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Death Of Val Byrne, Formerly Of Thurles, Co. Tipperary.

It was with a great sadness that we learned of the death, yesterday Friday 22nd May 2026, of Mrs Val Byrne (née Burke), Ballinteer, Co. Dublin and formerly of Thurles, Co. Tipperary.

Pre-deceased by her husband John; Mrs Byrne passed away peacefully, while in the care of staff at St. James’s Hospital, James’s Street, Dublin 8.

Her passing is most deeply regretted, sadly missed and lovingly remembered by her sorrowing family; loving daughter Tina, nieces Lena, Mary, Catherine and husband Dave, nephews Larry and Tommy, grandnieces Jessie and Kate, Jessie’s partner Shane, grandnephew Seb, extended relatives, neighbours and friends.

Requiescat in Pace.

Funeral Arrangements.

The earthly remains of Mrs Byrne, will be received into the Church of St. John the Evangelist, Ballinteer Avenue, Ballinteer, Dublin 16, (Eircode D16 VK27), to repose for Requiem Mass on Wednesday morning May 27th at 10:00am, followed by a Service of Cremation, immediately afterwards, in Mount Jerome Crematorium, 158 Harold’s Cross Road, Harold’s Cross, Dublin, (Eircode D6W HY98).

For those persons who would wish to attend Requiem Mass for Mrs Byrne, but for reasons cannot, same can be viewed streamed live online, HERE.

The extended Byrne and Burke families wish to express their appreciation for your understanding at this difficult time, and have made arrangements for those persons wishing to send messages of condolence, to use the link shown, HERE.

Note Please: Family flowers only please. Donations in lieu, if desired, to NSPCA in memory of Mrs Val Byrne (née Burke), Ballinteer, Co. Dublin.

Funeral Details Announced For Liz Howard, Former Camogie Association President.

Funeral arrangements have now been confirmed for Ms Liz Howard, formerly of Glasnevin, Dublin and Newtown, Nenagh, Co. Tipperary, who passed away peacefully at the Mater Hospital in Dublin on Thursday last, May 21st, 2026.

Ms Howard was widely known and deeply respected for her lifelong dedication to Camogie and the GAA. A former President of the Camogie Association and former PRO of Tipperary GAA, she made an outstanding contribution to Irish sport as a player, administrator, analyst and passionate supporter. Born in Carrick-on-Suir, Ms Howard also lived in Clare and Dublin, but always regarded Newtown, Nenagh as home. Outside of sport, she enjoyed a distinguished career with Aer Lingus, later specialising in Human Resource Management.

Predeceased by her parents Garrett and Josephine, her sister Kathleen and her baby sister Elizabeth, Ms Howard will be sadly missed by her sisters Pat (O’Driscoll), Jo (Needham) and Ann (O’Meara), her brother Gary, sister-in-law Aileen, brother-in-law Tommy, nieces, nephews, grandnieces, grandnephews, cousins, relatives, neighbours and many friends.

Her funeral will arrive on Monday next, May 25th, to the Church of the Holy Spirit, Youghalarra, Newtown, Nenagh, (Eircode E45 HD98), to repose for Funeral Mass at 11:00am, followed by interment in Youghalarra Cemetery, Co. Tipperary.

Requiem Mass will be available to view online via the parish webstream, HERE.

The extended Howard family wish to express their appreciation for your understanding at this difficult time, and have made arrangements for those persons wishing to send messages of condolence, to use the link shown HERE.

Note Please: Family flowers only. Donations in lieu, if desired, may be made to the Irish Kidney Association.
Family homes to remain private, in accordance with Ms Howard’s wishes.

Ms Howard family have also expressed their gratitude to Professor Yvonne O’Meara and her team, along with all the staff at the Mater Hospital, for the care and kindness shown to Ms Howard.

Thurles Towns Quarter-Mile Obstacle Course.

Thurles Quarter-Mile Obstacle Course: Where Bollards Go To Die & Traffic Lights Go To Retire.

In a town famous for heritage, history and sturdy stonework, it is reassuring to see that the local Municipal District Council is doing its best to add a modern attraction; a quarter-mile stretch of road furniture carnage.

