logo
Shocking domestic violence data adds further urgency to new strategy

Shocking domestic violence data adds further urgency to new strategy

Irish Times10 hours ago

'Zero tolerance' for domestic and gender-based violence was something of a mantra of the last Government.
It has carried over to the current Coalition as well, with Minister for Justice Jim O'Callaghan on Tuesday launching the final implementation plan for its 'Zero Tolerance' strategy aimed at tackling such violence.
But while tolerance levels among the politicians may have been at zero for years,
Women's Aid
has revealed that it received the highest number of disclosures of domestic violence and abuse in its 50-year history last year.
As Mary Carolan outlines in
our front page story
, more than 41,000 women reported abuse by their partner or ex-partner, and more than 5,000 reported abuse of children.
READ MORE
The 2024 figure for disclosures, up 17 per cent on 2023, included reports of assaults with weapons, constant surveillance, relentless put downs and humiliations, sharing intimate images online, complete control over all family finances, sexual assault, rape and being threatened with theirs or their children's lives.
Five women, the Women's Aid report notes, died in violent circumstances in 2024.
The number and nature of the abuse disclosures is 'utterly appalling' but is 'just the tip of the iceberg', said Women's Aid chief executive Sarah Benson.
Specialist services are 'overstretched and underfunded' and resourcing by Government and implementation of the Third National Domestic, Sexual and Gender-Based Violence Strategy remains 'crucial' to effectively reduce the scale and impacts of violence against women and children in Ireland, the organisation said.
The final implementation plan for that strategy published yesterday sets out 95 actions, including expansion of refuge accommodation.
Mr O'Callaghan said the plan 'provides a focused roadmap to deliver on the whole-of-government commitment to a zero-tolerance approach to DSGBV (domestic, sexual and gender-based violence)'.
He added: 'I am committed to building on what has already been achieved, and to strengthening implementation and identifying the actions we need to take now and where we need to go next to prepare a clear pathway toward the fourth national strategy.'
A test of whether the Government's efforts to tackle the scourge of domestic violence are having an impact will be the kind of data published by Women's Aid, and whether the shocking level of abuse the most recent data details falls instead of rises to new record levels.
Tentative ceasefire between Iran and Israel appears to hold
International events and the tentative ceasefire between
Israel
and
Iran
are the topic of
today's lead story
by Jack Power.
There were accusations from both sides of violations in the hours after the ceasefire came into force.
United States president
Donald Trump
's frustration at the situation boiled over as he spoke to reporters in advance of travelling to a Nato summit.
Mr Trump described Israel and Iran as two countries 'that have been fighting so long and so hard that they don't know what the f**k they're doing'.
In a later online post, the US president said 'both Israel and Iran wanted to stop the War equally! It was my great honour to Destroy All Nuclear facilities & capabilities, and then, STOP THE WAR'.
It was reported on Tuesday night that an initial classified US assessment of the US strikes on Iran's nuclear facilities says they did not destroy two of the sites and were likely to only set back the Iranian nuclear programme by a few months, according to two people familiar with the assessment.
The report produced by the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) – the intelligence arm of the Pentagon – concluded key components of the nuclear programme, including centrifuges, were capable of being restarted within months.
The White House disputed the intelligence assessment, which was first reported by CNN. 'The leaking of this alleged assessment is a clear attempt to demean President Trump, and discredit the brave fighter pilots who conducted a perfectly executed mission to obliterate Iran's nuclear programme,' White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said in a statement.
Best Reads
The Government will make a decision on whether to include services in the
Occupied Territories Bill
based on advice from the Attorney General, the Taoiseach has told the Dáil. The issue was raised in the Dáil after Tánaiste
Simon Harris
brought the legislation to Cabinet on Tuesday. The Israeli Settlements Prohibition of Importation of Goods Bill will make it an offence under the Customs Act to import goods from Israeli settlements in the Occupied Palestinian territories. There is pressure on the Government from the Opposition to include services as well.
Marie O'Halloran, Jack Horgan-Jones and Martin Wall report
.
Amid a debate in the Dáil on the high cost of groceries,
Miriam Lord imagines
what would happen if Taoiseach Micheál Martin did the weekly shop. 'He'd refuse to look at a biscuit, the house would be awash with broccoli and you'd die for the want of a cheese and onion crisp. The man cannot be allowed near a shopping trolley.'
On the Opinion pages, Kathy Sheridan asks:
should influencers and politicians share photographs of their children online?
Irish farmers have welcomed tentative moves by the
European Parliament
to restrict 'cynical' vegetarian and vegan food producers from using words such as sausage, burger and schnitzel to sell their products.
Conor Pope reports on this issue
.
'I sleep easier here': The makeshift homeless community under the M50 –
Kitty Holland outlines the plight of people
living beneath Dublin's ringroad.
Playbook
The
Dáil
kicks off with an opportunity for TDs to raise topical issues at 9am.
Independent TDs have a motion on legislative and structural reforms to accelerate housing delivery which is to be debated from 10am.
Leaders' Questions is at noon.
Government Business in the afternoon includes a motion on the Offences Against the State (Amendment) Act, 1998.
There will also be a committee stage debate on the Mental Health Bill, 2024, from 5.44pm.
Legislation to bring in changes to the Local Property Tax regime is to be debated from 6.44pm.
The weekly Dáil votes are due to take place at 10.45pm.
In the
Seanad
there will be a debate on the Supports for Survivors of Residential Institutional Abuse Bill, 2024, from 12.45pm.
Various
Oireachtas committees
, including health and transport, will be considering revised funding estimates for their relevant departments on Wednesday.
The committee on social protection will be considering the Social Welfare (Bereaved Partner's Pension) Bill, 2025, from 9.30am.
The committee on climate will meet the Climate Change Advisory Council on the topic of the carbon budget at 12.30pm.
The committee on arts, media, communications, culture and sport will examine the future of the An Post network, also at 12.30pm.
The committee on education will be considering education for children with special needs from 6.30pm.
The full Dáil, Seanad and committee schedules can be found
here

