
Anger in Cork as once-popular Cobh strand set to remain closed indefinitely due to lack of funds
A rocky strand around half a kilometre long between the Titanic Memorial Garden and Cuskinny Strand, Battery Strand was closed in June 2013 on public safety grounds following an inspection by an engineer involved with the Cobh Landslide Programme.
For generations the Battery Strand was a popular place for locals in the seaside Cork town to swim and bathe. The strand was accessible via a gate in the Memorial Garden's boundary wall, but that gate has been locked for the past dozen years.
The closure has been controversial, especially around summer-time each year. However, the local authority doesn't see much hope of getting funding to shore up the cliff.
Responding to a motion by Councillor Sinead Sheppard (Fine Gael) at this week's Cobh Municipal District meeting, Municipal District Officer Páraig Lynch said that there are no plans to reopen access while the current situation remains.
He said that the most likely solution to the issue would be to shore up the cliff face, which would have the effect of essentially covering the beach area, thus rendering it inaccessible. Mr Lynch added that while 50 to 70 metres of the cliff are owned by the local authority, the bulk of it is owned privately.
A 2020 report prepared for the Municipal District by the County Council's Coastal Management Section found that there was evidence of slippage along the cliff face and a medium to high risk of collapse. The report also stated that the works necessary to stabilise the cliff face wouldn't meet the criteria of the OPW's Minor Flood Mitigation Works and Coastal Protection Scheme.
Cobh Municipal District members were advised at that time that works to shore up the cliff could cost in the region of €500,000.
Speaking at this week's Cobh Municipal District meeting, Councillor Sheppard said the strand was "closed correctly but we need to raise it and to exhaust every avenue."
Councillor Cathal Rasmussen (Labour Party) said the decision to close the strand was on health and safety grounds and the cost involved in fixing it would be "huge." He added that "we've tried everything and made no progress." Councillor Anthony Barry (Fine Gael) said remediation would be "very costly" while Councillor Ger Curley (Independent Ireland) concluded that "it's probably not viable to be doing it."
However, local man Peter Kidney disputes the opinion of the local authority. A petition he set up in 2021 calling for access to the Battery Strand to be restored gained 1,317 signatures. Speaking to The Irish Independent, he queried whether all funding possibilities have been exhausted:
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"Have the municipal authority made any application for funding to central government? Why spend €144 million on cleaning the water in the lower harbour if you deny people access to the amenity?"
He believes only a small portion of the strand is owned privately and the bulk is owned by Cork County Council and the municipal authority. He also thinks there's a safety risk to having access to the beach closed off.
"There is no other access to the strand for two miles so if a yacht or small boat is in trouble they can only be rescued from the water," Mr Kidney said.
In January 2023 the Crosshaven lifeboat had to beach itself to take onboard a man who had fallen on cliffs at the strand as paramedics and fire service personnel were unable to extract the patient by land.
Researchers at UCC are currently carrying out a study into coastal erosion in County Cork. For now, it looks like state funding won't be forthcoming to fix the Battery Strand. Councillor Rasmussen said: "We tried everything to get money, everything was shot down. It's very difficult, it was a great amenity and is a huge loss to the town."
He said the plans he saw for shoring up the cliff would require an L-shaped prop from the cliffside to the water. There's also the difficulty of access with everything needed for a shoring-up effort having to come in from the water side of the strand, he added.
Funded by the Local Democracy Reporting Scheme.
