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Three teenagers appear in court over rioting in Ballymena

Three teenagers appear in court over rioting in Ballymena

Irish Times2 days ago

Three teenagers have appeared in court charged with rioting offences following recent violence in Ballymena, Co Antrim.
A district judge in the town's magistrates' court said a strong message had to be sent out that those involved in the disorder would be dealt with 'robustly' by the court.
The town has witnessed three nights of sustained violence and attacks on police in disturbances that followed an alleged sex attack on a teenage girl at the weekend.
The Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) has described the violence as 'racist thuggery'. It said officers and ethnic minorities have been targeted for attack.
READ MORE
Michael Elliott (18) of Lanntara, Ballymena, appeared in court on Thursday.
A PSNI detective constable said he could connect him to a charge of riotous assembly.
The officer told the court that Mr Elliott was arrested at 11.50pm on Tuesday night following an incident where a house on Bridge Street had been set on fire.
The detective constable said it was originally believed the occupants were still inside the property.
Mr Elliott was detained after he was seen running from the scene, the court was told.
He was wearing gloves and a balaclava, the court heard.
During police interview he had made admissions to the offence of riotous assembly, the detective said.
He told police during interview he had become involved in the disorder because others were involved and blamed the situation on police.
The detective constable said there was 'strong public feeling' currently within Ballymena.
He said police believed it is important that courts send out a 'strong message'.
He said if the court did not, there was a risk of further disorder that could lead to 'death or serious injury' for foreign nationals living in Ballymena.
A defence solicitor said his client's involvement was limited to 'throwing stones'.
The district judge told Mr Elliott he was a young man who now found himself in the dock in court.
He said the court would deal 'robustly' with people whose involvement in the disorder is backed up by evidence.
The judge refused an application for bail.
He said: 'Your case should be an example to others who are considering getting involved in further public disorder.'
The judge said there was a high likelihood that those who were charged over rioting would be refused bail and would face a significant custodial sentence if convicted.
He remanded Mr Elliott in custody until July 10th.
A 15-year-old boy appeared charged with riotous assembly and criminal damage.
The detective constable said he was arrested on the second night of disorder in Ballymena, which involved hundreds of people.
He said police observed footage showing bins set on fire at a retail park.
The officer told the court that when the youth was arrested, he had in his possession a bottle, a large rock and a balaclava.
The officer said there had been 'serious racially aggravated public disorder' in Ballymena.
A defence lawyer said his client accepted possession of the three items and that he should not have been in the area.
The lawyer said perhaps the teenager had 'got involved in the excitement'.
District Judge Nigel Broderick said anyone should be 'disabused of the notion that rioting is any form of excitement'.
He said the court needs to take measures to protect the public.
The judge added: 'I agree that a strong message needs to be sent out that those, young and old, who get involved will be dealt with robustly by the courts.'
He rejected bail and remanded the 15-year-old to appear at a youth court on June 18th.
A 17-year-old appeared charged with riotous assembly.
The detective constable said he was arrested in a retail park wearing a balaclava and dark clothing, which matched the description of those involved in the rioting.
A defence solicitor said there were a vast number of people wearing dark clothing and balaclavas who were not involved in rioting.
He said nothing 'beyond mere presence and the clothing he was wearing' tied his client to the offences.
The detective said there was an extensive amount of CCTV footage still to be examined.
The lawyer said there had been a 'rush to charge' his client.
The judge said he was satisfied the 17-year-old could be connected to the charge.
There was no application for bail and he was remanded to appear in youth court on June 18th. - PA

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Dog that found Tina Satchwell used in search for Annie McCarrick
Dog that found Tina Satchwell used in search for Annie McCarrick

