
Judge wants all sides to work towards November trial date for Donaldsons
A judge has said he wants all sides to work towards ensuring the trial of former DUP leader Sir Jeffrey Donaldson and his wife Lady Donaldson, on charges relating to alleged historical sex offences, goes ahead in November.
A previous court hearing had been told that there had been a deterioration in the medical condition of Eleanor Donaldson.
A brief review of the case at Newry Crown Court on Thursday heard that an assessment over whether she is currently fit to stand trial will take place next month.
The trial had previously been due to start in March, but was delayed because of Eleanor Donaldson's ill health.
A new trial date has been set for November 3.
Jeffrey Donaldson, 62, who did not attend the hearing on Thursday, has pleaded not guilty to 18 alleged offences.
The charges include one count of rape as well as allegations of indecent assault and gross indecency.
The charges span a time period between 1985 and 2008, and there are two alleged victims.
Eleanor Donaldson, 59, of Dublinhill Road, Dromore, who also did not attend court, is facing charges of aiding and abetting, which she denies.
Prosecuting barrister Fiona O' Kane told the court that the hearing had been organised to ensure 'all matters are still on track'.
Eleanor Donaldson's barrister, Ciara Ennis, said there was a 'firm date' for her client to see a forensic psychiatrist on July 18.
She said: 'There is absolutely no reason I can see at this point that it won't go ahead as planned.'
Judge Paul Ramsey said that the case had already been listed for review again on August 1 in Belfast.
He said: 'By that stage you should have the report, or at least a summary of the findings of the report.
'The prosecution will then decide what they want to do.'
Ms O'Kane said the prosecution had been 'proactive' and had instructed their own psychiatrist, pending the results of the report from the forensic psychiatrist.
Judge Ramsey said: 'The other thing we have to keep in mind, that we are moving towards the anticipated date of the trial, which I am anxious to maintain and keep.'
Ms O'Kane said: 'There is a triumvirate of interests going on here, obviously the complainants are very keen that this matter is progressed, we have the public at large who have an interest in the case, and then there are the defendants themselves.'
Judge Ramsey said: 'I think everybody should work towards that date in any event. Hopefully we will see what matters progress.'
Jeffrey Donaldson, the long-standing MP for Lagan Valley, was arrested and charged at the end of March last year.
He resigned as DUP leader and was suspended from the party after the allegations emerged.
Weeks before his arrest, he had led the DUP back into Stormont after a two-year boycott of the powersharing institutions.
Previous deputy leader Gavin Robinson was appointed his successor as DUP chief.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


BBC News
13 minutes ago
- BBC News
Christopher McBurnie's mum pays tribute to her 'best friend' son
The mother of a 14-year-old who was fatally stabbed last month has paid tribute to her "best boy" and "best friend".Christopher McBurnie, of Bromet Road in Castletown, died in Ramsey on 29 May. Rebecca Parker described her son as a "lovable comedian" who loved animals and was passionate about Liverpool Football Club."He wasn't just my son," she said. "He was my best friend, he was my world, he was my life." A 14-year-old boy charged with Christopher's murder will next appear in court on 2 Parker said Christopher and his four siblings meant everything to said his death had "absolutely shattered" her, adding "it's more than heartbreak - it's indescribable". Ms Parker said her son was "football mad" and had played for Colby Football Club on the island for several years, where he had been "absolutely over the moon" to be awarded the under-12 player of the said she shared a special bond with "kind and empathetic" Christopher."Every night when he came home we'd have this routine," she said. "He'd come up to my bedroom and sit on my bed and we'd just have a natter."We were very open with each other. Because he had quite an older head on his shoulders as well, you could have a conversation with him about things." Ms Parker said she had been "getting flooded with photos and videos" from Christopher's friends since his death, which showed he was "just very well-loved"."His friends have sent me videos and pictures of him being the clown really, doing jokes and all that, and that was him in a bubble. Just the best." She said Christopher's funeral on Friday would be "his big day" and a chance to "celebrate" him."I don't like to call it a funeral so I've just been calling it Christopher's day," she Parker said the procession would start from the family's home in Castletown "because he didn't make it home, so I've got to bring him home".Reflecting on life without her eldest son, she said: "Everywhere I go I can see his smile. It's like I can see him but I can't see him, every memory's coming back."All I keep thinking about is the night-time, because I think that was our special time, just me and him having a little natter before bed. That was our time."The service will begin at TheAbbey Church in Ballasalla at 10:30 BST. Read more stories from the Isle of Man on the BBC, watch BBC North West Tonight on BBC iPlayer and follow BBC Isle of Man on Facebook and X.


