
Kneecap's legal team for court battle to include Gerry Conlon lawyer
Irish rap trio Kneecap have named the legal team which will defend band member Liam Ó hAnnaidh against a terror charge.
The rapper, who performs under the name Mo Chara, will be represented by a team that includes Gareth Peirce, solicitor for Gerry Conlon and the Guildford Four and WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange during his fight against US extradition, and Rosalind Comyn, who has represented Extinction Rebellion protesters in court.
The 27-year-old was charged by postal requisition over the alleged display of a Hezbollah flag at a gig at the O2 Forum in Kentish Town, north London, in November last year.
His legal team also includes Darragh Mackin from Phoenix Law, Brenda Campbell KC, Jude Bunting KC and Blinne Ní Ghrálaigh KC.
Mr Mackin was the solicitor for Sarah Ewart, whose successful legal challenge helped to usher in the decriminalisation of abortion in Northern Ireland, while Ms Campbell was the defence barrister in the collapsed case against Seamus Daly, who was accused of murdering people in the IRA bomb attack in Omagh in 1998.
Mr Bunting acted for non-profit company Liberty in the Stansted 15's successful conviction appeal after they broke into Stansted Airport to stop a plane deporting people to Africa, which was a case Ms Ní Ghrálaigh also worked on.
In an Instagram post the group said: "The British establishment is conducting a campaign against Kneecap which is to be fought in Westminster Magistrates Court… We are ready for this fight. We are proud to have such a strong legal team with us."
In May, the Metropolitan Police said Kneecap were being investigated by counter-terrorism police after videos emerged allegedly showing the band calling for the deaths of MPs and shouting "up Hamas, up Hezbollah".
They apologised to the families of murdered MPs but said footage of the incident had been "exploited and weaponised".
They also said they have "never supported" Hamas or Hezbollah, which are banned in the UK.
In 2024, the band released an eponymous film starring Oscar-nominated actor Michael Fassbender which is a fictionalised retelling of how the band came together and follows the Belfast group on their mission to save their mother tongue through music.
Formed in 2017, the group, made up of O hAnnaidh, Naoise Ó Cairealláin and J. J. Ó Dochartaigh, are known for their provocative lyrics and merchandise as well as their championing of the Irish language.
Their best-known tracks include Get Your Brits Out and Better Way To Live, featuring Grian Chatten from Fontaines D.C., and 3Cag.
O hAnnaidh is due to appear at Westminster Magistrates' Court on 18 June.
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RTÉ News
an hour ago
- RTÉ News
Government awards contract to French company to develop sonar system
A government contract worth tens of millions of euro has been awarded to a French defence technology company to develop a new sonar system for Ireland. The towed sonar capability, when attached to an Irish naval vessel, will assist the Defence Forces with monitoring subsea areas in Ireland's Exclusive Economic Zone. It will help efforts to protect undersea communication cables and energy infrastructure, and also could assist in detecting illegal fishing, drug trafficking, terrorism and espionage in the future. The system is part of a wider project to boost maritime surveillance due to growing threats. The exclusive contract is with Thales DMS France, a company which specialises in advanced technologies in defence and security. The new sonar system is set to be operational in 2027. The Tánaiste and Minister for Defence Simon Harris said the investment will provide the naval service with a "state-of-the-art system, which will enable it to build a picture of our subsea". "It will serve as an important first step in creating a "pattern of life" in the subsea domain, with future projects further enhancing this capability" he said. French company Thales DMS France is currently leading a major European defence initiative that aims to strengthen the continent's