Irish Daily Mirror

timean hour ago

  • Irish Daily Mirror

Dog that found Tina Satchwell used in search for Annie McCarrick

Gardai are using the same sniffer dog that found the remains of Tina Satchwell to search for those of missing Annie McCarrick, it has emerged. The dog, called Fern, has been lent to the Garda by the PSNI – and is specially trained to indicate the scent or presence of dead bodies. The dog was brought over the border on Friday morning to search a home in Clondalkin, south west Dublin as part of the hunt for Annie – while detectives continued to question a man on suspicion of the American student's murder. That suspect, who is a millionaire businessman, walked free from a Dublin Garda Station on Friday afternoon – after officers released him without charge. But sources say the man, who is in his 60s, is still the focus of the Garda murder investigation – and officers will continue to build a case against him. And PSNI cadaver dog Fern was on Friday playing a key role in that investigation – by using her special skills to examine the house in Clondalkin that was sealed off on Thursday morning, around the same time the suspect was arrested. Gardai stressed that the current residents of the house were not in any way connected with Ms McCarrick, 26, or the case of her disappearance. But Fern was brought in to examine if Annie, who was from New York but was living and working in south Dublin when she disappeared in March 1993, was secretly buried there. 'Cadaver dogs are specially trained for just that,' a source said. 'Their task is to indicate the scent of death or the presence of human remains in a location. 'The dog is looking for remains, or signs that remains were once there.' The house was sealed for a second day on Friday and gardai said the search would continue for several days. As well as Fern, gardai from the Technical Bureau and officers from Irishtown station – where the probe into the murder of Annie is based - were also carrying out an invasive search of the property. The gardai were using specialist equipment as part of their search. But sources told the Mirror that gardai did not expect any major developments in the coming days. 'It is a complex investigation and a slow burner,' a source said. 'This could go on for some time yet.' The warning came as gardai confirmed that the businessman suspect had been released without charge – and that the investigation would continue. The force said in a statement: 'Gardaí continue to investigate the disappearance and murder of Annie McCarrick in March 1993. 'The male aged in his 60s who was arrested on the morning of 12th June, 2025 and detained under the provisions of Section 4 of the Criminal Justice Act 1984 has been released without charge. 'The searches in relation to this investigation remain ongoing and are being supported by a cadaver dog from an external agency. 'Searches will continue over the weekend. Updates will be provided as appropriate. 'Investigations ongoing.' Fern is one of three cadaver dogs used by the PSNI that are occasionally lent to the Garda force as they don't have their own. The same dog indicated the remains of Tina Satchwell, 45, buried under the stairs of her home in Youghal, Co Cork in October 2023 – more than six years after she was last seen alive. Her husband Richard, 58, murdered her at the house in March 2017 – before burying her there. He was last month convicted of Tina's murder – and Fern played a key role in bringing him to justice. Satchwell is now serving a life sentence – and is likely to spend more than 20 years behind bars. That case was a long running missing person's case – like that of Annie McCarrick and gardai are now determined to also bring the New Yorker's killer to justice. Thursday's arrest was the first in the long running probe into her disappearance – and comes two years after the case was upgraded from a missing person's hunt to a full blown murder inquiry, Sources have also told us that the suspect, who is now in his 60s, had an infatuation with Ms McCarrick. He has been interviewed by gardai at least twice – but as a witness and who had an alibi. But gardai always viewed him as a person of interest in the case and he became a suspect when the probe was upgraded to murder in March 2023 – the 30th anniversary of her disappearance. The man knew Annie, had an obsession with her and had even stalked and assaulted her. As well as searching for Mrs Satchwell and Ms McCarrick, PSNI dog Fern was also used in the initial investigation into March's disappearance of Kerry farmer Michael Gaine, 56. That case was upgraded to murder in April and last month Mr Gaine's remains were found chopped up in a slurry tank at his farm near Kenmare. Mr Gaine's former tenant Michael Kelley, 53, was later arrested on suspicion of murder. Mr Kelley vehemently denies any involvement in Mr Gaine's murder and was released without charge by gardai. That investigation is ongoing.

‘I wanted to do something radical': Wendy Erskine on her debut novel, which deals with class, rape and parenting
‘I wanted to do something radical': Wendy Erskine on her debut novel, which deals with class, rape and parenting

Irish Times

timean hour ago

  • Irish Times

‘I wanted to do something radical': Wendy Erskine on her debut novel, which deals with class, rape and parenting

