ideologue. That summer I arranged to take a family holiday there, informing her of our intentions.

We flew through Paris. The 90 minutes at passport control was not the most auspicious of starts.

The trip from the airport to our hotel was through streets with many crumbling buildings. The upper stories in some of these buildings were left unoccupied through being unmaintained.

There was the kitsch charm of the 1950s Cadillacs and motorcycles. I suppose we wanted more to absorb what was different and unique about the place.

Much of that there was. I will always enjoy the memories of travelling along the Malecón towards Habana Vieja. The main thoroughfare of O’Reilly Street offered proof that the Irish had already been there. There at a bar, while sipping pina coladas, there was a sublime sense of enjoying a three piece of guitar, upright bass and big, brassy singer.

At a art market I bought a local artist’s take on Warhol – A Campbell’s soup can in Revolution flavour. My daughter, then a young teenager, was invited to visit the Socialist Youth Movement. She found it a bit intense but was given some nice posters.

I found myself being summoned to a meeting with the member of the Politburo who had responsibility for Europe. The Politburo building, a bleak functional 1960s building, was located by the Plaza de la Revolución.

For two hours I was harangued there. The obsequiousness of the European Union towards the US embargo on Cuba was resting heavily, and fully, on my shoulders. I nodded sympathetically. The US embargo towards Cuba was and remains immoral.

I did point out that Cuba didn’t encourage appropriate support by holding some poor human rights positions, particularly in relation to gay rights. It didn’t help his mood.

We were there during the celebration of the Revolution. The three available TV channels all carried Fidel’s four hour speech live.

What capped the holiday for us was something of a mugging. While walking near our hotel we met two men, very much an odd couple. They claimed to be former Olympians. One short and squat claimed he had been a wrestler. The other long and lanky claimed to be a member of the national basketball team. We were wary but they convinced us to let them give us a tour of the backstreets of Havana.

It was fascinating. We were shown the animist shrines, some voodoo related, that were put up in many streets, in this officially atheist state. There were small signs of some private enterprise taking place, cafés and the like.

We ended up at Basketball player’s family home. We had to wait for the daily two hour power outage to end before we were offered some cool drinks.

Then came the scam. We were ‘encouraged’ to buy a lot of cigars from a family member who obtained them as a fringe benefit of working with the cigar company. I didn’t really mind as it was well worth the cost for that kind of access.

We spent the second week of our holiday at the could have been anywhere location of Varadero. This was my compact with the women in my life, who wanted to soak up the Sun’s rays than have to endure any more political tourism.

The journey to there from Havana through rural Cuba showed a national wealth spread even less thinly. Hoardings along the roadside advertised, not McDonalds or Coca Cola, but Castro and The Revolution.

At the resort, other than the people working there, the only Cubans we met were doctors. A paid holiday there for them and their families, was seen as part of their remuneration.

Cuba was not, nor is it, a socialist Nirvana. Nor is it a Hades. The Cubans we met, like people anywhere, aspired to better things from life and the society they wished to live in.

They gave no impression of being oppressed. They spoke with an openness, an articulacy and an intelligence I wish I heard more often in Irish politics. They were, and are, impressive in their resilience. Viva Cuba!

Dan Boyle is a former Green Party TD and Senator. Follow Dan on Twitter: @sendboyle

Rollingnews

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Patsy McGarry, in The Irish Times, reports:

The Garda and child and family agency Tusla are investigating an alleged incident at a major Dublin boarding school, following a claim that a 13-year-old boy was sexually assaulted in a dormitory with a hockey stick by eight other pupils.

The incident is alleged to have taken place late last Thursday night at the 450-year-old Church of Ireland-governed King’s Hospital secondary school in Palmerstown

However, it was not reported to the Garda, Tusla, or the Church of Ireland authorities until Tuesday.

… In February 2008, King’s Hospital and Swim Ireland agreed to pay substantial damages after a 10-year dispute to 13 female victims of convicted sex abuser Derry O’Rourke, who had been employed by the school as a swimming coach.

Boy (13) allegedly sexually assaulted by pupils at boarding school (Irish Times)

Broadsheet.ie