capabilities in anti-submarine and seabed warfare. The SEACURE project is utilising a combination of air, surface, and underwater drones to detect and track underwater threats in challenging environments. However, there are worries about who will operate the new capabilities due to recruitment and retention problems within the Defence Forces, including the Irish Navy. Just one, or two, of the six vessel fleet can be out at sea due to staffing shortages. "Given the enhanced development of the blue economy and the exclusive economic zone that Ireland has, there's huge opportunity for delivery in terms of enhanced maritime security awareness. So the people are absolutely crucial, we don't want a stranded assets" said Marie Gleeson, Retired Lieutenant Commander with the Irish Navy. She said it is a really 'positive step forward' in terms of enhancing the navy's ability to patrol Ireland's maritime domain. "When I was a ship's captain, you patrolled very regularly, you want to maintain a presence in this really important area and not having the ability to see what was happening underneath the surface of the ocean was a restraint in some respects. I think it is hugely important from a strategic defence capability that we have the capacity to deploy towed sonar" she added. Ireland has one of the largest maritime Exclusive Economic Zones (EEZ) in the European Union. There are extensive undersea cables, sea fishing and energy production capacity and infrastructure in the waters. One of the biggest concerns is the safeguarding of these undersea cables which keeps everything from banking systems to TikTok operating. Marine expert and consultant, John Paul Kearns said the introduction of the new sonar system is a long time coming. "Once we develop our offshore wind we will have lots of pipelines and cables coming ashore and that infrastructure needs to be protected, monitored and surveyed all the time. Using this sonar and companies like Thales, and hopefully bringing it back in-house into Ireland, we can actually manage and monitor all of that" he said. "The reason we need to monitor it is we need to ensure that for one it's not being damaged in a mischievous or malevolent way. We have to make sure it's not damaged through storm damage. We have to make sure we can survey it… Because if you think of it… ten times the size of Ireland, underwater, is most of where the threat lies for the future" he said. In October 2024, then Tánaiste Micheál Martin said that there was a "risk" of sea cables being sabotaged following increased activity by the Russian navy and associated Russian merchant ships off the south and west coast of Ireland over the past number of years. The location of these vessels have raised concerns that undersea cables are being mapped. RTÉ News also reported in April that Minister for the Environment Darragh O'Brien has been warned that damage to Ireland's subsea gas interconnectors would have a catastrophic impact on the country's energy supply. Briefing papers and studies on energy security to the minister said that Ireland is highly vulnerable to the impact of gas supply disruptions and notes that a Russian naval vessel loitered over the Gas Networks Ireland subsea interconnector last November. Russia has denied that the presence of its military ships off the south, southwest and west coast of Ireland represent a threat. It comes as a public consultation on Ireland's first ever maritime security strategy was launched last week. The new strategy plans to map out Ireland's approach to maritime security and intends to look at how to deal and address emerging threats, vulnerabilities and protecting subsea infrastructure. A new maritime security unit was set up last year at the Department of Defence to look at ways to address maritime threats and risks to Ireland. Dr Margaret Stanley, who previously led the Office of Emergency Planning in the Defence Department and worked on peacekeeping matters at the United Nations in New York, was appointed to head the unit. Ireland's first maritime security strategy is expected to be published before the end of the year.