Driving down the Cregagh Road in east Belfast, after the Museum of Orange Heritage, the eye is inevitably drawn to the gauntlet of union flags lining the street, which perhaps obscures the shift from middle- to working-class housing. Some things never change, you might think, yet you'd be wrong. It's perfectly safe nowadays to park your southern-reg car on a side street. The author Wendy Erskine lives nearby and has taught English in a local secondary school since 1997 (including to fellow author Lucy Caldwell), and Caffe Nero is an auspicious location. Michael Magee won the inaugural Nero debut fiction prize for Close to Home , his coruscating portrait of post-Troubles but still troubled Belfast. Erskine's equally powerful debut novel, The Benefactors, similarly captures a city no longer overshadowed by political and sectarian violence, allowing light to shine instead on other social ills such as violence against women and class divisions. The title relates to several disparate groups, evidence of the layered nature of the work. Misty, a young working-class woman whose sexual assault by three middle-class teenagers is at the heart of this novel, has an account on an OnlyFans-style website called The Benefactors or Bennyz. Bronagh, whose son is one of the boys guilty of rape, runs a charity dependent on wealthy American do-gooders. She also colludes with the two other mothers in buying Misty's silence, dressing it up as a goodwill gesture. There are also those who do the right thing for no financial reward, such as Boogie, who takes on the responsibility of raising his daughter, Misty, and her half-sister, Gen, when their mother absconds. READ MORE If the lives portrayed are sometimes difficult, the reading experience is anything but, leavened with a dry Belfast wit and benefiting from a sharp authorial eye and ear. 'Humour is so much a dimension of life that not to include it seems like a decision,' says Erskine. 'If you don't find it funny, it's very bleak.' Erskine's gift for authentic and entertaining dialogue is matched with one for deft and memorable characterisation, honed and displayed in her two short story collections, Sweet Home (2018) and Dance Move (2022). [ Wendy Erskine: 'There's a real high that comes from having written a short story' Opens in new window ] Her second collection's epigraph from William Blake – 'Joy and woe are woven fine/ A clothing for the soul divine' – could serve as a recipe for her fiction. She also approvingly quotes her literary hero, Gordon Burn, who imagined his artist friend George Shaw 'painting the back room of the social club in Tile Hill with all the seriousness of Monet painting Rouen Cathedral'. 'There is real brutality but also a lot of fun and joy in life,' she says of her literary sensibility, influenced by Burn's fearless focus on life's sleazy, tawdry underbelly. 'There is also an attention to detail, the specifics of people's worlds. I'm asking the reader to collaborate with me. You have to trust the reader, that they can cope with complex characters, a tolerance for people being contradictory. If you try to smooth it, you lose what makes them realistic. Of course, if they are just a jumble of contradictory elements, that also is not realistic. 'Specificity is not just verisimilitude,' she clarifies. 'If it were just to provide a mimetic facsimile of reality, then what's the point, why not just look at some photographs? It's about creating worlds.' She quotes Zola: ''Art is a corner of creation seen through a temperament.' I'm nosy as hell, I'm always noticing, listening, paying attention. I'm really interested in people, in structure.' She is not afraid to move beyond realism. The handover scene is inspired by Sergio Leone's westerns. One of the women even bursts incongruously into song. The Benefactors is about two worlds colliding. 'It's about sexual assault but that's only part of the book because so much is about what it means to be a good parent, it's about class, money, love, charity. And then cut into the novel we have 50 first-person monologues. I didn't want 50 different perspectives on what happened that night. I wanted a really polyphonic, kaleidoscopic, experience of a place. 