
Kneecap concert in Manchester under threat as council holds talks
Kneecap
concert in England is under threat with Manchester city council reportedly holding talks with the promoters over the rap trio's appearance alongside
Fontaines DC
next month.
There have been calls for the Belfast group to be dropped from the line-up at Wythenshawe Park in Manchester on August 15th, which also features English Teacher.
The council has refused to be drawn on the nature of the discussions but confirmed it was speaking to 'key stakeholders' about the concert.
'As with any major event being held in one of our parks, we are in regular discussions with the key stakeholders involved to ensure the event concerned can take place safely and effectively,' a representative said.
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A Fontaines DC concert in London's Finsbury Park with Kneecap playing support went ahead without incident last weekend, however a scheduled appearance at a festival in Glasgow this week was cancelled after concerns were raised by police.
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Kneecap owes Keir Starmer, the BBC and Helen from Wales a thank you
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The trio
instead played a gig
at the city's O2 Academy earlier, which sold out in less than 90 seconds.
Kneecap have found themselves in the eye of a storm in recent months with the British prime minister
Keir Starmer
saying it was 'not appropriate' for the band to perform at last month's Glastonbury festival after frontman, Mo Chara, was
charged with a terror offence
and accused of displaying a flag at a gig in support of Hizbullah.
'I think we need to come down really clearly on this,' Mr Starmer told the Sun. 'I won't say too much, because there's a court case on, but I don't think that's appropriate.'
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Leo Varadkar says politicians should not censor artists following Keir Starmer Kneecap remark
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The Eavis family, who run Glastonbury, stood up to the pressure and the band played before thousands of fans on the West Holts stage on the Saturday afternoon with the area closed off 45 minutes before the set began, having reached capacity.
An add promoting their Wembley Arena show in September
was banned
from running on the Transport for London (TfL) network this week.
'We've been banned from advertising on the London tube. How petty can political policing and interference get? After using the tube to advertise loads of times for gigs, records and our movie, all without issue,' Kneecap said in a post on X.
The post added: 'Speak out against genocide and they'll use every single angle they can to silence you.'
In Northern Ireland this weekend, Kneecap posters appeared on bonfires with one in Dungannon, Co Tyrone, featuring the group on a poster with the wording 'Kill Your Local Kneecap', seemingly in response to a clip that emerged from a show in 2023 which appeared to show a Kneecap member declaring: 'The only good Tory is a dead Tory. Kill your local MP.' –
Additional reporting the Guardian
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Irish Times
an hour ago
- Irish Times
UK set up secret Afghan immigration scheme after data leak
The UK government set up a secret multibillion-pound scheme to relocate thousands of Afghans to Britain after a data leak put them at risk of reprisals from the Taliban – and gagged the media with a super-injunction. The names, contact information and other personal details of about 25,000 Afghans, people who worked closely with the UK before the Taliban seized power and some of their family members, were accidentally disclosed by a British soldier in emails in February 2022. The leak of the vast, highly sensitive database was not discovered until August 2023 when it was mentioned in a Facebook group. About 100,000 people were put at risk, the government estimated, when wider family members were included. It also contained email addresses belonging to UK government officials. In response, ministers in Rishi Sunak's former Conservative government instituted a secret scheme to bring Afghans to the UK. READ MORE [ International Criminal Court issues arrest warrants for Taliban leaders over persecution of women Opens in new window ] The plan as recently as February this year, under Keir Starmer's current Labour administration, was to relocate 25,000 people, at a potential cost of £7 billion (€8 billion), according to a government estimate. 'The current policy response to the [data] incident will mean relocating circa 25,000 Afghans, who have previously been found ineligible for the [Afghan Relocations and Assistance Policy] scheme, but who we assess to be at the highest risk of targeting by the Taliban should they have access to the database. This will mean relocating more Afghans to the UK than have been relocated under the ARAP scheme, at time when the UK's immigration and asylum system is under significant strain. This will extend the scheme for another 5 years at a cost of [about] £7 billion. Implementation of the policy has also required unprecedented legal action, in the form of the 'super injunction' that has consequences for scrutiny and transparency.' In recent weeks, as the High Court in London took steps towards lifting the veil on the affair, the government cut short the scheme. British intelligence had previously assessed that the breach had put the Afghans at risk of murder, torture, harassment and intimidation by the Taliban. The UK's ministry of defence said this month that a new review of threats in Afghanistan had found the risk to Afghans still in the country was less than previously thought. Despite the £7 billion estimate revealed in court proceedings, MoD officials said this week that the direct costs of the leak had only ever been estimated at about £2 billion (€2.3 billion), and that the bill for the covert evacuations would now be much lower because the number of eligible Afghans had been reduced. The revelations come at a time when Britain's public finances are under heavy strain and the anti-immigration Reform UK opposition party is leading the country's main establishment parties in the polls. The High Court has been told that civil servants have warned of the risk of 'public disorder' in reaction to news of the secret relocation