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

US HR firm Deel admits it instructed ‘discreet' surveillance on manager at centre of  ‘spy' case
US HR firm Deel admits it instructed ‘discreet' surveillance on manager at centre of  ‘spy' case

Irish Times

timean hour ago

  • Irish Times

US HR firm Deel admits it instructed ‘discreet' surveillance on manager at centre of ‘spy' case

One of the companies in the international human resources (HR) firms' 'spy' dispute instructed that 'discreet' surveillance be carried out on the Irish payroll compliance manager at the centre of High Court proceedings over the affair, a judge was told on Wednesday. US headquartered Deel Inc, which allegedly recruited Dublin man Keith O'Brien to pass on trade secrets to it from his employer Rippling, also headquartered in the US, did not instruct that there be covert or intimidatory surveillance on Mr O'Brien, Mr Justice Brian Cregan was told. Last Friday, Mr O'Brien, of Balrothery in north Dublin, was granted a one side only represented injunction preventing 'persons unknown', who were seen driving two different cars in the vicinity of Mr O'Brien's home and workplace, from harassing or intimidating him by following, photographing and recording him or members of his family. They were also restrained from attending within one kilometre of those places. READ MORE The case was against persons unknown because his lawyers did not at that stage know the identities of the owners/drivers of the vehicles. The court was also told by Imogen McGrath SC, for Mr O'Brien, that it was believed the people involved were working for Deel and the conduct was designed to intimidate him because he had agreed to co-operate with Rippling in a separate case it is bringing over the spy affair against Deel and Mr O'Brien. The court heard however that, in response to requests to desist, Deel's solicitors Hayes LLP had written to say their client had 'no knowledge' of surveillance by any persons in the vehicles identified. On Wednesday, when the case returned to the High Court, Ms McGrath said there had been dramatic developments over the previous 24 hours. The identities associated with the two cars had been provided and the owner/driver of one car allegedly seen in one incident, a couple who attended court, were not involved in any surveillance and the case against them was being discontinued, counsel said. The driver of the second vehicle which was involved in five other alleged incidents of following and surveilling had also come forward. John O'Regan BL, for the second driver, asked the judge that his client's name be anonymised until he is able to make a formal application in this respect. Counsel said the application will be in accordance with case precedent or statute law because his client has significant health issues and operates 'in the sphere of surveillance' and revealing his identity could put his safety at risk and damage his business. Counsel also asked the case be put back as his client, while refuting Mr O'Brien's claims, wanted to come to a practical agreement in relation to the court orders. Mr Justice Cregan said he was prepared to hear the application for anonymisation of the defendant but was reluctant to make an order in relation to that at this stage. The court heard that while Deel was not a defendant in Mr O'Brien's action, which includes a claim for damages, the judge had directed that their lawyers attend court on Wednesday to say why they should or should not be a party. Paul Gardiner SC, for Deel, told the judge his client had instructed that 'discreet surveillance' be carried out on Mr O'Brien but there was no question that it should be covert and used to intimidate or harass him. 'My client (Deel) engaged with Person B (to carry out surveillance) and unknown to us they engaged Person A and Deel was not involved in instructing anyone to carry out intimidation and we refute that', he said. The judge said given Deel's solicitors' response to requests to desist from Mr O'Brien's lawyers of having 'no knowledge' of those involved in following him, it 'could be interpreted as being economical with the verité (truth)'. Mr Gardiner replied his side only ascertained the actual position over the weekend. He also said his client was agreeable to not surveilling Mr O'Brien any further and if he (O'Brien) wished that Deel should be a defendant he should serve papers to that effect. Ms McGrath, for Mr O'Brien, said they would have to consider that as they would need to see what instructions, including text messages, Deel gave to Person B to carry out the surveillance. The judge continued the injunctions and adjourned the matter for a week.

