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Former Sinn Féin leader Gerry Adams donates his €100k BBC defamation case damages

Former Sinn Féin leader Gerry Adams donates his €100k BBC defamation case damages

Sunday World10 hours ago
The move was disclosed yesterday by his solicitors
The move was disclosed yesterday by his solicitors, almost three months after a High Court jury in Dublin found the former Sinn Féin leader had been defamed by a 2016 BBC programme and a BBC website article containing allegations he sanctioned the murder of ex-party official Denis Donaldson.
Mr Adams (76) denied any involvement in the killing and sued over the Spotlight programme and the article.
The corporation confirmed in June it would not be appealing the outcome of the case, which has left it facing legal costs estimated at around €3m.
A statement issued by Johnsons Solicitors, the law firm that represented Mr Adams, said it could confirm the BBC had discharged the order of the court in relation to damages awarded by the jury.
'Mr Adams said at the outset of his defamation case against the BBC that he intended to donate any damages awarded to good causes,' the statement said.
'Donations have been made to Unicef for the children of Gaza, local An Cumann Lúthchleas Gael, An Cumann Cabhrach, to the Irish-language sector, to the homeless and Belfast-based youth, mental health and suicide prevention projects and others.'
An Cumann Cabhrach is an organisation that provides support for families of republican prisoners and IRA volunteers who lost their lives during the Northern Ireland conflict.
Mr Donaldson (55), a former Sinn Féin administrator in Stormont, was shot dead at a remote cottage in Glenties, Co Donegal, in April 2006 - four months after he admitted to having been an informer for police and MI5 since the 1980s.
At the time, Mr Adams was Sinn Féin president and TD for Louth, but he has since retired from frontline politics.
Mr Adams denied any knowledge or involvement in the killing and described the programme as 'a grievous smear'.
The BBC argued that words used did not mean that Mr Adams sanctioned the murder and that it had merely published an allegation made by a former British agent, known only as Martin, who infiltrated Sinn Féin and the IRA.
It said that it had been left up to viewers and readers to decide.
The BBC also argued that Mr Adams was not entitled to damages due to his reputation as having been an IRA leader, something he has always denied.
However, a jury found the words meant that Mr Adams sanctioned and approved the murder.
It also found the BBC's actions had not been in good faith and that it had not been fair and reasonable to publish the allegation.
Mr Adams' legal team said the verdict was a 'full vindication' for their client, while the BBC said it was 'disappointed' with the outcome.
After the verdict, Mr Adams said taking the case 'was about putting manners on the BBC', a comment that was described as 'chilling' by Seamus Dooley, the Irish secretary of the National Union of Journalists.
Former Sinn Féin president Gerry Adams. Photo: Brian Lawless/PA.
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Nicola Sturgeon's ‘instinct' is to back a united Ireland as she praises 'kind' Martin McGuinness
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Nicola Sturgeon's ‘instinct' is to back a united Ireland as she praises 'kind' Martin McGuinness

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Irish Examiner view: Kneecap and the debate over free speech
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Letters to the Editor, August 21st: On Norman names, Tony Holohan and the Shannon pipeline
Letters to the Editor, August 21st: On Norman names, Tony Holohan and the Shannon pipeline

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Letters to the Editor, August 21st: On Norman names, Tony Holohan and the Shannon pipeline