Daily Mail
21 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Church of England preparing for war 'that involves the UK' amid fears over global conflicts
The Church of England is preparing for Britain to be drawn into a war due to the growing threat of global conflict, it revealed today. For what is thought to be the first time, a serving member of the Armed Forces - who fought in Iraq and Afghanistan - will brief the Church's ruling body on the threats facing Britain when it meets next month. While not yet on a 'war footing' and still 'praying for peace', the Bishop to the Armed Forces said the Church is now readying itself to play an important spiritual role during 'conflict that involves the UK'. As part of preparations for this, the CofE's top brass is looking back to the leadership shown by senior religious figures during the Second World War for inspiration. Reverend Hugh Nelson, Bishop to the Armed Forces, said the Church wants to 'take seriously' the potential challenges ahead and avoid being caught out like the nation was by the pandemic. Revd Nelson said he had been hearing from military personnel for the past two years 'rising concern about the threat of very, very serious conflict, including conflict that involves the UK'. During a briefing ahead of next month's General Synod, he referenced the Government's national security strategy, published earlier this week, which warned the UK must actively prepare for a 'wartime scenario' on British soil 'for the first time in many years'. The upcoming meeting of the Church's ruling body will receive an address by Brigadier Jaish Mahan, Deputy Commander (Reserves) 1st UK Division, in what is thought to be the first time a serving member of the Armed Forces who is not a CofE chaplain or Royal has spoken at Synod. Brigadier Jaish - a practising Christian who joined the army in 1994 and served in Kosovo, Sierra Leone, Iraq and Afghanistan - will brief Synod on the 'global context and the challenges faced by the UK'. A Synod agenda paper states: 'While a conflict directly involving the UK is not an immediate risk, given the very serious impact such a conflict would have on every person in the country, we must be prepared. 'The pandemic showed us the risks of being unprepared for a national crisis, and we must learn the lessons.' Revd Nelson said today: 'As a Church, we want to take seriously those challenges, both to do everything that we can to pray for and work for and advocate for peace, because the kingdom of God is a kingdom of justice and peace, and to face the reality and to put in place, or at least to begin to have conversations towards plans about how the Church might need to respond and to be if there were to be a serious conflict. 'We do not want to be in the situation that we were all in - Church and wider society - pre-pandemic, when those that knew things said there will one day be a pandemic, and none of us had done anything in preparation for that. So we want to take that seriously.' While he declined to go so far as to say the work was putting the Church on a 'war footing', he noted that consideration is being given to how religious leaders acted in previous wartime scenarios. He said: 'We have looked back at some of the ways in which senior Church leadership - archbishops and bishops - led, the things that they said, particularly in the Second World War.'


The Guardian
27 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Review calls for £10m overhaul of the Office for National Statistics
The UK's main statistics body needs a £10m overhaul and its top role split in two after a series of management failings and errors that have plagued the organisation for several years, a scathing report has found. The Devereux Review on performance and culture of the Office for National Statistics (ONS) found 'deep-seated' issues that called for radical measures and warned of the likelihood that past statistics would need to retrospectively revised. Sir Robert Devereux, a retired career civil servant, said the role of national statistician should be split in two, creating a new role of ONS permanent secretary to oversee a wide-ranging reorganisation, alongside the national statistician, who assumes responsibility for the accuracy of published data. 'This new permanent secretary position could be handed to someone with a track record of leading and turning around an operational business,' Devereux said. He added: 'I suggest temporary separation since, with more effort to develop evident talent within the government statistical service, I think it might well be possible to recombine the roles in due course, once the organisation's core business is back on a more stable footing.' The role of national statistician is vacant after Prof Sir Ian Diamond retired due to ill health during the review. Among the searing criticisms in the review, Devereux said there was 'a weak system of planning and budgeting' and a reluctance at senior levels to hear and act on difficult news. The review said there was a 'reluctance on the part of some to take at face value the warnings which have been raised, apparently preferring instead to categorise those making the warnings as lacking in accountability'. Officials at the Bank of England and the Treasury, MPs and City analysts have criticised the ONS's operations after its surveys were hit by falling participation rates among businesses and the public during the pandemic, leading to questions about the validity of its data. The ONS, which is based in Newport, south Wales, has sought to increase the rate of responses to its surveys, but with only limited success. In particular, its labour market data showing the level of employment in the UK economy have been heavily revised in recent years. The consumer prices index and the retail prices index were recently found to be incorrect after an error by a government agency supplying the ONS with data pushed the headline rate up by 0.1 percentage points to 3.5% in April. The ONS refused to amend the figure, arguing that investors who bought inflation-linked financial products would claim compensation. Acting national statistician Emma Rourke said the report marked 'a turning point for the ONS as we commit to implement the recommendations and reset towards a culture that embraces feedback and challenge'. The ONS has also published a £10m plan to improve the accuracy of its economic and population statistics. It said that improving the accuracy of ONS statistics will take collective effort. 'In some cases, this may mean revising published figures or historical series. That is not a sign of failure, but of a statistical system willing to evolve, led by evidence, and open about how it improves. 'We will work closely with users to ensure revisions and breaks in series are well managed, with support provided to users.' Devereux said senior managers had become focused on delivering new IT systems, diverting resources from existing system upgrades. 'There has been a commendable interest in both new approaches to statistics (including the use of administrative data) and ensuring the relevance of ONS activity to wider political debate. Unfortunately, this has had the (unintended) effect of de-prioritising the less exciting, but nonetheless crucial, task of delivering core economic statistics of sufficient quality to guide decision making,' he said. For instance, problems with trade data 'reflected known concerns' about flaws in the computer system used to compile the figures, but nothing was done about it until an error occurred. The producer price index, which measures the cost of raw materials and components used in industry, was flawed after staff stuck with old coding methods, reducing their ability to spot errors, said Devereux. In 2020, the ONS shifted publication of economic statistics from 9.30am to 7am. Concerns that this put added pressure on staff to verify and comment on data outside office hours sparked a review by the statistics regulator. The review found a move back to 9.30am would not be possible due in part to the weakness of the IT systems.