RTÉ's Finding Samantha podcast optioned for TV
RTÉ's Finding Samantha podcast optioned for TV

RTÉ News​

timean hour ago

  • RTÉ News​

RTÉ's Finding Samantha podcast optioned for TV

Keeper Pictures has optioned the exclusive TV adaptation rights to RTÉ Documentary on One's true-crime podcast series Finding Samantha. Under the deal, the Dublin-based production company - whose credits include The Gone and Striking Out - will adapt the hit podcast into a eight-episode drama series. Experienced UK screenwriter, playwright and novelist Emilia di Girolamo has been signed to the project as showrunner. Finding Samantha tells the stranger-than-fiction story of Australian con artist Samantha Azzopardi, who has created more than 100 false identities since she embarked upon her career of fraud and deception as a 14-year-old girl in Brisbane. The seven-part series has been one of RTÉ Documentary on One 's most successful podcasts, drawing in millions of listeners from more than 100 countries. Since its release in May 2023, Finding Samantha has hit the number one spot on both Apple Podcasts and Spotify in Ireland. In an unprecedented first for an RTÉ podcast, it also featured in the top five in the Apple Podcast charts in both Australia and New Zealand. Both the podcast and forthcoming TV adaptation start in 2013, when a distressed 14-year girl was picked up outside the General Post Office in Dublin city centre. Swiftly nicknamed 'The GPO Girl' by the media, the teenager appeared to be too traumatised to speak. She was duly taken to a children's hospital by the Gardaí, who assumed that she was a victim of child trafficking. After an intense, month-long investigation into her identity produced no leads, the police released a photograph of the mute teenager. That resulted in an astonishing call from the other side of the world, which revealed that 'The GPO Girl' was, in fact, a 25-year-old Australian called Samantha Azzopardi, a sophisticated serial con woman - and a psychological enigma. Emilia di Girolamo's credits include a string of successful true-crime adaptations. She wrote and executive produced Channel 4 drama Deceit, based on the controversial honeytrap at the heart of the investigation into the 1992 murder of Rachel Nickell. She was also head writer and showrunner on The Tunnel: Vengeance for SKY and Law & Order UK for ITV/NBC. Most recently, she created, wrote and show ran Amazon Prime Video's critically acclaimed Montreal-based detective series Three Pines, starring Alfred Molina. Hugh Ormond, RTÉ Head of Podcasting said "This is very exciting for RTÉ and reflects the outstanding growth of the Documentary on One podcast slate over the last five years. "Partnering a compelling story like Finding Samantha with a drama production house of Keeper's calibre is something we hope to see more of in the coming years". Emilia di Girolamo said "I'm thrilled to partner with Keeper Pictures and the brilliant RTÉ Documentary on One journalists to bring this extraordinary story to screen. "Samantha Azzopardi embodies a new breed of 'emotional con woman' trading in attention and sympathy, and her story sits perfectly within our cultural fascination with complex female criminals. Like the podcast, the drama is a psychological excavation that explores the driving forces behind her compulsive deceptions, as well as the damage she inflicted on her many vulnerable victims. The series also delves into the cat-and-mouse games Samantha played with the podcast team, creating a multi-layered narrative that's as much about the pursuit of truth as it is about deception itself". Yvonne Donohoe, Creative Director and Producer at Keeper Pictures said: "Alongside listeners from around the world, we at Keeper Pictures were captivated not only by Samantha Azzopardi's story but also the nuanced and balanced way this podcast, and these journalists in particular, interpret, understand and tell this knotty, fascinating, intense, emotional and thrilling true crime story. "We are delighted to have secured the screen rights for the podcast and to be collaborating with a brilliant showrunner who shares our passion for this story but also wants to treat the material with sensitivity and integrity as we bring this story to life in an ambitious, engrossing, water-cooler limited TV drama series."