Weigh, Hey and Up She Rises for the second time in 6 weeks.

Above we have the full civic experience. Silver bollards, nobly installed to protect pedestrians, are flattened by vehicles, replaced lovingly back into the exact same spot, and then, in a plot twist visible from space, flattened again. One might call it maintenance. Others might call it a subscription service for bollards.

Pedestrian lights on sabbatical.

Meanwhile, two pedestrian crossings, at Cathedral Street and Parnell Street, have been non-functional for over six weeks after being struck by high sided vehicles. Six weeks is a long time in traffic-light years. By now, those lights are not just broken; they are on sabbatical. Perhaps they are taking time out to reflect on their career choices, or waiting for a council committee to confirm that pedestrians do, in fact, still exist in Thurles.

Cork is that way… or is it!

The road signs are putting in an equally spirited performance, (See above). Some are totally missing, (Kickham Street), some are pointing the wrong way, and others seem to have adopted a more philosophical approach to navigation: “Cork is that way… probably.” A driver looking for Cashel, Cork, the Horse and Jockey, or basic municipal competence may need not a map, but a medium.

All of this is squeezed into a stretch of roughly a quarter of a mile (402 metres); a compact showcase of avoidable repairs, repeat damage and public money being sent out to do laps. The council’s own roads services information says local authorities deal with road surface maintenance and road markings, while road signs are listed among roads and transport services provided and maintained by local authorities. The relevant Thurles Municipal District office also lists roads contact arrangements, including an out-of-hours roads number.

Which makes the current scene all the more impressive. It is not neglect in one location. It is neglect with choreography. Bollard down, bollard up, bollard down again. Crossing broken, still broken, somehow even more broken. Sign missing, sign twisted, sign auditioning for interpretive dance.

Perhaps there is a master plan. Perhaps the district is trialling a new “guess-your-own-junction” traffic system. Perhaps the bollards are part of a renewable metal initiative: install, destroy, invoice, repeat. Perhaps the non-working crossings are intended to encourage eye contact between pedestrians and motorists, in the same way cliff edges encourage balance.

But to the ordinary resident, pedestrian, driver, parent, visitor or ratepayer, it looks rather simpler: a dangerous, shabby and expensive mess being allowed to continue in plain sight.

Thurles deserves better than road safety by “shrug”. It deserves crossings that work, signs that point where they are meant to, and bollards that are not repeatedly sacrificed like shiny stainless-steel offerings to the gods of poor planning.

At this stage, the council should either fix the problem properly or install a tourist information plaque:

“Welcome to Thurles Municipal Money-Go-Round:
Please mind the bollards. They won’t be here long.”

Selective Outrage – Why Sinn Féin Consistently Struggles To Condemn Terrorism.

Sinn Féin is very quick to accuse Israel of “genocide”, but far less willing to honestly talk about Hamas using civilians, including women and children, as human shields or operating from underground tunnels in densely populated civilian areas. Even international bodies and Western governments have criticised Hamas for storing weapons near schools and hospitals or firing rockets from civilian locations.
At the same time, human rights organisations have also argued that Israel still has legal obligations to protect civilians regardless of Hamas’s actions, which to be fair has been extremly targeted to limit civilian deaths.

Both things can be true at once: Hamas can be guilty of terrorist tactics, and innocent Palestinians can still suffer terribly because of Israel’s military response.

The problem is that Sinn Féin often speaks about this conflict in a completely one-sided way. They condemn Israel loudly and constantly, but rarely apply the same moral standards to Hamas.

That raises an obvious question: Why?

The answer may lie closer to home. Sinn Féin has spent decades defending or justifying the IRA campaign by calling it “war” or “armed struggle” instead of “terrorism“. The party still struggles to give a clear moral condemnation of IRA violence, because doing so would undermine a central part of its political identity. Even today, senior republican figures continue to argue there was “no alternative” to the IRA campaign.