Catherine Connolly's suitability Sir, – I refer to two letters in today's Irish Times ( August 20th ) discussing Catherine Connolly 's suitability for the presidency, following the interview with her in Saturday's paper in which she expressed her very outspoken views on the US, EU, Nato, neutrality etc. Surely this is completely missing the point. The presidency is not, and should not be, a political appointment. This is a post in which the incumbent is obliged to represent the views of the majority and the government of the day. The person elected must be able to represent us all at all levels, nationally and internationally, with dignity, impartiality and intelligence. President Michael D Higgins can get away with expressing his heartfelt views at times because he has been in the post for nearly 14 years. He has earned that right. 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A break for the health service Sir, – I recently spent my summer holiday in Ireland, and was unlucky to have an accident which resulted in a double fracture in my right arm. Because of the injury, I was treated in five different public hospitals – Ennis, small injury clinic; Limerick, fracture clinic; Croom, surgery; Castlebar, ED; Kilkenny ED – and I would like to express my thanks for the absolutely excellent level of treatment and service that I received everywhere. An extremely high level of efficiency, and, most importantly, I was greeted and treated with kindness and empathy by everyone I met, from receptionists to porters, nurses to surgeons. As I regularly read reports of the failings of the Irish health service, I feel it is very important to share my extremely positive experience. – Yours, etc, SARAH IRONSIDE, Brussels, Belgium Discerning taste Sir, – Concerning the correspondence about people not taking the top paper of the pile but rummaging and taking the second or third paper ('Discerning taste', Letters, August 19th ). A long time ago the Death Notices were printed on the back page of The Irish Times. Many people would turn over the first paper of the pile and have a quick look at the notices without having to buy the paper. – Yours, etc, SEAMUS STEPHENSON, Clontarf, Dublin 3. Sir, – Guilty as charged, I must confess that I am one of those unscrupulous Irish Times readers berated by Tony Corcoran ('Discerning taste', Letters, August 19th ). I regularly take a sneak preview of the paper on the shelves, but I always fold it back neatly and replace it in the second or third position in the bundle. – Yours, etc, JOHN LEAHY, Wilton Road, Cork. Race for the Áras Sir, – Reading Kathy Sheridan's column (' Tony Holohan's reluctance to admit mistakes sits badly with the national mood ,' Opinion, August 19th), I worry as to the idea that one man, an accomplished doctor who helped lead the country through a difficult and unprecedented crisis, might be considered unelectable given a loud minority of conspiracy theorists and nutcases, whereas another man who recklessly and unapologetically mismanaged the State, allowing the boom to become even boomer until the economy collapsed leaving scars still palpable up and down the country, should see no impediment to election. I occasionally wonder at the leaders of certain major nations, thinking: of all the millions of people they have to choose from, is this the best they have? An exception was Ireland over the last two presidential mandates. I fear the exception may be about to end. – Yours, etc, JOHN F McELHONE, Eden Road, Rosbeg, Co Donegal. What's in a Norman name Sir, – Fintan O'Toole has, in a single article (' Sinn Féin may reject commemorating the Normans, but there are some suspiciously Saxon names in its ranks ,' Opinion, August 19th) successfully demolished this mythical concept of 'We Irish' as being descendants of the inhabitants of an ideal world in ancient times – a world of pure Gaelic Irishness. After waves of invasions (including that of the Vikings), we find the Normans arriving. While they directly came from Wales, they were in essence representing the French King Henry II, who ruled over most of France at the time. After each of these invasions, we learn that the invaders 'became more Irish than the Irish themselves'. Fast forward to the 20th century, and we see in our history books 'unusual' names of key figures who featured centrally in the struggle for Irish freedom – Hobson, Hyde, Griffith, Spring-Rice, Childers, Lemass, de Valera, Casement, Gonne, Gore-Booth etc. Now, we would not find such names among the Irish chieftains who were forced to submit to the Norman invaders. Rather, the families of these people came to Ireland in the centuries that followed, which demonstrates that as a people we have evolved over time to be the 'Irish' we are right now. The Normans form part of that evolution and. to borrow a familiar expression, they are 'part of what we are', whether some like it or not. – Yours, etc, EAMON O'FLYNN, Merrion Road, Dublin 4 Sir, – Fintan O'Toole (' Sinn Féin may reject commemorating the Normans, but there are some suspiciously Saxon names in its ranks ,' Opinion, August 19th) makes a common mistake as regards Irish surnames. In the 18th century in Ireland, many ordinary people did not have a surname, and, in order to give themselves a lift socially, they adopted the surname of the local landlord. In other words, there are many people in Ireland today, sporting particular surnames, who have no genetic connection whatsoever to those surnames. – Yours, etc, SÉAMAS de BARRA, Rathfarnham, Dublin 14. Sir, – Fintan O'Toole's recent article (' Sinn Féin may reject commemorating the Normans, but there are some suspiciously Saxon names in its ranks ,' Opinion, August 19th) reminded me of another piece in your paper a decade ago by John Grenham in the Irish Roots column on how our surnames were Anglicised. As that article concluded: 'As guides to ethnic origins, surnames in Ireland can be very treacherous indeed.' I suspect few supporters of Sinn Féin would deny the Anglo (Norman) roots of Wolfe Tone, Parnell or Pearse. Reasonable people cannot deny Mr O'Toole's conclusion that the Irish, like every nation, are 'a product of multiple invasions and migrations, colonisations and resistances, settlement and unsettlement'. Nonetheless, Mr O'Toole should be far more hesitant to take English-sounding names like Clarke, Sands and Hughes at face value. – Yours, etc, EOGAN HICKEY, Brussels, Belgium. Carbon credits and promises Sir, – The recent exchange between ActionAid Ireland and Verra's CEO in your newspaper (' A wolf in sheep's clothing, the false promise of carbon credits ,' Science & Climate, August 14th; Letters, August 20th) exposes