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Tag: Ireland

  • Rosie O’Donnell quietly returns to US after abandoning country over Trump’s victory

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    After a self-imposed political exile to Ireland after President Donald Trump’s re-election, Rosie O’Donnell quietly returned to the United States.

    During an interview with Chris Cuomo on his new show, “SiriusXM’s Cuomo Mornings,” the 63-year-old actress revealed she recently returned to the country to visit her family. The actress moved to Ireland with her teenage daughter in January 2025, just prior to President Trump’s second inauguration. 

    “I was recently home for two weeks, and I did not really tell anyone,” she told Cuomo. “I just went to see my family. I wanted to see how hard it would be for me to get in and out of the country. I wanted to feel what it felt like. I wanted to hold my children again. And I hadn’t been home in over a year.”

    She then shared that she “wanted to make sure that it was safe” for her and her daughter to come back over the summer so that they could be with family during her break from school.

    O’Donnell said she recently returned to the U.S. without telling anyone. (Dave Benett/Getty Images)

    HOLLYWOOD ELITES REMAIN IN AMERICA DESPITE PLEDGING TO LEAVE AFTER TRUMP’S ELECTION IN 2016

    When speaking to Cuomo, she went on to discuss how America “feels like a very different country” to her than when she lived here because she hasn’t “been watching the news” or keeping up with “American culture television” while living in Ireland.

    “I’ve been in a place where celebrity worship does not exist,” she explained. “I’ve been in a place where there’s more balance to the news. There’s more balance to life. It’s not everyone trying to get more, more, more. It’s a very different culture. And I felt the United States in a completely different way than I ever had before I left.”

    O’Donnell claimed she doesn’t “regret leaving at all” and feels she did “what I needed to do to save myself, my child and my sanity.”

    Rosie O'Donnell in front of the Sydney Opera House in October 2025.

    O’Donnell added that she doesn’t regret moving to Ireland. (Brendon Thorne/Getty Images for Tinderbox Productions)

    ROSIE O’DONNELL SAYS DAUGHTER BLAMES TRUMP FOR FORCING THEIR FAMILY’S MOVE OUT OF AMERICA

    “And I’m very happy that I’m not in the midst of it there because the energy that I felt while in the United States was — if I could use the most simple word I can think of — it was scary,” she added. “There’s a feeling that something is really wrong, and no one is doing anything about it.”

    The bad blood between O’Donnell and President Trump goes back 20 years, when she criticized him while on “The View.” They continued to throw jabs at each other over the years, with O’Donnell telling the Irish radio show “Sunday with Miriam,” “He uses me as a punching bag and a way to sort of rile his base.”

    After announcing she had moved to Ireland, the star shared she was applying for Irish citizenship during an interview with the U.K.’s Daily Telegraph in October 2025.

    “What great news for America!” White House spokesperson Abigail Jackson told Fox News Digital about the news at the time.

    Rosie O'Donnell and Donald Trump

    Rosie O’Donnell and Donald Trump (Getty Images)

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    President Trump had previously threatened to revoke O’Donnell’s American citizenship twice before through posts on Truth Social.

    “Because of the fact that Rosie O’Donnell is not in the best interests of our Great Country, I am giving serious consideration to taking away her Citizenship,” he wrote in July 2025. “She is a Threat to Humanity, and should remain in the wonderful Country of Ireland, if they want her. GOD BLESS AMERICA!”

    He later renewed the threats in September 2025, writing, “She is not a Great American and is, in my opinion, incapable of being so!”

    O’Donnell fired back against the president’s threats, using the Constitution as her defense against the President.

    A split of Rosie O'Donnell and Donald Trump

    President Trump threatened to revoke O’Donnell’s citizenship. (Getty Images)

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    “He can’t do that because it’s against the Constitution, and even the Supreme Court has not given him the right to do that. … He’s not allowed to do that. The only way you’re allowed to take away someone’s citizenship is if they renounce it themselves, and I will never renounce my American citizenship,” the “Now and Then” star said. “I am a very proud citizen of the United States.

