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Kilkenny woodturner handcrafts beautiful everyday items

Kilkenny woodturner handcrafts beautiful everyday items

Irish Times23-05-2025
As Dublin awaits Metrolink from the airport we examine why it is back in the news and why costs are being talked about again. Video: Dan Dennison
Binyamin Netanyahu accused the "leaders of France, Britain, Canada and others' of being on the "wrong side of humanity". Video: Reuters
Flash flooding on Australia's southeast coast that has killed at least three people and cut off towns, isolating tens of thousands of residents. Video: Reuters
President Donald Trump said there were "many concerns" about South Africa he wanted to discuss during a meeting with president Cyril Ramaphosa. (Reuters)
Eyewitness footage shows moment shooting suspect Elias Rodriguez was restrained by security officers after fatal attack on Israeli embassy staffers in DC.
Dublin City Council has started to clear a large illegal landfill site in Darndale on the north of the city. Video: Bryan O'Brien
The Israeli military said that it fired near a diplomatic delegation which had "deviated" from an approved route in the occupied West Bank. Video: Reuters
Israeli attacks on Jabalia overnight have resulted in multiple fatalities and numerous injuries, mainly to children, according to reports.
Caoimhe Ní Ghormáin, an expert in medieval Irish manuscripts, and John Gillis, who led the conservation, talk about the Book of Leinster. Video: Ronan McGreevy
Gordon Manning speaks to members of the Dublin Senior Camogie squad ahead of this week's Camogie Association vote on the wearing of shorts. Video: Bryan O'Brien
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Donald Trump to set up meeting with Putin and Zelensky to end war after ‘very good' meeting with Ukrainian leader
Donald Trump to set up meeting with Putin and Zelensky to end war after ‘very good' meeting with Ukrainian leader

Irish Independent

time38 minutes ago

  • Irish Independent

Donald Trump to set up meeting with Putin and Zelensky to end war after ‘very good' meeting with Ukrainian leader

Timeline of territorial shifts in Russia's war on Ukraine Russia's troops are continuing their slow war of attrition in eastern and northern Ukraine, even as the conflict enters a pivotal phase with a series of high-level meetings that are part of US President Donald Trump's push for peace. In the three-and-a-half years since Moscow launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine, the front line has continued to move slowly with some unexpected strikes also redrawing the map. Here is a look at some of the main events in the conflict: February 24 2022: Russian President Vladimir Putin launches an invasion of Ukraine from the north, east and south. Russian troops quickly reach Kyiv's outskirts, but their attempts to capture the capital and other cities in the north-east meet stiff resistance. March 5 2022: Russian advances toward Kyiv and Kherson reach their height. The port city of Mariupol is surrounded. April 2 2022: Ukraine defeats Russian forces in Kyiv after throwing them back in Chernihiv. August 29 2022: Ukraine's first counter-offensive starts in the east and south. September 30 2022: Russia illegally annexes Donetsk, Luhansk, Kherson and Zaporizhzhia regions of Ukraine, even though it does not fully control either of the four. September to November 2022: Ukrainian forces reclaim vast parts of the Kharkiv, Mykolaiv and Kherson regions in the first counter-offensive, including the city of Kherson itself. May 22 2023: Russia claims control of Bakhmut after months of fighting. June 6 2023: As Ukraine's long-anticipated second counter-offensive starts, the Russian-controlled Kakhovka Dam explodes, sending a wall of water into southern Ukraine and upending Ukrainian battle plans. Autumn 2023: The second Ukrainian counter-offensive ends, with little change to the front line. February 18 2024: Russian forces take complete control of the eastern city of Avdiivka after months of combat. April 19 2024: The US House of Representatives approves a 61 billion dollar package for Ukraine after months of delay. May 10 2024: Russia launches a new offensive in the north-eastern region of Kharkiv, capturing a string of villages and opening a new front in the war. August 6 2024: Ukraine launches a lightning incursion into Russia's Kursk region, holding territory along the border in an unexpected and embarrassing episode for the Kremlin. January 20 2025: Mr Trump is inaugurated as the 47th president of the United States. His election raises uncertainty as to whether Washington will continue to support Ukraine. April 26 2025: Moscow says all Ukrainian troops have been forced out from Russia's Kursk region. Several weeks later, Mr Putin visits the area in a show of strength and is filmed speaking with local volunteers. June 1 2025: Ukraine strikes airfields deep inside Russia by launching drones that have been secretly stored and transported across the country on the back of trucks. The attack is codenamed Operation Spider Web. Summer 2025: Russia and Ukraine both step up drone strikes with the ability to strike deep into each other's territory. June 30 2025: Russia says it has taken full control of Ukraine's Luhansk, one of four regions that Moscow illegally annexed in September 2022. July 31 2025: Russia says it has taken full control of the strategically important Ukrainian city of Chasiv Yar after a grinding, months-long assault. August 2025: Russian forces continue their push in the Donetsk region, where the Kremlin has focused the bulk of military efforts, capturing small villages and closing in on Pokrovsk, a strategically important city. August 15 2025: Mr Putin meets Mr Trump in Alaska for the first Russia-US summit in four years to discuss ending the war in Ukraine. Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky and European officials say Mr Putin wants Ukraine to withdraw from the remaining 30pc of the Donetsk region that it controls as part of a deal.