Irish Times
an hour ago
- Irish Times
The housing crisis could erode Ireland's middle class to a point of collapse
For all our problems as a country (struggling healthcare system, growing numbers of homeless , absurd cost of living ) there is some cause for pride in our status as one of only a small number of western nations where the far right has so far failed to gain any kind of serious electoral foothold. These people make a lot of noise, certainly – whipping up hysteria about immigration , committing arson and other forms of violent intimidation – but none of it has translated to anything like a coherent or potent political movement. Some of this can probably be accounted for by the obvious lack of political talent among their ranks, although it must be acknowledged that the parties we routinely elect to power in this country are not, themselves, exactly overrun with great and charismatic statesmen. There is also the fact that an Irish far right, unlike its counterparts in other English-speaking countries, is in no position to draw on the usual reservoirs of reactionary nostalgia. No one is going to get elected with a promise to 'make Ireland great again', because the closest thing we have to a cultural memory of a lost imperial grandeur is Italia 90. But if and when the far right does come to gain significant ground in this country, it will be because it has been able to effectively exploit a disaster created by the parties of the coalition government, and compounded over many long years of political inaction. The housing crisis in this country has been so dire for so long that it feels conceptually mistaken to even refer to it as a crisis, as though it were some kind of dangerous inflection point, beyond which lay the risk of potential disaster. The disaster is our everyday reality, and has been for some years now. And that disaster is, primarily, generational. Just 7 per cent of people aged 25-39 own a home. That already appalling statistic is compounded by the fact that rents are climbing faster than at any time over the past two decades, with the national monthly average for newly advertised properties having recently exceeded €2,000. Unsurprisingly, given this situation, according to the most recent figures from the CSO, 41 per cent of those aged 18-34 live at home with their parents. READ MORE [ A key social housing scheme is in danger of falling apart. Why? Opens in new window ] There is no question that Fianna Fáil and Fine Gael, who between them have run the Republic since independence, are to blame for this situation. Even if they had the will to address it – and were not ideologically averse to doing so by building social housing, rather than pumping public money in to the bank accounts of landlords – the prospect of any kind of meaningful improvement during the lifetime of this Government would be vanishingly small: the measures necessary to tackle a disaster of this scale involve the kind of long-term planning, in terms of labour and infrastructure, that the Coalition parties have never shown any serious intention to undertake. There are, of course, people who benefit from the ever-increasing value of property, and the entirely dysfunctional rental market. Quite a few of those people are TDs, and many more are in positions of power and influence in the country. But even people who own their own homes, or who otherwise stand to benefit from rising property values, have to live in this society, among other people; they, too, have to live with the social consequences of this disaster. One of these consequences may be that the Coalition's middle-class voter base erodes to the point of collapse. The prospect we face in this country is that of a middle-class incapable of reproducing, from one generation to the next, the social conditions – property ownership in particular – necessary for its own existence. Far-right movements have historically been very effective at profiting from this kind of social crisis, at exploiting widespread fear of status loss. Writing about the fundamental characteristics of fascism, the Italian writer Umberto Eco argued that it always 'springs from individual or social frustration, which explains why one of the characteristics typical of historic Fascist movements was the appeal to the frustrated middle classes, disquieted by some economic crisis or political humiliation, and frightened by social pressure from below.' (And fascism is, among other things, a response to crises created by the inherent instabilities of capitalism. It is no coincidence that the rise of right-wing populism in Europe and the US followed the great financial crisis of 2008, and the long years of recession that came in its wake.) [ Power struggles, resignations and Conor McGregor's toxicity: The fracturing of Ireland's far right Opens in new window ] The far right have precisely one solution to offer to a problem like this housing disaster: blame the immigrants, who are the cause of almost all our social ills, and whose preferential treatment by the Government is at the cost of the impoverishment and indignity of the true – which is to say, native – Irish. As Balakrishnan Rajagopal, the UN's special rapporteur on the right to adequate housing, put it in an interview last year: 'Far-right parties prosper when they can exploit the social gaps that emerge out of underinvestment and inadequate government planning, and when they can blame outsiders.' The irony here, of course, is that placing the blame for the housing crisis on outsiders does the government an unintentional favour, in that it distracts attention away from the actual causes. The scapegoating impulse that drives almost all far-right movements diverts anger about real social problems away from the powerful people at fault, and toward the powerless people in society. It's a profound insult to our national dignity that so many people, in this supposedly wealthy country, no longer feel they have any prospect of owning their own home. It's an even deeper insult that so many have been driven into homelessness – by a lack of social housing, by ever-increasing rents and by the effects of poverty. On its own terms, this is a social disaster that demands an urgent response; the longer it continues to unfold, the deeper the damage will be to our future. In terms of the opportunity it presents to the far right, it may well prove more disastrous still.

