More to follow.
Covers to broadsheet@broadsheet.ie
Thanks Darragh Clifford, Colin McGann, Ronan Coveney , Mike Hogan 4FM, Kevin Doyle, Geoff McGrath , David Cochrane
More to follow.
Covers to broadsheet@broadsheet.ie
Thanks Darragh Clifford, Colin McGann, Ronan Coveney , Mike Hogan 4FM, Kevin Doyle, Geoff McGrath , David Cochrane
b) No
c) Paul Mariner
If you answered a) or even c) you are cordially invited to a traditional pub quiz to be held in aid of the Children’s Hospital in Crumlin at the Rathmines Inn, Rathmines, Dublin, on Saturday, November 23, 2013.
The cost is €10 per person, with four people per table.
The night will include music, ‘nibbles’, ‘spot prizes’ and a very high chance of a tombola-style raffle.
More here
Nibbles.
Thanks Kevin Byrne
Wexford Street, Dublin this evening.
Thanks Tasha
Pulled into Connolly Station and there is a building on Fire beside me. #SHOCKINGPICTURE pic.twitter.com/6el7bk8nXx
— Niall Donnelly (@Beaks66) November 4, 2013
Platforms 6 & 7 in Connolly Station closed due to a fire in the building opposite. All DART & Commuters going through Platform 5.
— Ian (@Ian_Reynolds95) November 4, 2013
Thanks Hannah Bates
The Glanmire Active Retirement Protest March “Against All Cuts To Young And Old” in Budget 2014 begins at Cork Opera House at 12.30pm.
There better be Barry’s.
Details here
Further to journalist Conor Ryan’s story in this morning’s Irish Examiner – in which he revealed for the first time correspondence between religious orders and the State in relation to the indemnity deal and how the Sisters of Mercy transferred 66 schools, worth €412million to a religious trust called Ceist – law lecturer at Kent Law School Mairéad Enright, above, has written her thoughts on the matter.
In Human Rights in Ireland blog, she writes:
“The question of how church institutions maintain control of property which might otherwise be the subject of compensation paid on litigation, or which might come within the ambit of redress schemes, has taken on significant weight in other jurisdictions.
“In the United States, in July, District Judge Rudolph Randa held that clerical abuse victims – the primary creditors of the bankrupt Archdiocese of Milwaukee – could not access $55m which, in 2007, the then Archbishop had placed in a cemetery trust for the perpetual care of the deceased of the Archdiocese.
“The Judge held that any interference with the trust would compromise the constitutional protection for free expression of religion. The former Archbishop, now Cardinal Dolan, maintains that the transfer of this enormous sum was not an attempt to avoid compensation claims.
“In New South Wales and in Victoria [Australia] campaigners have advocated reform of the Roman Catholic Church Trust Property Act, which the Catholic Church has used to avoid paying compensation in sexual abuse claims. The church has successfully argued, using the so-called ‘Ellis defence‘ – that diocesan statutory property trusts cannot be sued except on property claims. Victims must rely on mediation with dioceses to obtain redress under the controversial ‘Towards Healing‘ scheme and this raises controversial issues of oversight and bargaining power, similar to those which arise on settlement of a lawsuit. (These are just the tactics than can be used to avoid paying out on successful claims. There are other means to avoid claims altogether – statutes of limitation, charitable immunity, and bishops’ invocation of the doctrine of corporation sole among them). To get the full story on redress, we may need to look far beyond the indemnity agreement and its successors.”
Previously: Mercy, Mercy Me
Cardinal Timothy Dolan on Broadsheet
Pic: IntLawGrrls
http://vimeo.com/78535865
Images from the all-female card at Esker Boxing `Club, Lucan, Dublin Saturday night.
The first women only boxing tournament in Ireland.
Thanks Donal Moloney
An enormous keg carrying Guinness blocking a lane of the south quays towards Heuston Station. Dublin this afternoon.
That’ll be your ‘king pin’.
*sucks teeth*
(Sam Boal/Photocall Ireland).
A visceral take on the spirit of competition, where sprinters transform into their aggressive animal counterparts to survive and win.
Directed by Jérémy Delbos, Raphaëm El Khaddar, Camille, Marjoux, Laurent Maynard and Cécile Terrillon of the Ecole Supérieure des Métiers Artistiques de Toulouse