Remembering Cathleen O'Neill, who beat down a path for other women
“A force bigger than life itself,” said a eulogy by O’Neill’s friend Carmel Jennings. “Working-class warrior,” said Rita Fagan, another friend of O’Neill’s.
Since February, Superintendent Seán Fallon has been supervisor of the Garda National Diversity and Integration Unit.
A spokesperson for the Department of Justice said its policy document on the family reunification process is currently under review.
The services are now more expensive, and the companies managing them are less flexible and harder to contact than the embassies were, would-be travellers say.
For hundreds still left without shelter and exposed to exploitation, hostility and violence, how much of a difference will that ruling make?
From their shop Traditional Asian Cake in the Stephen’s Green Shopping Centre, Stephen and Vivian Goh sell their own special version of the treat.
It’s vital to learn about the genuine roots of commercialised things, says Favour Odusola.
Hirantha Pereira says he mostly tries to forget his sister Belinda’s murder in Dublin in 1996, but sometimes he daydreams about what it would be like if she was still alive.
Fearing fines, KLM and Lufthansa have been enforcing stringent requirements, leading Bolivians to miss flights, and even leaving one man stranded.
“There’s an adultification of Black and Brown children happening here,” said Jennifer O’Leary, a woman advocating for the young asylum seeker.
Several have been sleeping down a laneway near the International Protection Office on Mount Street Lower.
Joe Dalton’s show “Crossing the Rubicon” on Dublin South FM had guests talking about One World Government, fluoride, alt-Covid treatments and more.
She had stayed in the shelter since she’d got her status because she couldn’t find another place to live. But she’s no longer welcome.