'These voices are there to refract the central concerns of the novel. It's always struck me how arbitrary it is who you focus on as a writer. One writer might focus on those people sitting over there, somebody else the person serving. Often when I'm reading I'm going: okay, so I'm listening to your conversation but I wonder what that waiter is thinking. It's to give a broad, complex consideration of a particular place.' Each time you write a story you have to re-establish a world, even if it is quite geographically circumscribed. It's quite tiring Erskine's creative approach is to start with ideas for a character, which she has described as like playing with coins in her pocket, wondering what to spend them on. The novel has traditionally been regarded as a bourgeois form, privileging the individual over the collective, which some left-wing authors have sought to challenge by focusing on a group of people working together. So I wonder how much her diverse, multi-voiced approach to storytelling is down to methodology and how much to ideology? 'Although I wasn't conscious of it, I think there is something in what you are saying,' she says, although her initial impetus was more practical. 'I'd written maybe 30 or 40 short stories and I wanted to write a novel. I thought I would like to reside in the same world as my characters for longer than six or seven weeks, for maybe a year. Each time you write a story you have to re-establish a world, even if it is quite geographically circumscribed. It's quite tiring. I know that sounds ridiculous but it's like building a stage set, then striking the set. 'I didn't want to write a novel that could have existed as a short story. I know the form is super flexible but at same time there are limits. You can't deal with five characters' entire existences, you certainly can't put in another 50 people. I knew there would be a complexity of voices and something formally quite radical. I didn't want a wee chamber piece with a super narrow focus. I knew I wanted to do something radical.' She was aware of the risk that readers might switch off, tiring of having to recalibrate to a new perspective in each chapter, but she likes a more challenging reading experience. 'A good novel will teach you how to read it. I'm not a driver – I failed my test seven times – but I know when I get in the car if the driver knows what they're doing.' The sexual assault at the centre of The Benefactors recalls the high-profile 2018 Belfast rape trial , whose defendants were acquitted. 'It would be extremely disingenuous of me to say I'd never heard of the rugby rape trial,' says Erskine, 'but I've lived in this city most of my life and so I'm aware of any number of different trials and experiences that aren't to do with trials, of what happens in people's lives.' She is all too aware that the North has a bad reputation for misogyny and violence against women. 'I can't remember the statistics but this is not a good place. An extremely high number of women were killed by partners in their home. In terms of social attitudes, this place is traditionally behind others, with a lot of internalised misogyny.' She highlights how prejudice is not universal and intersects with class bias, rendering working-class women more vulnerable to abuse. But the sexual assault was not the starting point. The genesis of the novel was two characters, Frankie and Boogie. 'I wanted people from different backgrounds to be brought somehow into close proximity. That became a sexual assault.' In the initial stages, the book consisted of lots of little shards of memories just floating around in her head – 'I have a houseful of empty notebooks' – such as a YouTube video of a guy putting Mentos into a bottle of Coke. 'I liked that guy's attitude to having fun with kids. I wanted to write about someone who is an unlikely but really good parent.' Erskine dislikes didactic storytelling. 'I don't like fiction that has huge designs on me, or where characters are used as vehicles. They have to take precedence. I know it sounds a bit Mystic Meg, but you have to allow characters to push back,' rather like actors taking issue with the script. But there are times when Erskine and her creations are singing from the same hymn sheet, such as when the wonderfully potty-mouthed, born-again Christian Nan tells Misty, her great-granddaughter, that the boys who harmed her 'are not our type of people'. The divide she is reinforcing is not the North's usual tribal Catholic-Protestant one but the class divide. 'I really enjoyed that conversation,' says Erskine. [ In the Kitchen by Wendy Erskine: consider the clutter Opens in new window ] One of the 50 random, anonymous voices that insert themselves between the traditional chapters also feels like Erskine's philosophy shining through. 