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Irish Independent
21 hours ago
- Irish Independent
Anger in Cork as once-popular Cobh strand set to remain closed indefinitely due to lack of funds
A rocky strand around half a kilometre long between the Titanic Memorial Garden and Cuskinny Strand, Battery Strand was closed in June 2013 on public safety grounds following an inspection by an engineer involved with the Cobh Landslide Programme. For generations the Battery Strand was a popular place for locals in the seaside Cork town to swim and bathe. The strand was accessible via a gate in the Memorial Garden's boundary wall, but that gate has been locked for the past dozen years. The closure has been controversial, especially around summer-time each year. However, the local authority doesn't see much hope of getting funding to shore up the cliff. Responding to a motion by Councillor Sinead Sheppard (Fine Gael) at this week's Cobh Municipal District meeting, Municipal District Officer Páraig Lynch said that there are no plans to reopen access while the current situation remains. He said that the most likely solution to the issue would be to shore up the cliff face, which would have the effect of essentially covering the beach area, thus rendering it inaccessible. Mr Lynch added that while 50 to 70 metres of the cliff are owned by the local authority, the bulk of it is owned privately. A 2020 report prepared for the Municipal District by the County Council's Coastal Management Section found that there was evidence of slippage along the cliff face and a medium to high risk of collapse. The report also stated that the works necessary to stabilise the cliff face wouldn't meet the criteria of the OPW's Minor Flood Mitigation Works and Coastal Protection Scheme. Cobh Municipal District members were advised at that time that works to shore up the cliff could cost in the region of €500,000. Speaking at this week's Cobh Municipal District meeting, Councillor Sheppard said the strand was "closed correctly but we need to raise it and to exhaust every avenue." Councillor Cathal Rasmussen (Labour Party) said the decision to close the strand was on health and safety grounds and the cost involved in fixing it would be "huge." He added that "we've tried everything and made no progress." Councillor Anthony Barry (Fine Gael) said remediation would be "very costly" while Councillor Ger Curley (Independent Ireland) concluded that "it's probably not viable to be doing it." However, local man Peter Kidney disputes the opinion of the local authority. A petition he set up in 2021 calling for access to the Battery Strand to be restored gained 1,317 signatures. Speaking to The Irish Independent, he queried whether all funding possibilities have been exhausted: ADVERTISEMENT Learn more "Have the municipal authority made any application for funding to central government? Why spend €144 million on cleaning the water in the lower harbour if you deny people access to the amenity?" He believes only a small portion of the strand is owned privately and the bulk is owned by Cork County Council and the municipal authority. He also thinks there's a safety risk to having access to the beach closed off. "There is no other access to the strand for two miles so if a yacht or small boat is in trouble they can only be rescued from the water," Mr Kidney said. In January 2023 the Crosshaven lifeboat had to beach itself to take onboard a man who had fallen on cliffs at the strand as paramedics and fire service personnel were unable to extract the patient by land. Researchers at UCC are currently carrying out a study into coastal erosion in County Cork. For now, it looks like state funding won't be forthcoming to fix the Battery Strand. Councillor Rasmussen said: "We tried everything to get money, everything was shot down. It's very difficult, it was a great amenity and is a huge loss to the town." He said the plans he saw for shoring up the cliff would require an L-shaped prop from the cliffside to the water. There's also the difficulty of access with everything needed for a shoring-up effort having to come in from the water side of the strand, he added. Funded by the Local Democracy Reporting Scheme.


Dublin Live
2 days ago
- Dublin Live
Council's 'Be Sound' campaign shows authority created 'outright dangerous' shared spaces
Our community members are treated to special offers, promotions and adverts from us and our partners. You can check out at any time. More info Dublin City Council has created "outright dangerous" spaces in an attempt to roll out cycle lanes and shared spaces as fast as possible, it has been claimed. The council's "Be Sound" campaign encourages cyclists and pedestrians to look out for each other when using roads and pathways, to greenways. The campaign tacitly acknowledges the lack of foresight that's been afforded to proper spatial planning for everyone, according to Fine Gael TD Meave O'Connell. Deputy O'Connell said the council created impractical and some "outright dangerous" spaces in an attempt to roll out cycle lanes and shared spaces as fast as possible. Deputy O'Connell said: "Two months ago I called on the Minister for Transport to commence a review of the Design Manual for Urban Roads and Streets. This document sets out the primary guidelines for local authorities, and rarely gives any consideration to people with visual impairments. "In their earnestness to roll-out cycle lanes and shared spaces as fast and as widely as possible, local authorities created spaces that are not only impractical, but in places are just outright dangerous. It is ludicrous that in places around our city, older people and those with visual impairments have to step off buses directly onto cycle lanes." Deputy O'Connell went to say that the council should focus on how its work has impacted some of our most vulnerable road user instead of telling road users to "Be Sound". Dublin Live has contacted Dublin City Council for comment. Join our Dublin Live breaking news service on WhatsApp. Click this link to receive your daily dose of Dublin Live content. We also treat our community members to special offers, promotions, and adverts from us and our partners. If you don't like our community, you can check out any time you like. If you're curious, you can read our Privacy Notice. For all the latest news from Dublin and surrounding areas visit our homepage.