    “I am also getting my citizenship here so I can have dual citizenship in Ireland and the United States because I enjoy living here,” she added. “It’s very peaceful. I love the politics of the country. I love the people and their generous hearts and spirit. And it’s been very good for my daughter. But I still want to maintain my citizenship in the United States. My children are there. I will be there visiting and go to see them. And I have the freedom to do that, as does every American citizen.”

    Under the United States Constitution, a president does not have the power to strip the citizenship of someone born in the country, meaning since O’Donnell was born in New York, her citizenship is protected by the 14th Amendment.

    Rosie O'Donnell walked back comments about Minneapolis shooter

    Rosie O’Donnell has been one of President Donald Trump’s most prominent critics in the entertainment industry. (Chelsea Guglielmino/Getty Images)

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  • Entain Launches Racing Bet Builder to Allow Fans to Make Horseracing Parlays

    Gaming and betting giant Entain has unveiled a revolutionary new horseracing product that will change how fans of the sport interact with the sector. The new product will allow racing fans to create horseracing parlays exclusively on the operator’s Ladbrokes and Coral brands.

    Entain Delivers an Exciting New Product

    In its official announcement, Entain described its new “Racing Bet Builder” product as a “first-of-its-kind innovation.” The new product will be available to players of Ladbrokes and Coral in the UK and Ireland and will be accessible through their online sportsbooks, as well as at retail betting locations.

    Entain elaborated that the Racing Bet Builder will allow users to combine multiple selections from the same event into a single wager. This will allow them to create a broader, personalized bet where they choose the outcomes they wish to bet on, rather than relying on pre-set accumulators.

    Entain acknowledged that the release of this new product responds to the rapidly growing popularity of parlay products. The operator said that these types of bets have been increasingly popular among sports fans and are likely to appeal to horseracing enthusiasts too due to the simplicity, flexibility, personalization, and control they offer.

    The gaming company teased that its Racing Bet Builder will sport a bespoke interface and will allow players to build personalized bets that combine markets such as win, place in various positions, and winning distance.

    Horseracing parlays can reach odds of up to 100,000/1, potentially turning even small wagers into huge paydays.

    Capturing the Beauty of Racing and Betting

    Jamie Crossfield, Entain UK’s sportsbook director, commented on the launch of the new product, saying that it seeks to emphasize the beauty in the variety of outcomes.

    The beauty of race day is the variety of outcomes – from underdog stories to photo finishes. Racing Bet Builder captures that excitement and gives customers more freedom to back their instincts. It’s a smarter, more satisfying way to bet on racing.

    Jamie Crossfield, sportsbook director, Entain UK

    The new product is already available across Coral and Ladbrokes’ online sportsbooks, as well as at retail shops and via in-shop self-service betting terminals.

    Entain concluded that players who wish to take their excitement even further can combine Racing Bet Builder selections with other sports markets through Bet Builder+.

    Angel Hristov

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  • UK Prosecutors Try to Reinstate Terrorism Charge Against Kneecap Rapper

    LONDON, Jan 14 (Reuters) – British prosecutors sought to reinstate a ‌terrorism ​charge against a member of ‌Irish rap group Kneecap on Wednesday for displaying a flag of Iran-backed ​Lebanese militia Hezbollah at a London gig, after a court threw out the case last year.

    Liam Óg Ó ‍hAnnaidh, whose stage name is Mo ​Chara, was accused of having waved the flag of the banned militant group Hezbollah during a ​November 2024 ⁠gig.

    The charge was thrown out in September after a court ruled it had originally been brought without the permission of the Director of Public Prosecutions and the Attorney General, and also one day outside the six-month statutory limit.

    But the Crown Prosecution Service said it would challenge the ruling ‌and its lawyer Paul Jarvis told London’s High Court on Wednesday that permission was only required ​by ‌the time Ó hAnnaidh first ‍appeared in ⁠court, meaning the case can proceed.

    Kneecap – known for their politically charged lyrics and support for the Palestinian cause – have said the case is an attempt to distract from what they described as British complicity in Israel’s genocide in Gaza. Israel strongly denies committing a genocide in the tiny coastal territory.