the peculiar logic of carbon offsets: the more they fail, the louder their defenders claim they're indispensable. Karol Balfe rightly argues that carbon markets 'almost always fail to provide any real climate benefit' and amount to both a 'policy failure and a moral failure'. And the evidence is damning. Independent investigations – including by the Guardian and Die Zeit – found that over 90 per cent of rainforest offsets certified by Verra were essentially worthless. The reductions existed principally on paper. Meanwhile, offset schemes have been connected to land grabs, weakened community rights, and displacement in the Global South – hardly the marks of 'climate justice'. Even the projects described as success stories do not alter the basic arithmetic. A tonne of CO₂ released today is not retroactively cancelled by a promise that another tonne might, some day, be absorbed elsewhere. It is the climate policy equivalent of running up a credit-card bill and insisting one is solvent because next month's wages might cover it. Climate action cannot be reduced to accounting tricks. Offsets provide cover for delay – allowing companies and governments to declare progress while emissions keep climbing. This is similar to another sleight of hand recently under discussion: the 'temperature neutrality target', effectively freezing Ireland's emissions at current levels rather than driving them down. As Dr Colm Duffy of the University of Galway has warned, such an approach 'seriously jeopardises the Paris Agreement's goal of limiting warming to 1.5 °C'. It is not climate leadership; it is climate bookkeeping. Every euro and ounce of political will invested in sustaining this offsets bubble is one not directed toward genuine decarbonisation: phasing out fossil fuels, enabling renewables, or supporting communities on the front line of climate change. Until we admit that offsets – and clever new accounting targets – are part of the problem, not the solution, we will continue congratulating ourselves for what is only creative bookkeeping as the climate unravels around us. – Yours, etc, PAUL O'SHEA, Planet before Profit CLG, Ballycorus Road, Shankill, Co Dublin. Ryanair and global warming Sir, – Celestine O'Reilly writes of her disbelief that Ryanair is set to increase the number of seats out of Ireland by 15.5 per cent this winter ( Letters, August 20th ) despite evidence of the impact of global warming. Ryanair, like all businesses, responds to customer demand which clearly favours travel over climate impact, especially at such low prices (I too am guilty). Therein lies the issue. People pay lip service to the concept of dealing with climate change as long as it doesn't impact them – 'somebody else should do something about it'. I don't profess to have a solution to the problem, but blaming companies is an overly simplistic argument. Ultimately, people drive demand and therefore change – and solutions must start there. – Yours, etc, SEÁN DOWLING, Timoleague, Co Cork. Sir, – Based on our ongoing enthusiasm for air travel, even in the face of catastrophic climate change, Ryanair are very confident that most of their extra winter seats will be booked and paid for (' Ryanair adds 600,000 seats to Irish winter schedule ,' Business, August 16th). Maximising profits is their primary aim. Why should we expect them to care about climate change, unless and until it affects their bottom line? Michael O'Leary has ample evidence that Ryanair does not need to 'keep passengers happy', or to act responsibly in the face of climate change. Why bother, as long as they operate within the law and the money keeps rolling in, in ever-increasing quantities? Celestine O'Reilly ( Letters, August 20th ) refers to the 'insanity' of pumping out increasing amounts of greenhouse gases into the atmosphere. I agree with her, but we must accept that whenever we choose to fly with Ryanair, or any other airline for that matter, we are among the many millions who are putting their hands to that pump. – Yours, etc, KATHERINE QUIRKE, Dún Laoghaire Co Dublin. Shannon pipeline and MetroLink Sir, – Is there any chance that Michael O'Leary has a twin brother? A brother who has access to a white horse, who realises that Uisce Éireann's proposed Shannon pipeline project needs to be scrapped? The similarities between the MetroLink and Shannon pipeline projects are interesting to say the least. The Greater Dublin Water Supply study was started by Dublin City Council in 1996, nearly 30 years ago. A feasibility study was commissioned in 2004 and the results was the 'silver bullet' that was to be the Shannon pipeline. The initial estimate for the project was €700 million. This increased to €1.6 billion by 2016, and in June 2024, the major projects advisory group recommended that an estimated cost of €10.4 billion would be needed – €10.4 billion no less, and no one has batted an eyelid. Some €67.6 million has been spent on the project between 2014 and 2024, and not a pipe laid. Serious consideration was not given to alternative solutions. For instance, the rivers in the East – the Liffey, Slaney, Boyne and Barrow – have a combined flow three-quarters that of the Shannon and the incremental development of these, together with the proper utilisation of the Poulaphouca reservoir (Blessington Lakes), would provide the same solution at a fraction of the cost. Existing investment is being ignored and existing resources are being underutilised. The Irish taxpayer has already paid for the construction of a 22kmsq reservoir (Poulaphouca) at the Blessington Lakes for this specific purpose, to store water for summer supply when the rivers are low. So why is Poulaphouca not being used as a long-term solution? Poulaphouca holds 190 billion litres of water and is one of the biggest reservoirs in these islands. Poulaphouca was originally intended for water supply primarily. The greater amount of the reservoir is devoted to electricity generation, a minuscule amount of electricity in the context of the overall electricity generation of the country. This must change and water supply be given priority. Cost would be almost zero. Thames Water in England are proposing to build a facility smaller than Poulaphouca (150 billion litres) and say it is needed to secure the supply for 15 million Londoners. Fifteen million no less! Poulaphouca is the centre of any possible solution in any instance, so why build a pipeline? Just optimise beneficial use of the reservoir together with the rivers of the east and save the country several billion euro. – Yours, etc, KAY MULLANE, River Shannon Protection Alliance, Ballina, Co Tipperary.

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