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Hotel stay in Oxford boutique hotel for Tánaiste and delegates cost €4,200

Hotel stay in Oxford boutique hotel for Tánaiste and delegates cost €4,200

BreakingNews.ie3 hours ago

A single night hotel stay for Tánaiste Simon Harris along with Ireland's Ambassador to the UK Martin Fraser and a group of six public servants cost the taxpayer nearly €4,200.
The room for then-Taoiseach Simon Harris at the five-star Old Parsonage Hotel in Oxford cost €563 for just one night of accommodation last year.
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The hefty bill was run up when Mr Harris met with UK prime minister Keir Starmer and attended a meeting of the European Political Community (EPC) in Oxfordshire last July.
The boutique Old Parsonage is one of the best-known hotels in the university city and prides itself on being 'a luxury home-from-home with impeccable hospitality".
The Department of Foreign Affairs said the booking was made when rooms were in short supply because of a large number of visiting delegations.
They said: 'Accommodation for one night, 17 July, was booked on the basis of location, availability and quoted costings in a period of high demand in Oxford.
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'[There were] forty plus Heads of State and Government and their delegations also in attendance at the EPC conference.'
Other more junior officials – who were also in attendance – stayed at a nearby Premier Inn where the overnight rate was nearly €275.
The bills were among tens of thousands of euros of expenditure charged to diplomatic credit cards at Ireland's embassies in London and Paris over the course of a year.
In Paris, the embassy ran up significant bills during the Rugby World Cup and Olympics with €2,800 spent on temporary accommodation for one member of staff.
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There was also an Airbnb bill of €5,576 for an official at the 2024 Olympics, where Ireland claimed a record-setting haul of medals.
A further charge of €2,090 with Airbnb covered the cost of a group of Irish artists visiting Paris at the time of the Rugby World Cup in 2023, according to records released under FOI.
Other bills on the card included €620 for four rugby match tickets as part of 'political engagement' by the Embassy.
There was a charge of €250 for promotional pins for the Rugby World Cup, a €2,900 bill at the Tsuba Hotel in Paris for a political delegation, and around €230 for Irish cheese.
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Other more mundane costs on the credit card included €36 for door wedges, €21.50 for electric light bulbs, and €1,317 for a replacement grill.
At the Embassy in London, among the charges listed were four umbrellas for drivers costing a combined €105, tea towels from John Lewis costing €144, and €138 worth of Christmas tree lights from Amazon.
A new fridge cost €1,317 while €105 was spent on a congestion charge penalty under the road charging scheme in the UK capital.
There was also a bill of around €2,150 at the Pullman Hotel for a visit by Minister Paschal Donohoe and four officials in August of last year.
Asked about the spending in France, the Department of Foreign Affairs said: 'Tens of thousands of Irish citizens travelled to France for the Rugby World Cup (2023) and Paris Olympics and Paralympics (2024).
'In advance of these tournaments, the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade reinforced its operations in France, to provide expanded consular services for traveling fans.'

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Revealed: The UK's best restaurant
Revealed: The UK's best restaurant

Telegraph

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Revealed: The UK's best restaurant

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State is ‘stifling criticism of Islam over fear of violent mobs', says Tory MP
State is ‘stifling criticism of Islam over fear of violent mobs', says Tory MP

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State is ‘stifling criticism of Islam over fear of violent mobs', says Tory MP

The state is stifling criticism of Islam because of fears of a violent mob reaction, a senior MP has claimed. Nick Timothy, a front-bench Tory MP, issued the warning ahead of his Bill aimed at protecting free speech and the right to criticise religions, including Islam, being presented before Parliament on Tuesday. It follows the conviction of Hamit Coskun, 50, for setting fire to a Koran outside the Turkish consulate in London earlier this year while declaring that Islam was a 'religion of terrorism'. He was found guilty of committing a racially aggravated public order offence during a peaceful protest. Politicians and free speech campaigners claimed the 'grotesque' prosecution was an attempt to revive long-abolished blasphemy laws. In an attempt to prevent future prosecutions, Mr Timothy, who is a columnist for The Telegraph, is proposing a Freedom of Expression (Religion) Bill that would rewrite the Public Order Act to prevent it being used as a 'de facto' blasphemy law. His bill, which is co-signed by 11 other MPs, would extend legal provisions – which protect the freedom to criticise religion in specific circumstances – to the whole of the Public Order Act. 'The Public Order Act is increasingly being used as a blasphemy law to protect Islam from criticism. The Act was never intended to do this. Parliament never voted for this, and the British people do not want it,' said Mr Timothy. 'To use the Public Order Act in this way is especially perverse, since it makes a protester accountable for the actions of those who respond with violence to criticism of their faith. This is wrong, and it destroys our freedom of speech. 'We should be honest that the law is only being used in this way because the authorities have become afraid of the violent reaction of mobs of people who want to impose their values on the rest of us. 'My Bill will put a stop to this and restore our freedom of speech – and our right to criticise any and all religions, including Islam.' At Westminster magistrates' court, Coskun was found guilty of a religiously aggravated public order offence of using disorderly conduct, which was motivated 'in part by hostility towards members of a religious group, namely followers of Islam'. Coskun, who is an atheist of Armenian-Kurdish descent, attended the Turkish Consulate on Feb 13 while holding a burning copy of the Koran above his head and shouting 'F---- Islam' and 'Islam is religion of terrorism'. He was ordered to pay £240, but despite the conviction he has pledged to continue burning Korans and intends to go on a tour of the UK, visiting Birmingham, Liverpool and Glasgow where he will set fire to the holy book. It is unclear whether he will resist doing so until the case is heard at the Court of Appeal where it will be decided whether he is able to challenge Monday's verdict.