The Journal
an hour ago
- The Journal
Drug dealer released just four weeks into 18 month term due to prison overcrowding crisis
IRISH JAILS ARE so overcrowded that prison authorities are left with no other option but to release long sentence prisoners despite convictions for serious offences, The Journal has learned. Multiple security and civil service sources have confirmed that a number of prisoners, including those suspected to be members of Organised Crime Groups, have been released. Prison sources said that prisoners who have received sentences for non-violent offences, like cases associated with large drugs seizures, are being let out ahead of time. The calculus used for the release of the prisoners is that they are not classified as a danger to society. The Department of Justice has claimed they are on 'temporary release' but the reality, according to multiple sources, is that these prisoners will remain free. One of those prisoners is Stephanie Treacy from Limerick – she was sentenced to 18 months in prison for her part in a drug dealing operation in the city's St Mary's Park, which is known locally as The Island Field or Kings Island. She served just four weeks of that two year sentence before being released by prison authorities – both Garda and Prison Service sources have confirmed that it was due to measures to limit overcrowding. Stephanie Treacy and her brother Owen Treacy, who was identified in court by gardaí as being involved in organised crime in the city, were arrested after a lengthy garda operation. Owen Treacy has 140 previous convictions for a variety of offences and is a member of a well known family in the city. He and his sister were caught after a long-term garda covert surveillance operation. Gardaí told a Limerick court in April that the Treacys and some associates accessed the roofs of houses on St Munchin's Street between 18 July and 2 August, 2019. They were placing and removing objects under roof tiles – the gardaí confirmed this was where their drugs were located. On 2 August, 2019, Gardaí executed search warrants on three properties at St Munchin's Street, as well as an address associated with the Treacys at St Ita's Street. There they seized more than €32,000 in cash and cheques, as well as more than 100 drug deals that were ready for distribution. The Treacys were placing the drugs inside the plastic toy holders found in Kinder Eggs before selling them on. Owen Treacy Junior has recently been convicted of a threat to kill a Limerick based garda. He got a three month sentence for that which would run consecutive to his three-and-a-half years for the Kinder Egg drugs scheme with Stephanie. Advertisement Owen Treacy will serve his sentence but his sister is out and free and back in Limerick City, having served a fraction of what the judge in the circuit court deemed appropriate. Stephanie had received a three year headline sentence, with the final 18 months suspended. A view of Limerick city looking up the Shannon towards Kings Island. Alamy Stock Photo Alamy Stock Photo Overcrowding The Journal has previously reported that record-high levels of overcrowding inside Ireland's prisons are increasing the risk of violence , seeing incarcerated people sleeping on the floor and creating a difficult working environment for staff . There is now a real risk that the Irish Prison Service will not be able to transport all prisoners for court hearings, as overcrowding is putting pressure on staff to meet their escort abilities. Director General of the Irish Prison Service Caron McCaffrey warned the Department of Justice in a letter last year that the system is at 'tipping point' in respect of its ability to carry out escorts to court and maintain safe staffing standards inside its facilities. Her letter told the Department: 'Current levels of overcrowding are exacerbated by resource constraints due to ever-increasing demands for escorts.' We asked the Irish Prison Service and the Department of Justice for comment on the release of prisoners and the specific case of Stephanie Treacy. The Irish Prison Service said they do not comment on individual cases. The Department of Justice classified the freeing of prisoners as 'temporary release'. 'The Irish Prison Service must accept into custody all people committed to prison by the Courts. As such, the Irish Prison Service has no control over the numbers committed to custody at any given time. 'Where the number of people in custody exceeds the maximum capacity in any prison, officials in the Irish Prison Service make every effort to deal with this through a combination of inter-prison transfers and structured Temporary Release. 'The legislative basis for temporary release is set out in the Criminal Justice Act 1960, as amended by the Criminal Justice (Temporary Release of Prisoners) Act 2003. 'Decisions in relation to temporary release are considered on a case by case basis and the safety of the public is paramount when those decisions are made.' Readers like you are keeping these stories free for everyone... A mix of advertising and supporting contributions helps keep paywalls away from valuable information like this article. Over 5,000 readers like you have already stepped up and support us with a monthly payment or a once-off donation. Learn More Support The Journal