plan, which comes a year after far-right riots last summer. To date, the UK government has moved about 18,500 Afghans affected by the data breach to Britain. The MoD said most were already eligible under an existing route. Officials said just 5,500 people were relocated directly because of the breach, with at least a further 2,400 due to come. Defence secretary John Healey is expected to announce he is closing the secret scheme – known as the Afghan Response Route – to new applicants in a statement to the House of Commons on Tuesday. Earlier this month, the government also abruptly closed the public schemes – known as the Afghan Relocations and Assistance Policy (Arap) and Afghan Citizens Resettlement Scheme. The events can be reported for the first time after the UK's high court on Tuesday lifted an unparalleled global gagging order that has silenced the press since September 2023. The super-injunction was the first ever to be obtained by the British government. But a fresh interim injunction granted by the High Court until at least next week means that even now crucial details that explain the severity of the incident cannot be published. The database was a detailed record of individuals who had applied – in most cases unsuccessfully – under the public Arap scheme, which offered relocation to the UK for those at risk of reprisals after they worked for or alongside the UK before the Taliban retook power. UK combat operations ended in Afghanistan in 2014 after 13 years, but British troops remained until a chaotic western withdrawal in 2021 that allowed the Taliban's return. The UK government did not discover the leak until an anonymous person posted screenshots of the spreadsheet on Facebook in August 2023 and threatened to disclose the entire database. One of the people familiar with the breach said the database had been sold, at least once, for a five-figure sum. They said that one of the Afghan recipients used their possession of the database as leverage to pressure the government to relocate themselves and 14 family members to the UK. The identity of the soldier, or whether they have been sanctioned, has not been revealed by the MoD. The department has not successfully contained the leak and it is not known whether the Taliban has obtained the list. More than 665 Afghans have started a collective legal action to sue the MoD over the data breach, seeking at least £50,000 each (€57,600), with the potential for thousands more people to join the lawsuit once they learn of the incident and their potential exposure. – Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2025.


Extra.ie
an hour ago
- Extra.ie
KNEECAP announce 'biggest run of shows ever' after Glastonbury controversy
KNEECAP have announced their 'biggest run of shows ever' in Scotland, England and Wales for November 2025, following their recently announced London's OVO Wembley Arena show on September 18. The 10-date tour will kick off in Bournemouth's O2 Academy on November 14 and wrap up in Glasgow's OVO Hydro on November 30, with stops in Liverpool, Cardiff, Newcastle, Birmingham and more along the way. Announcing the tour on Instagram, KNEECAP wrote: 'The Prime Minster himself cant stop us…he could stop sending bombs to Israel but that's another story…' View this post on Instagram A post shared by KNEECAP (@kneecap32) This follows KNEECAP's Liam Óg Ó hAnnaidh, aka Mo Chara, terrorism charges in the UK concerning an alleged display of a Hezbollah flag at a London show in November 2024. The court hearing, originally set for June 18, has now moved to August 20. The band's Glastonbury set, which had been deemed by UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer as 'not appropriate'. Their set was not broadcast live on the BBC due to editorial concerns concerning impartiality. Additionally, the trio recently revealed that a recent poster advertising their upcoming Wembley gig has been banned from the London Tube. KNEECAP recently revealed that they've been added to the line-up of this year's sold-out Electric Picnic in Stradbally Hall in Co. Laois from August 29–31. Tickets for KNEECAP's shows in Scotland, England and Wales go on sale this Friday at 10am here.


Irish Daily Mirror
2 hours ago
- Irish Daily Mirror
Kneecap announce new tour dates for group's 'biggest run of shows ever'
Belfast rap trio Kneecap have announced new tour dates to play their "biggest run of shows ever" across Scotland, Wales and England. The move comes after Liam Og O hAnnaidh, who performs under the stage name Mo Chara, was charged in May with a terrorism offence relating to displaying a flag in support of Hezbollah at the O2 Forum in Kentish Town, north London, during a gig in November 2024. The group said their actions, including holding the Hezbollah flag, had been taken out of context. Announcing the news on Tuesday, the group – which is made up of O hAnnaidh, Naoise O Caireallain and JJ O Dochartaigh – shared a post on Instagram with the caption that read: "Here we go. GLASGOW, SCOTLAND - JULY 08: Mo Chara and Móglaí Bap of Kneecap perform onstage during a concert at O2 Academy Glasgow on July 08, 2025 in Glasgow, Scotland. (Photo by) "We're back in November across Scotland, England and Wales to play our biggest run of shows ever. "All of ye can get a pre-sale link for tomorrow at 10am ahead of the masses by signing up to our mailer or WhatsApp channel. "The Prime Minster himself cant stop us…he could stop sending bombs to Israel but that's another story…" The group are known for speaking out against the war in Gaza, and recently performed to a sea of Palestinian flags during their set at Glastonbury Festival in June. They claim the controversies surrounding the group are part of a smear campaign against them because of their vocal support for Palestine and criticism of Israel's actions in Gaza, which they say is a genocide. The group recently performed at Glasgow's O2 Academy, in a gig which sold out in 80 seconds. They were due to perform at TRNSMT festival in Glasgow, but their set was axed after concerns raised by police. Their tour will start in Bournemouth on November 14 before moving on to Liverpool, Newcastle and Glasgow. Kneecap will also perform in London at the previously announced show at OVO Arena Wembley on September 18. Subscribe to our newsletter for the latest news from the Irish Mirror direct to your inbox: Sign up here.