Student with place on UCD master's course still awaiting evacuation from Gaza
Student with place on UCD master's course still awaiting evacuation from Gaza

Irish Times

timean hour ago

  • Irish Times

Student with place on UCD master's course still awaiting evacuation from Gaza

The Department of Foreign Affairs said it was aware of the case of a student who needed to be evacuated from Gaza to start her course at University College Dublin . The student, who did not wish to be named, said she was a 25-year-old architect in training. She said she was accepted earlier this year on to a master's degree course in architecture, urbanism and climate action at UCD. The university did not respond to requests for comment. READ MORE The woman has tried to lobby TDs to help her get out of Gaza, so she can start her course this coming academic year. Correspondence seen by The Irish Times showed the student had been advised she would qualify for a visa on the basis of her paperwork, but such a permit would only be issued if the Government approved another evacuation mission. Ireland has so far facilitated the evacuation of a number of third-level students from Gaza to Ireland. In July, a group of nine Palestinian students arrived in Ireland to take up scholarships for the 2025-2026 academic year under the Government's Ireland-Palestine scholarship programme, which is run by Irish Aid . Another three Ireland-Palestine scholarship fellows were evacuated from Gaza in April, having been able to leave in 2024. A spokesman for the department said it was 'aware' of the woman's situation. 'While the department is limited in the assistance it can provide to non-Irish citizens, it is currently exploring options to assist individuals who are eligible to travel to Ireland,' he said. Student activists from universities across Dublin have organised a demonstration on Tuesday outside the department's headquarters at Iveagh House in the city centre. They are demanding the Government facilitate the evacuation of Gazan students who have a confirmed place in Irish universities and are due to begin their studies in September. Many of these Gazan students have received scholarships from the Irish Representative Office in Ramallah through the Irish Aid-run programme, which provides 30 scholarships for one-year master's degrees. Others have received supports from individual Irish universities, often called 'sanctuary scholarships'. 'With few safe passages out of Gaza, these students are being left cruelly stranded by the government that invited them here in the first place,' a coalition of students' unions from Trinity College , UCD, DCU and the National College of Art and Design (NCAD), who organised the protest, said in a joint statement. Harry Johnston, chair of Trinity College Dublin boycott, divestment and sanction group, a student-led pro-Palestinian organisation with no affiliation to the university's administration, said the goal of the protest was 'to demand better from our Government'. He said there were 'over 40 students currently trapped in Gaza' who were to begin their studies in Ireland soon. 'The Department of Foreign Affairs is in charge of issuing visas and should be pressuring Israeli authorities to ensure that these people can escape,' he said. The department's office is a regular place of pro-Palestinian protest. Last May, red paint was splattered on the facade of Iveagh House and in August last year the words 'Gaza BDS now' were painted on Iveagh House in an act that was investigated by gardaí as criminal damage.