    J.J. Ó Dochartaigh, who goes by DJ Próvaí, was in court but Ó hAnnaidh was not required to attend and was not ​present.

    KNEECAP SAYS PROSECUTION A DISTRACTION

    Ó hAnnaidh was charged in May with displaying the Hezbollah flag in such a way that aroused reasonable suspicion that he supported the banned group, after footage emerged of him holding the flag on stage while saying “Up Hamas, up Hezbollah”.

    Kneecap have previously said the flag was thrown on stage during their performance and that they “do not, and have never, supported Hamas or Hezbollah”.

    The group, who rap about Irish identity and support the republican cause of uniting Northern Ireland with the Republic of Ireland, have become increasingly vocal about the war in Gaza, particularly after Ó hAnnaidh was charged ​in May.

    During their performance at June’s Glastonbury Festival in England, Ó hAnnaidh accused Israel of committing war crimes, after Kneecap displayed pro-Palestinian messages during their set at the Coachella Festival in California in April.

    Kneecap have since been banned from Hungary and Canada, also cancelling ​a tour of the United States due to a clash with Ó hAnnaidh’s court appearances.

    (Reporting by Sam TobinEditing by Gareth Jones)

    Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

    Photos You Should See – January 2026

    Reuters

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  • Brickbat: Irish Eyes Are Prying

    Ireland Deputy Prime Minister Simon Harris says that when his country holds the presidency of the European Union next year, it will lead a push for new rules that would require people to verify their identity before using social media across the E.U. Harris says this will reduce anonymous online abuse, bots, and the spread of false information. He said it could also include age checks to keep young users from viewing content regulators say they shouldn’t. Critics say the plan could deal a big blow to user privacy.

    The post Brickbat: Irish Eyes Are Prying appeared first on Reason.com.

    Charles Oliver

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  • Irish PM Aims for Deeper Trade Talks With China in Beijing

    BEIJING, Jan 6 (Reuters) – Ireland’s Prime Minister ‌Micheal ​Martin is set to ‌have more in-depth talks on trade with China’s No. 2 official ​on Tuesday, working to strengthen strategic ties with the world’s second-largest economy amid frosty China-European ‍Union relations.

    Martin’s scheduled meeting with ​Chinese Premier Li Qiang forms part of his five-day trip that he said ​would include “a ⁠significant economic dimension”, a clip posted on the Irish Taoiseach’s X handle on Monday evening showed.

    The Irish leader was seen in the clip telling media that he would discuss with Li in “greater detail” trade issues such as beef exports and China’s recently ‌imposed tariffs on dairy, a day after a summit with Chinese President Xi Jinping.

    “I ​discussed obviously ‌the situation in terms ‍of Irish ⁠beef exports into China, the tariff situation in respect of dairy products,” Martin said, adding that Xi “undertook to engage with Chinese officials in respect of those specific issues.”

    Martin described his meeting with Xi on Monday as a “warm and constructive engagement”, covering a range of issues including bilateral and EU-China ties.

    “On a broader level, I think the President was keen that ​Europe and China would have a broader framework to govern trade into the future,” he said.

    Xi had told Martin during the meeting that China and the EU should “bear the long-term picture in mind”, according to state news agency Xinhua.

    Ties between China and the EU have been tense since the EU imposed levies on Chinese electric vehicle imports in 2024. China has since retaliated with a series of measures including the latest tariffs on EU dairy products.

    Last week, China also set import quotas and additional tariffs on beef imports ​from this year, a move affecting global exporters of the meat into the Asian country.

    The first Taoiseach to visit China since 2012, Martin has recently downplayed the Irish intelligence agency’s portrayal of China as a “hostile state actor”, ​preferring instead to adopt a long-term and strategic understanding of China.

    (Reporting by Liz Lee; Editing by Shri Navaratnam)

    Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

    Photos You Should See – December 2025

    Reuters

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  • China Seeks Closer Ties With Ireland, Xi Tells Martin in Beijing

    BEIJING, Jan 5 (Reuters) – ‌China ​is ready ‌to strengthen strategic communication ​with Ireland and expand practical ‍cooperation, while aiming ​to achieve mutually ​beneficial ⁠results, Chinese President Xi Jinping told Irish Prime Minister Micheal Martin on Monday.