Dublin transport contactless payment system not operational until 2029, says minister
Dublin transport contactless payment system not operational until 2029, says minister

Irish Times

time2 hours ago

  • Irish Times

Dublin transport contactless payment system not operational until 2029, says minister

Contactless payments across Dublin's bus, tram and railway public transport networks will not be fully operational until 2029, Darragh O'Brien has told an Oireachtas hearing. The first testing phase of the 'next-generation ticketing' contactless payments system will be introduced in 2027 in a 'controlled area within Dublin across bus, rail and Luas', the Minister for Transport told Wednesday's Oireachtas hearing on 2025 transport estimates. A second phase is scheduled to run in summer 2028, with a third one to follow in 2029, he said. 'Obviously how we roll it out will be dependent on the first phase – if that goes well and the testing of that is robust and we don't require many system changes,' Mr O'Brien said in response to a query on the system from Green Party leader Roderic O'Gorman. 'By 2027 to 2029 we would have the system fully operational.' READ MORE The Minister said he was investigating whether it was possible to 'shorten the distance' between the first two testing phases, but he could not give a commitment on that. 'It is a roll-out of, effectively, a whole new contactless ticketing system that's going to be with us for a generation and will make a very significant change.' A National Transport Authority report published this year stated contact payments on public transport would take about three years to deliver. Spanish company Indra is responsible for the introduction of the contactless system across bus, tram and rail services. Asked by Fine Gael TD Grace Boland whether the Government planned to maintain the 90-minute €2 fare beyond the end of this year, Mr O'Brien said it was his 'intention to keep that'. The Minister also referred to the extension of free travel for five- to eight-year-olds from September and extending student travel fares to 25-year-olds. Anecdotally, recent fare reductions have resulted in more people taking public transport, the Minister said. However, it was difficult to quantify how many people were opting for bus or rail as a result of such price cuts, he said. Recently published data showed more than one million public transport journeys are now taken in Dublin daily. The Oireachtas committee also heard how the number of electric-vehicle (EV) charging points across the State remained far behind the European Union average. At present, there are seven EV charging posts for every 10,000 people, compared to an EU average of 20 per 10,000 and 13 per 10,000 in the UK, Sinn Féin's Pa Daly told the committee. People needed to have 'confidence that the battery will take them far enough, but also that they'll be able to recharge around the State', Mr Daly said. He also cited a recent warning from the Climate Change Advisory Council that the Government did not support access for lower-income families to EVs, which jeopardised emissions targets. Acknowledging that the number of charging points was below the EU average, Mr O'Brien said his department was addressing the shortfall and investigating EV grant options for lower and middle-income families and for rural dwellers. Asked if this would include grants for second-hand EVs, Mr O'Brien said it would. Earlier on Wednesday, the Minister told Newstalk Breakfast radio he did not expect the State would hit its projection of one million EV users by 2030, but said numbers would most likely reach 630,000-700,000 by the end of the decade. Responding to concerns from Mr O'Gorman regarding the 'almost systematic removal of references to cycling in this programme for government', Mr O'Brien told the committee the TD could 'be absolutely assured that this Government is as committed as the last to continue the real advancements that were made over the last five years in the provision of active travel schemes'. In addition to the Government's commitment to spend €360 million on public transport infrastructure, Mr O'Brien said his department would seek additional funds through the updated National Development Plan to improve 'active travel'.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store