'Mate, let me tell you, I got to the stage of life where, if it's not about love to some degree, then I don't want to know.' She agrees, adding: 'That's on the No Alibis tote bag'. A debut novel backed with its own bookshop merch. Time is not linear and Erskine is passionate about the ever-present nature of the past and how it influences, even dictates, her characters' thoughts and actions. She scorns the notion of a character having a backstory as some kind of optional extra. 'For what I do, it's just a word that doesn't work. To my mind everything is simultaneous. There is no such thing as past.' Instead we have flashbacks or separate timelines, where we see for example Frankie being groomed as a teenager in care, learning to look after herself but becoming hardened to the extent that, when she in turns becomes a stepmother, the child in her care feels like an orphan. Structuring the novel proved an interesting challenge. 'A much more traditional structure would be to have the sexual assault come in the first third. I wanted the novel to be almost like a bowtie, that well-known literary term. You've got all these people, trust me on this, it all comes together, then it all goes out again.' The Slap by Christos Tsiolkas interested her as a model. 'In The Slap, there are eight different narrative points of view, constructed as a kind of relay, one coming after the other, each advancing the story. At no point do we return to the point of view of an earlier character. Whereas, in The Benefactors there is a rotation. We have Frankie, then Boogie, then Miriam, then Misty, then Bronagh and then we return again to their perspectives at various points. 'I also think just generally it's like The Slap in that a central incident is used to hold together a consideration of a range of preoccupations.' So much of what I understand about how to write, structure, conceptualise relationships, I learned from Chekhov She originally planned for the 50 anonymous voices to bunch in the middle 'like a choric interlude' but that didn't work so instead they are scattered throughout. Miriam, another of the mothers, is grieving her late husband, complicated by the knowledge a young woman was with him in the fatal car crash. The novel she is reading is 'full of young women's non-problems'. 'Miriam had expected a kind of cool and expansive perspicacity, but this is juvenile solipsism.' What might seem a sassy diss on Erskine's part is in fact in character for Miriam, who has a grudge against young women generally. By contrast, when Bronagh mocks Donal for a poetic turn of phrase, Erskine owns it. 'What some people think of as fine writing is very misguided. It's like the Dolly Parton thing: It takes a lot of work to look this cheap. My dialogue is edited over and over to get it just right.' This reminds me of Erskine's appreciation of the austere beauty of a whitewashed church wall in contrast to the Baroque's excess. 'I used to get migraines all the time, and when I came round I felt euphoric, looking at a white wall my husband was painting and Lonely Sad Eyes by Them was playing,' she says. 'I honestly regard that as one of the high points of my life, the simplicity of it.' Kathryn Ferguson has directed a short film scripted by Stacy Gregg and starring Aidan Gillen based on Erskine's short story Notalgie, written for The Irish Times. She has written an essay on Pasolini, another on fashion, a film script, several stories and 20,000 words of a new novel, about a Vanity Fair Becky Sharp-style grifter in mid-Ulster in the late 70s.' [ Nostalgie, a short story by Wendy Erskine Opens in new window ] Erskine wrote an unpublished novel in her 20s but was almost 50 when her short story Locksmiths won her a place on a Stinging Fly writing course in Dublin taught by Sean O'Reilly. 'But so much of what I understand about how to write, structure, conceptualise relationships, I learned from Chekhov.' [ Locksmiths, a short story by Wendy Erskine Opens in new window ] Contemporaries she admires include Adrian Duncan, Will Ashon, Svetlana Alexievich, fellow teacher-writers Elaine Feeney and Kevin Curran, 'people who just do their own thing'. She had studied in Glasgow, then taught in England, but personal circumstances brought her back to Belfast. Her goal had always been to return to Glasgow 'but as it turned out I love living here, it's beautiful, compact, there's a real energy here, in terms of writing, the arts, it's such an interesting place. The deep structures are obviously problematic.' What would make it better? 'On this particular road, a bar!' The Benefactors is published by Sceptre on June 19th