    Xi did not ‌elaborate on what cooperation China ​was interested ‌to further ‍in his ⁠opening remarks at their meeting held at the Great Hall of the People, but he emphasised mutual respect ​and achieving win-win outcomes as “valuable experiences for the long-term, stable development of China-Ireland ties”.

    Martin, the first Irish Taoiseach to visit Beijing in 14 years, said that Ireland recognises China’s “indispensable role” in ​the world, underlining China’s peacekeeping efforts, and stressed Ireland’s stance on open trade.

    (Reporting ​by Liz Lee; Editing by Christian Schmollinger)

    Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

    Photos You Should See – December 2025

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  • Irish Player Wins $20M EuroMillions Jackpot

    Ireland’s National Lottery has crowned a new victor of a life-changing seven-figure prize, confirming that a player has succeeded in correctly matching all lucky numbers to win some EUR 17 million (approximately $20 million).

    The Biggest Lottery Win in Ireland in a While

    In its official announcement, the National Lottery noted that the prize went to one extremely lucky player from Cavan in the Ulster region. While the $20 million EuroMillions jackpot is a far shot from the EUR 250 million jackpot ($293 million) the lottery awarded last June, it is still a significant prize that is certain to change the winner’s life for good.

    The winning numbers for the recent EuroMillions drawing were 7, 25, 30, 37, and 41. The lucky stars, on the other hand, were 5 and 11.

    Officials hailed the win, with Darragh O’Dwyer, a spokesperson for the National Lottery, celebrating the occasion. O’Dwyer cheered the winner on securing such a fantastic prize, saying that it will be a “huge Christmas surprise” for them.

    As of the time of this writing, however, the winner has yet to come forward. O’Dwyer encouraged all players from the Cavan area to check their tickets.

    We’re asking all Cavan players to check their tickets very carefully and, if you are the winner, sign the back of your ticket and keep it safe. Our claims team is ready to guide you through the claiming process, and we’ll announce the store location on Tuesday.

    Darragh O’Dwyer

    Players Across the Sea Win Big

    In the meantime, players in the US just made history after winning two Mega Millions prizes within a few days from one another. The first was a spectacular $980 million jackpot that went to a player from Georgia, while the one to follow saw a player in New Jersey scoop up $90 million from the same game.

    After a quite busy Mega Millions season, all eyes seem glued on Powerball and the growing $1.1 billion jackpot. The most recent drawing saw the action intensify as dozens of players missed the game’s top prize by a single number.

    In other jackpot news, the California Lottery announced that five players in the state have won prizes of $1 million from scratch-off tickets. These included an incredibly lucky woman from Compton, who won her prize a day before her birthday.

    Fiona Simmons

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  • Irish Minister Defends ‘Limited’ Trade Curbs on Israeli Settlements

    By John O’Donnell and Padraic Halpin

    DUBLIN, Dec 12 (Reuters) – Ireland’s planned curbs on trade with Israeli settlements ‌will ​be limited strictly to goods, a minister told Reuters, offering ‌the first clear signal on the scope of the contested legislation and rejecting accusations that the country is antisemitic.

    Ireland has been preparing ​a law to curb trade with settlements in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, facing pressure at home to widen the scope of the ban from goods to services, while Israel and the United States want ‍the bill scrapped.

    Ireland has been one of the European ​Union’s most outspoken critics of Israel’s assault in Gaza, which authorities in the Palestinian enclave say has killed more than 67,000 people.

    ‘EXTREMELY LIMITED MEASURE’, SAYS MINISTER

    But Thomas Byrne, Ireland’s Minister of State for ​European Affairs and Defence, ⁠told Reuters that the bill is limited to the import of goods and that it would not become law this year.

    “It’s an extremely limited measure, which would prohibit imports of goods from illegally-occupied territories,” he said in an interview. “Similar measures have already been brought in in a number of European countries.”