The Journal
4 days ago
- The Journal
'Remigration': The far right's plan to expel non-white people from Europe
WHITE NATIONALISTS ACROSS Europe have for more than a decade promoted a policy called 'remigration', which despite its innocuous-sounding name is a plan to expel non-white people from the continent. Now, far-right activists and fringe political parties in Ireland are joining that chorus of extremists. In doing so, they are continuing to take inspiration from anti-immigration movements abroad and attempting to introduce their talking points into Irish politics. On 17 May, members of the far-right National Party attended a 'Remigration Summit' in Italy, and at an anti-immigration rally in Dublin city centre on 26 April, they marched down O'Connell Street chanting: 'Save the nation, remigration!' The National Party's only elected representative, Patrick Quinlan of Fingal County Council, repeated the call in a speech he made at the Customs House on the same day. 'Ireland belongs to the Irish people. We must start a policy of mass remigration,' Quinlan told a crowd of thousands gathered along the quays who chanted: 'Get them out! Get them out!' 'We'll shut the borders, we'll house the people, we'll rekindle our ancestors' divine fire,' Quinlan said. The party's youth wing also turned up selling the same message – the mass expulsion of immigrants and those who do not fit their definition of Irishness. Quinlan is not the only Irish politician to call for 'remigration'. Dublin City Councillor Gavin Pepper did so last year on social media , while complaining about crimes committed by Muslims in Ireland. Gavin Pepper and Patrick Quinlan were contacted by The Journal and offered an opportunity to respond. And at the summit in Italy, National Party member John McLoughlin said that while his party does not advocate violence, when 'our people reach breaking point, you most certainly won't be able to depend on the likes of me or any other political leaders here to hold them back'. Opponents of 'remigration', he said, should think twice because 'it's not our last hope to save ourselves, it's their last hope'. The Journal sought to contact John McLoughlin via social media and the National Party, but received no response by the time of publication. Those on the far-right fringe in Ireland are following the lead of more established anti-immigration parties (and right-wing extremist groups) elsewhere in Europe, who have made mainstreaming 'remigration' their goal. In the last year or so, they've begun to see some success. It's great to have young men stepping up, Fair play John and well done on representing the party. — Cllr. Patrick Quinlan (@PQuinlanNP) May 25, 2025 What does 'remigration' mean? Those who call for 'remigration' want to see non-white people expelled from Europe en masse, regardless of their citizenship, legal status or place of birth. This, according to those who support the idea, can be done forcibly or through incentivising people to leave a country voluntarily. The term 'remigration' has long been used in academia to describe people returning to their countries of origin voluntarily, like refugees returning to their home countries after World War II, for example. More recently, the word has been hijacked by supporters of Identitarianism - a pan-European, ethnonationalist movement that began in France in the 2000s. Remigration is the only ticket to make Europe European again! 👉🏻 Get yours now (in the comments below) and join us in that fight on Saturday the 17th of May in Milano, 🇮🇹 Let's make history together ✈️ ! — Remigration Summit 26 (@resum25) March 24, 2025 Identitarians are racial segregationists. They oppose multiculturalism, globalisation and immigration in general, all of which they see as existential threats to the white populations and national cultures of Europe. Like other far-right groups, they are particularly concerned with demonising Muslims and often try to stoke fears of 'Islamisation'. In a 2019 report , the Institute for Strategic Dialogue – a think tank focused on combatting extremist ideologies – described 'remigration' as 'essentially a non-violent form of ethnic cleansing'. A general election poster erected by a grouping of far-right parties, including the National Party Telegram - The irish People Telegram - The irish People If 'remigration' is the goal of white nationalists, the animating fear behind it is the 'Great Replacement' conspiracy theory , which casts foreigners – especially