Hamas accepts new 60-day ceasefire proposal, according to source from the group
Hamas accepts new 60-day ceasefire proposal, according to source from the group

The Journal

timean hour ago

  • The Journal

Hamas accepts new 60-day ceasefire proposal, according to source from the group

HAMAS HAS ACCEPTED a new ceasefire proposal for Gaza without requesting amendments, a source from the group today said, after a fresh diplomatic push. Mediators Egypt and Qatar, backed by the United States, have struggled to secure a lasting truce in the conflict, amid a dire humanitarian crisis in the Gaza Strip. But after receiving a new proposal from meditators, Hamas said it was ready for talks. 'Hamas has delivered its response to the mediators, confirming that Hamas and the factions agreed to the new ceasefire proposal without requesting any amendments,' the source said, speaking on condition of anonymity. Israel has yet to respond. A Palestinian source familiar with the talks said mediators were 'expected to announce that an agreement has been reached and set a date for the resumption of talks', adding guarantees were offered to ensure implementation and pursue a permanent solution. Another Palestinian official earlier said mediators had proposed an initial 60-day truce and hostage release in two batches. The proposal comes more than a week after Israel's security cabinet approved plans to expand the war into Gaza City and nearby refugee camps, which has sparked international outcry as well as domestic opposition. 'Confronted and destroyed' An Islamic Jihad source told AFP the plan envisaged a 60-day ceasefire 'during which 10 Israeli hostages would be released alive, along with a number of bodies'. Out of 251 hostages taken during Hamas's October 2023 attack that triggered the war, 49 are still held in Gaza including 27 the Israeli military says are dead. The Islamic Jihad source said 'the remaining captives would be released in a second phase', with negotiations for a broader settlement to follow. They added that 'all factions are supportive' of the Egyptian and Qatari proposal. US President Donald Trump wrote on Truth Social: 'We will only see the return of the remaining hostages when Hamas is confronted and destroyed!!! Advertisement 'The sooner this takes place, the better the chances of success will be.' Last week, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Israel 'will agree to an agreement in which all the hostages are released at once and according to our conditions for ending the war'. Meanwhile, in a now all too familiar scene in Gaza, AFP footage from the southern city of Khan Yunis showed crowds of mourners kneeling over the shrouded bodies of their loved ones who were killed seeking aid the day before. 'Beyond imagination' Egyptian Foreign Minister Badr Abdelatty, visiting the Rafah border crossing with Gaza today, said Qatari Prime Minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al Thani was visiting 'to consolidate our existing common efforts in order to apply maximum pressure on the two sides to reach a deal as soon as possible'. Alluding to the dire humanitarian conditions for the more than two million people living in the Gaza Strip, where UN agencies and aid groups have warned of famine, Abdelatty stressed the urgency of reaching an agreement. 'The current situation on the ground is beyond imagination,' he said. Egypt said it was willing to join a potential international force deployed to Gaza, but only if backed by a UN Security Council resolution and accompanied by a 'political horizon'. 'Deliberate' starvation On the ground, Gaza's civil defence agency said Israeli forces killed at least 11 people across the territory today, including six killed by Israeli fire in the south. Contacted by AFP, the Israeli military said it was 'not aware of any casualties as a result of IDF fire' in the southern areas reported by the civil defence. Media restrictions in Gaza and difficulties accessing swathes of the Palestinian territory mean AFP is unable to independently verify the tolls and details provided by the civil defence agency or the Israeli military. Rights group Amnesty International meanwhile accused Israel of enacting a 'deliberate policy' of starvation in Gaza and 'systematically destroying the health, well-being and social fabric of Palestinian life'. Israel, while heavily restricting aid allowed into Gaza, has repeatedly rejected claims of deliberate starvation. Hamas's October 2023 attack on Israel resulted in the deaths of 1,219 people, mostly civilians. Israel's offensive has killed more than 62,004 Palestinians, most of them civilians, according to figures from the health ministry in Gaza which the United Nations considers reliable. - © AFP 2025

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