    Byrne’s comments give insight into Dublin’s thinking as Ireland seeks to deflect pressure, including from U.S. companies based in the country, to soften its criticism of Israel. Ireland’s bill is expected to help shape how other European nations launch similar ‌curbs on trade with Israeli settlements.

    The Irish government has signalled the bill is imminent but has yet to publicly announce its scope.

    Byrne declined to say when it would be ​sent ‌to parliament, as the government weighs the ‍bill’s implications. “It’s certainly not going to ⁠be implemented this year,” he said.

    Earlier this year, sources told Reuters that the government intended to blunt the law, curbing its scope to just a limited trade of goods, such as dried fruit, and not services.

    That more ambitious move could have entangled companies in technology and other industries in Ireland doing business in Israel. Business lobby groups had sought to kill the idea.

    Limiting the bill to goods only would catch just a handful of products imported from Israeli-occupied territories such as fruit that are worth just 200,000 euros ($234,660) a year.

    LAWMAKER BLACK SAYS SHE STILL WANTS SERVICES BAN

    Most of the international community considers Israeli settlements in the West Bank illegal under international law.

    Israel disputes this, citing historical and biblical ties to the area. It says the settlements provide strategic depth and security.

    On Gaza, Israel says it acted in ​self-defence following the deadly October 7, 2023, Hamas attack that killed 1,200 people and resulted in 251 hostages, according to Israeli tallies. Israel has repeatedly said it is committed to international law and tries to minimize harm to the civilian population of Gaza.

    Frances Black, the lawmaker who proposed the Irish bill, told Reuters she would push to include a ban on services. “It will take a lot of work in the new year to get services included but that’s exactly what I’m prepared to do.”

    Byrne also defended Ireland’s government, after Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Saar recently posted a video online where he accused the Irish government of having an “antisemitic nature”.

    Saar said the Irish government’s response had been slow to a local proposal to rename a park bearing the name of Chaim Herzog, the former president of Israel who was raised in Dublin.

    Irish ministers had roundly criticised the idea and Dublin City Council has since delayed a decision on whether to remove the name.

    U.S. senator Lindsey Graham had also labelled Ireland a “cesspool of antisemitism”.

    EU LAWMAKER REJECTS ANTISEMITISM CHARGE AS ‘NONSENSE’

    “I reject outright that the country is in any way antisemitic,” said Byrne. “We’re deeply conscious of the ​contribution that Jewish people have made in Ireland.”

    Ireland’s relations with Israel have been fraught. Last December, Israel shut its embassy in Dublin amid a row over Ireland’s criticism of its war in Gaza, including Ireland’s recognition of a Palestinian state last year.

    Barry Andrews, an Irish member of the European parliament, urged Dublin to go ahead with its occupied territories bill. “Claims that Ireland is antisemitic are nonsense,” he said. Ireland has nothing to fear. We are no longer the only ones doing this.”

    On Wednesday, ​Ireland’s central bank governor Gabriel Makhlouf was forced to abandon a public speech in Dublin by pro-Palestinian protesters objecting to the central bank’s earlier role in the sale of Israeli bonds.

    (Additional reporting by Conor Humphries, Editing by William Maclean)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

    Photos You Should See – December 2025

    Reuters

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  • Former AP photographer’s vintage images of Ireland capture a world before it disappeared

    BERLIN (AP) — Rare photographs of Ireland from 1963 show a world about to disappear, a country before it took its first steps toward modernity.

    Black and white images captured by a young German photographer, Diether Endlicher — who later spent four decades covering the Olympics and major global events for The Associated Press — are being shown at the Irish embassy in Berlin, where Endlicher, now 85, was honored last weekend for his role in documenting moments of Irish life from another era.

    The photos feature boatmen, fishermen, workmen, herders taking their animals to markets, women transporting milk by donkey cart, a funeral, devout worshippers praying to relics in stone-walled fields, ruined abbeys, dramatic landscapes, children looking at TVs through a shop window, an evocation of a time before modern conveniences arrived to convert all.