Arabs – as an invading force marshalled by global elites whose objective is to wipe out white people. The 'Great Replacement' theory featured on general election posters erected last year by a grouping of far-right Irish parties that included the National Party, the Irish People party and Ireland First. It also came up in the speech delivered by the Nationals Party's John McLoughlin in Italy, when he talked about 'ethnic replacement', casting out 'the invader' and referred to asylum seeker accommodation buildings as 'plantation centres'. He compared British control of the six counties in the north to how 'Germany lost Frankfurt to Turkey, or France lost Paris to Algeria'. As is typical with proponents of the theory, which originated in France, McLoughlin inverted the real history of the French invading and colonising Algeria. He also said those who oppose 'remigration' aim to deny its supporters 'the very heritage of our ancestors, carved in stone and soil'. During the speech, McLoughlin made repeated references to soil, and the phrase 'stone and soil' has echoes of the Nazi slogan 'blood and soil'. He also said the National Party stands for 'excellence over equality'. National Party members represented Ireland today at the Remigration Summit 2025 in Milan. Many thanks to the conference organisers for hosting such a thoroughly well-run event despite interference from multiple state governments and their leftist foot soldiers. Remigration is… — The National Party | An Páirtí Náisiúnta (@NationalPartyIE) May 17, 2025 As Quinlan and McLoughlin did in their speeches, Irish adherents to the theory cast their project as one of liberation, and resistance to the 'invasion' and 'plantation' of Ireland. They do so using language that invokes the Irish struggle against British rule and colonialism. Quinlan said in his speech that Ireland has lost 'that holy fire that blazed in our patriot dead'. Advertisement 'They were able to conquer tyranny because of that fire,' he said. Elsewhere in Europe, white nationalists call for a new 'Reconquista', a reference to the campaign by Christian kingdoms to retake land conquered by Muslims in the Iberian Peninsula centuries ago. Anti-immigration protesters gather at the Customs House in Dublin. Alamy Stock Photo Alamy Stock Photo Who has called for 'remigration'? 'Remigration' has been promoted by far-right political parties and extremist groups in a number of European countries over the last ten years or so. More recently, it's found expression in Canada, Australia and, most notably, in the United States. Those who promote the idea aim to bring it into mainstream political discourse, which was the purpose of the ' Remigration Summit' that took place in Italy on 17 May. In 2024 the vision of Remigration became the hope of our entire continent. In 2025 we will organize the first Remigration Summit: in May we will gather activists, journalists and politicians to unite our ideas, reach and influence. If we work together, Remigration is inevitable. — Remigration Summit 26 (@resum25) January 1, 2025 The most prominent exponent of the idea in the European context has been the far-right German political party Alternative for Germany (AfD), which came second in this year's federal election with just over 20% of the vote. The AfD has been officially labelled a right-wing extremist group by Germany's domestic intelligence agency (BfV) and one of its members has been convicted for using banned Nazi-era slogans . The party also has documented ties with neo-Nazi groups. The BfV said the AfD aims 'to exclude certain population groups from equal participation in society, subject them to unconstitutional discrimination, and thus assign them a legally devalued status'. Ahead of this year's election, AfD leader Alice Weidel endorsed the idea of 'remigration' at a party conference, where she talked about 'large-scale repatriations'. 