That creates a serious credibility problem. A movement that spent years defending bombings, shootings and civilian deaths as part of a “legitimate struggle” naturally finds it difficult to speak honestly about terrorist methods used by groups abroad. There is an obvious emotional and political overlap between the language used to defend the IRA in the past and the language now used to excuse or downplay Hamas.
For many republicans, admitting that the IRA committed terrorism would come with a huge psychological cost. It would mean accepting that innocent people were murdered in the name of politics and that many supporters defended or excused those actions at the time.
That is uncomfortable. So instead, a narrative is maintained, where the IRA were simply freedom fighters reacting to oppression and where the moral responsibility always lies elsewhere.

You can see echoes of that same thinking in discussions about Hamas. Violence against civilians becomes “resistance”. Terrorism becomes “armed struggle”. Murder becomes “context”.

None of this means every Sinn Féin voter supports Hamas or supported every IRA action. Many ordinary voters support Sinn Féin today because of housing, healthcare, inequality or support for Irish unity by peaceful means. But the party leadership under Mary Lou McDonald still depends heavily on a historical narrative that avoids a full moral reckoning with the IRA campaign.
That is why Sinn Féin can speak endlessly about Israeli wrongdoing, while appearing deeply uncomfortable discussing Hamas atrocities in equally direct language.

A serious and balanced position would recognise all innocent victims equally. It should be possible to say:
Israeli civilians murdered by Hamas matter.
Palestinian civilians killed in Gaza matter.
Hamas using civilian areas for military purposes is wrong.
Collective punishment and indiscriminate killing are wrong.
Terrorism is wrong, whether it happens in Belfast, London, Tel Aviv or Gaza.

But Sinn Féin often appears selective in its outrage. And many people notice that the party’s attitude to groups like Hamas, mirrors the same moral ambiguity it still shows towards the IRA.
That is why critics believe Sinn Féin’s position is not really based on universal human rights principles, but on an old political worldview, where violence carried out by movements seen as “anti-colonial”, is treated more sympathetically than violence carried out by others.

Shannon Pipeline Project Moves Forward, Despite Strong Tipperary Opposition.

Lough Derg shore line.

The controversial Water Supply Project for the Eastern and Midlands Region has cleared another major hurdle, after its business case was approved by the Uisce Éireann board and noted by Government.

The decision allows the project, which would take water from the River Shannon at Parteen Basin and pipe it towards the Greater Dublin Area, to move into its next phase, including procurement and tendering. Uisce Éireann says the scheme is needed to reduce the east coast’s dependence on the River Liffey and to provide a more secure water supply for up to half the State’s population.

Under the proposal, water would be abstracted from the lower Shannon, treated near Birdhill in Co Tipperary, and then transported through Tipperary, Offaly and Kildare to Peamount in Dublin. Uisce Éireann says the project would involve taking a maximum of 2% of the long-term average flow at Parteen Basin and insists its studies show no negative impact on Shannon water levels or water quality.

However, the plan has faced sustained opposition across Co Tipperary and the wider Shannon region. Local concerns centre on the principle of removing water from the Shannon system to serve the east of the country, with opponents questioning whether enough has been done to protect Lough Derg, the Lower Shannon, wildlife habitats, farming communities and local water needs. Others argue that Dublin’s supply problems should be tackled first through leak reduction, conservation and upgrades to existing infrastructure before a multi-billion euro pipeline is advanced.

There are also concerns among landowners along the proposed route, including disruption during construction, compulsory purchase issues, long-term restrictions on land use and the scale of works required for a 170km pipeline. Critics in Tipperary have repeatedly described the project as one that asks rural communities to carry the environmental and construction burden for the benefit of the capital.

Uisce Éireann has defended the scheme as essential national infrastructure. It says the project would not only serve Dublin, Meath, Kildare and Wicklow, but could also create a treated-water “spine” with future offtakes for communities in Tipperary, Offaly and Westmeath.

Gary Gibson, Senior Programme Manager with the Water Supply Project Eastern and Midlands Region, states that the utility is already seeking contractors as the project progresses. If planning is secured, Uisce Éireann has previously indicated that construction could begin in 2028 and take around five years to complete.