Séamas O'Reilly: Ballymena violence is the result of politics based on scapegoating any ‘other'
Séamas O'Reilly: Ballymena violence is the result of politics based on scapegoating any ‘other'

Irish Examiner

time5 hours ago

  • Irish Examiner

Séamas O'Reilly: Ballymena violence is the result of politics based on scapegoating any ‘other'

Ballymena is burning. Since Monday, protesters have descended on various streets in the Antrim town, following an alleged sexual assault of a girl. Two 14-year-old boys have been charged with attempted rape, both presumed to be of migrant origin as they used a Romanian interpreter in court. Their solicitor said they would be denying the charges. A peaceful vigil for the girl, commandeered by local agitators, spilled into full-on rioting – or, to use the odd euphemism so often deployed in the statelet I grew up in, 'disturbances'. Over the course of the next few nights, several migrant homes were attacked and destroyed, with dozens of PSNI officers assaulted and injured, and fulminating rhetoric from those protesting broadcast on social media, to anyone who'd listen. The rioters' response to news of the alleged assault was attacking homes of any and all migrants or 'non-locals' they could find. One was that of a Filipino family, the dad of whom worked for Wrightbus and came back from his shift to find his house in flames. Assembly member Sian Berry told Stormont of a family-of-three who were forced to barricade themselves in their attic as men 'rampaged' downstairs. Crowds gather in front of a line of riot police and vans in Ballymena, Northern Ireland, as people protest over an alleged sexual assault in the Co Antrim town, Wednesday, June 11, 2025. (AP Photo/Peter Morrison) Reaction has been swift and furious, with politicians and community leaders from all sides condemning the violence. Some did this, however, with a few more caveats than others. North Antrim MP Jim Allister said the violence was 'very distressing' and 'senseless' but added that the context for the violence was that there had been 'significant demographic change in the area' because of 'unfettered immigration'. Demographic change is, of course, a relative concept, but even its most gymnastic description would be hard to tally with this part of the world. The Northern Irish Assembly's figures indicate that net migration from other countries to Northern Ireland in the past 22 years is around 62,000 people. Around 3% of Northern Ireland's population currently belong to any ethnic minority at all. Indeed, 'unfettered immigration' seems a somewhat odd descriptor for the Mid and East Antrim council area, in which Ballymena is situated, which has seen a net total of fewer than 5,000 international migrants settle there, this century. Of course, any such change in population will be noticed by those with eyes to see it. Which is to say: those who oppose anyone who's different, in any way, being anywhere near them. It's easy, therefore, to dismiss all of what is happening in Antrim right now as racist thuggery. Thankfully, it's not just easy to do this, but correct. A protester stokes a barricade fire in Ballymena, Northern Ireland, as people protest over an alleged sexual assault in the Co Antrim town, Wednesday, June 11, 2025. To their credit, the PSNI have been clear-cut on this point, with the chair of their police federation Liam Kelly describing the violence as 'mindless, unacceptable and feral' and the actions of the rioters as 'a pogrom'. There is no interpretation of these acts, no nuance or context that can be added, that points in any other direction. Any talk of 'simmering tensions' and 'local anger' merely gets us away from the point at hand; the tension and anger is from people who believe all outsiders should be terrorised and killed, and we owe them, and their concerns, nothing but clear-eyed disgust. None of this is new. I'm old enough to remember scenes of Catholics being ousted from their homes in Antrim, primarily because it still happens all the time. Last July, the family of Jessy Clark, a nine-year-old boy with multiple serious disabilities, were allocated a newbuild bungalow in the Ballycraigy estate in Antrim town. The home was purpose-built to provide for Jessy's medical needs, allowing him the facility to bathe and use his wheelchair, freedoms he'd been denied in the hospital bed he'd been living in for years. Shortly before the family were due to move in, the house was attacked with bricks and paint bombs. Soon its boarded-up windows featured graffiti of crosshairs, and slogans declared that all such housing was for 'locals only'. The LVF-affiliated group responsible for this were implicated in a several other attacks in the area, driving eight African families out of their homes in the few weeks previous. Deducing this took little by way of detective work, since the group posted laminated signs around the area declaring 'No Undesirables… No Multiculturalism' and warnings to 'keyboard warriors' that their home might be next. Police officers on Clonavon Road in Ballymena following a second night of violence in Ballymena, during a protest over an alleged sexual assault in the Co Antrim town. Multiple cars and properties were set on fire in Ballymena while rioters hurled petrol bombs, fireworks and masonry at police officers. What we're seeing now in Ballymena is the downstream effect of a political project based on scapegoating any 'other' who looks, speaks or prays differently. It is not new, no matter how much of it is broadcast online or egged on by bad actors on social media. MLAs from across Northern Ireland have criticised DUP MLA Gordon Lyons, who confirmed that displaced Ballymena migrants had been housed in Larne Leisure Centre, hours before that location was set alight by a mob. Lyons says the information was in the public domain when he put it on social, and had been confirmed by the local council, but has not elaborated on why he felt the need to specify that he had not been consulted on this decision. Lyons, for those who don't know - and may now scarcely believe it - is Northern Ireland's Communities Minister. One might be tempted to imagine any other situation in which innocent people were rehoused for, say, flooding, fire, or some other natural disaster, only for their Community Minister to refer to them not as constituents, or traumatised people in fear for their lives, but as "individuals", housed only "temporarily", and making sure to point out that he and his party colleagues had no part in giving them shelter. I grew up around this hoary old routine; sectarian prejudice dressed up with talk about jobs, housing or religious identity, now being wheeled out in terms of law and order, grotesquely weaponizing an awful alleged crime to bring brickbats and firebombs to the homes of peaceful, terrified foreigners. The central perversity of treating these people as anything other than racist thugs is only more transparent in Ballymena because they have so few migrants that any other excuse is patently absurd. It's the same skit we've seen at play for decades, the same justification as in Southport and Dublin and East Belfast before, and will see again for as long as these people have hate in their hearts, an X account, and a brick at arm's reach. We are not witness to a disturbance, but a pogrom. It behoves us to say so, loud and clear. Read More Séamas O'Reilly: Many of the tropes of standard Irishness are not universally applied both sides of the border

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