'And I have to be honest with you, if it's going to be called remigration, then that's what it's going to be: remigration,' she said, making a U-turn on a topic that had brought intense scrutiny upon her party only a year previous. AfD leader Alice Weidel gives a speech at a party conference in Riesa, Germany. Alamy Stock Photo Alamy Stock Photo In 2024, the policy was deemed too extreme by another major player in far-right European politics, Marine Le Pen's National Rally party in France, after a report by Correctiv exposed a secret meeting between AfD members, neo-Nazis and like-minded businesspeople, at which 'remigration' was the main talking point. Reports of the meeting led to massive demonstrations across Germany. National Rally, which itself has Nazi-sympathising roots , and the AfD have since broken off their alliance in the EU Parliament. Another far-right French politician, Éric Zemmour, has called for a ministry of 'remigration' to be established. In Austria, the idea has been promoted by the leader of the Freedom Party (FPO), Herbert Kickl. The party laid out plans to create 'Fortress Austria' ahead of parliamentary elections in 2024, in which it won around 29% of the vote. The FPO has also called for the EU to have a 'remigration commissioner' . FPO leader Herbert Kickl at a party meeting in Vosendorf, Austria. Alamy Stock Photo Alamy Stock Photo In Sweden, 'remigration' is government policy, although it does not involve forcing people to leave the country. Sweden does not strip people of their citizenship or refugee status, unlike the more extreme ideas promoted elsewhere in Europe. The Swedish government incentivises people to leave voluntarily by offering them money, something Denmark also does. And then there is the case of the United States since Donald Trump won the presidency for a second time. There, the term has become more common since the 2024 election campaign, when Trump himself used it in a Truth Social post attacking his Democratic opponent Kamala Harris. Trump wrote: 'As President I will immediately end the migrant invasion of America. We will stop all migrant flights, end all illegal entries, terminate the Kamala phone app for smuggling illegals (CBP One App), revoke deportation immunity, suspend refugee resettlement, and return Kamala's illegal migrants to their home countries (also known as remigration).' US President Donald Trump's Truth Social post about immigration Source: Truth Social While Trump did effectively freeze all refugee resettlement on his first day in office, he also signed an executive order intended to provide white South Africans asylum status. He has also said white people in South Africa are being subjected to 'genocide', a common myth among white nationalists. Since coming to power, the Trump administration has been expelling people from the US under dubious pretexts, some of whom have a right to reside in the country and others who are in fact American citizens . The US president's use of the term 'remigration' was celebrated by those in Europe who have sought to mainstream it, including the well-known Austrian white nationalist Martin Sellner , who hailed it as a 'victory'. 'Remigration has had a massive conceptual career,' Sellner wrote on X. 'Born in France, popularised in German-speaking countries, and now a buzzword from Sweden to the USA!' Last week, the US State Department sent a plan to congress that would transform the government agency that oversees immigration into an 'Office of Remigration'. Implementing 'remigration' as envisioned by extremists like Martin Sellner would involve a state either revoking or breaking its own laws around citizenship. It would also mean withdrawing from international treaties that guarantee people the right to seek asylum. This is why Germany's AfD has been labeled a right-wing extremist organisation, because its intention is to violate the country's constitution and deny citizens their most fundamental rights. Need more clarity and context on how migration is being discussed in Ireland? Check out our FactCheck Knowledge Bank for essential reads and guides to finding good information online. Visit Knowledge Bank The Journal's FactCheck is a signatory to the International Fact-Checking Network's Code of Principles. You can read it here . For information on how FactCheck works, what the verdicts mean, and how you can take part, check out our Reader's Guide here . You can read about the team of editors and reporters who work on the factchecks here . Readers like you are keeping these stories free for everyone... It is vital that we surface facts from noise. Articles like this one brings you clarity, transparency and balance so you can make well-informed decisions. We set up FactCheck in 2016 to proactively expose false or misleading information, but to continue to deliver on this mission we need your support. Over 5,000 readers like you support us. If you can, please consider setting up a monthly payment or making a once-off donation to keep news free to everyone. Learn More Support The Journal