QUENTIN LETTS: Criticising Red China is a moreish activity. You try some and before long hanker for another plateful
QUENTIN LETTS: Criticising Red China is a moreish activity. You try some and before long hanker for another plateful

Daily Mail​

time39 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

QUENTIN LETTS: Criticising Red China is a moreish activity. You try some and before long hanker for another plateful

China 's vice-premier He Lifeng, a big yam, is in London and spent his morning with Rachel Reeves. MPs, perhaps sensing that he (that is to say, He) might need a laugh after his ordeal, laid on a Chinese-related show in the afternoon: An urgent question attacking a 'nefarious' plan for a Chinese super-embassy in London. Sir Iain Duncan Smith (Con, Chingford & Woodford Green) led demands that planning minister Matthew Pennycook block the embassy. He and a surprising number of Labour backbenchers argued that the site was a security risk, being bang next to a telephone exchange that serves the City. 'Dark cabling' runs underneath the premises. These may be used for the transmission of delicate material. Our spooks are said to be uneasy about this, as are the Americans and, oddly, the Dutch. Much Beijing-bashing ensued. China operatives might cut those dark cables. National security was at risk. It would cost a fortune to police the site. Criticism of Red China is a moreish activity. You try some and before long you hanker for another plateful. Moreover, there is now an electoral consideration: Many British constituencies contain large numbers of Hong Kongers, some of whom worry that Chinese diplomats present a mortal threat to them. This is not a concept entirely easy to explain to President Xi, but these Hong Kongers may be swing voters. MPs therefore feel under pressure to deplore the Beijing regime. Comrade Pennycook was a credit to his profession. He stood there and repeatedly said nothing. It takes years in Communist-approved training camps to perfect this verbose art. Mr Pennycook's tongue was tied because this was a 'quasi-judicial matter' on which he, as planning supremo, would allegedly have to pass judgment. 'I cannot comment in any detail,' he regretfully told Sir James Cleverly, a former foreign secretary. 'I didn't ask for any detail!' yelped Sir James. Mr Pennycook shuffled his papers and regretted that that did not alter matters. He still could not dilate. What he possibly meant was that Sir Keir Starmer, diplomatic genius that he is, may already have given Premier Xi an undertaking that the super-embassy can proceed. Sir Iain suggested 'Project Kowtow' was under way – 'a walk of shame for the Government'. Mr Pennycook murmured: 'It would not be appropriate for me to comment.' Unhappy Labour MPs included Alex Sobel (Leeds C), burly Blair McDougall (East Renfrewshire) and even the House's leading Starmerite greaser, Mark Sewards (Leeds SW). It is almost unheard of for little Sewards to express anything but ravished delight at the Government's behaviour. Whips may need to check his circuit board to make sure a virus has not infected his central controls. We also had an eruption from Marie Rimmer, a magnificent old Labour pudding from St Helens who normally does as commanded by her party. Ms Rimmer, like a runaway truckle of cheese, proved hard to stop once she was rolling. 'China has a record of state-backed espionage,' she cried through some whistly-sounding teeth. 'There has been a massive under-estimation of the risk.' Deputy Speaker Nusrat Ghani tried to get her to shut up but Ms Rimmer did not notice. Bits of cheese-wheel, or at least her oratory, were by now flying here and there. Words were splintering. Sentences were disintegrating. A nearby MP took a shard of cheddar in the eye and went down like a fallen warrior. Even Beijing's most accomplished code-breakers might have struggled to understand what our Marie meant. At one point she seemed to talk of 'signals contraception'. Did she mean 'interception'? Or something else? Maybe the wheezy dinner-lady routine is a brilliant front. Maybe she is an MI6 ace under deep cover. In other news Torsten Bell, pensions minister, explained the Government's rethink on winter fuel payments. What a twerp! Arrogant young Bell's nose twitched as he pushed his excuses past a set of vegetarian-looking teeth. Rabbit with a quiff. Any pensioner would have been tempted to truncheon him with a furled brolly.

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