    The pictures lay unseen and forgotten in Endlicher’s attic until recently, when he rediscovered them after deciding to go through his archive. He scanned the now 62-year-old negatives and contacted the embassy to see if there was any interest. There was.

    Maeve Collins, the Irish ambassador to Germany, praised the photographs’ “beautiful detail” and historical importance.

    “They bring a vivid expression to the lived experience of people on the west coast of Ireland in the early 1960s,” she said.

    Photos are record of a road trip

    Endlicher was 22 when he traveled with a friend from Germany to the west coast of Ireland in a tiny Fiat 500, a two-door bubble car known as the “Bambino” that was not designed for road trips. He carried a Leica M2 and three lenses to places where few had seen cameras before.

    Once they got to Ireland’s west coast, they found a man transporting turf to Inishmaan, one of the Aran Islands in Galway Bay, in a large sailing vessel with no motor. They decided to go with him and Endlicher took photos as they went.

    “I thought we’d never arrive there because the wind was not so strong. The boat traveled very slow,” Endlicher told the AP. “It was an interesting trip there and then when we landed on Inishmaan, that was a different world.”

    He saw fishermen at work, and peasants threshing barley by beating stalks on stones. Their clothes were home-spun from tweed. Electricity hadn’t reached the island. Turf from the mainland was used for heating and cooking.

    Many of the locals made clear they didn’t want their photos taken. The Aran Islands are still part of the Gaeltacht, the Irish-speaking area, and on Inishmaan at the time, most did not speak any English.

    “Inishmaan was a different world, even from the mainland,” Endlicher said. “Europe was very different then and so the difference between Ireland and Europe, mainland European countries was not so big. The agriculture was about the same. Farmers worked with horses. The only thing that was different in Ireland was donkeys. There were many donkeys at the time.”

    Return to work for the AP

    Endlicher returned to Ireland in 1984 to cover U.S. President Ronald Reagan’s visit for the AP. He worked for the news agency from 1965 to 2007.

    “I covered 29 Olympics altogether, Winter and Summer Olympics. I covered many Winter Olympics. As a Bavarian, I almost grew up on skis,” said Endlicher, who would ski the slopes before big races to find the best positions for photos.

    Endlicher was at the 1972 Olympics in Munich where 11 Israeli athletes and coaches were killed after being targeted by the Palestinian group Black September.

    He traveled to Israel for news assignments in the 1980s and 90s and did several stints in Gaza, where he saw the first intifada, a Palestinian uprising against Israel’s military occupation of the West Bank and Gaza.

    He remembers Israeli soldiers forcing him to hand over his film after he took photos of them beating a child who had been running with a Palestinian flag in Khan Younis, in Gaza.

    “I had no chance, I had to give them the film,” he said.

    Endlicher covered the changes unleashed by the fall of the Berlin Wall and the breakup of the Soviet Union, as well as uprisings in Georgia and Armenia.

    “I remember in Moscow, there was this uprising when the communists tried to occupy the parliament, that was after (former Russian President Boris) Yeltsin, there were a lot of shootings in Moscow,” he said. “I was undercover, under a truck, and next to me was a TV cameraman in a telephone cell, and they shot at the telephone cell and he was wounded.”

    Endlicher was also embedded with American troops during the Gulf War in 1991, and had been in Prague, Czechoslovakia for the Soviet invasion in 1968, when he relied on a taxi driver driving to and from Vienna, Austria to get his films out to be processed and transmitted.

    “He must have had some deal with the border police or the Russian army,” he said.

    Job presents dangers

    Reflecting on the dangers he faced over a 42-year career with the AP — Endlicher also previously worked for German news agency DPA – he said he believes there is a necessity to take pictures, to bear witness.

    “It’s necessary that some people are willing to take the risk. Like Anja Niedringhaus, she paid with her life,” he said of his former AP colleague who was killed in Afghanistan in 2014. “The thing is you have to be independent, I think. If you’re married and have kids, it’s a different story. If you are single and have no obligations … It’s also difficult to keep up friendships. I had also a time when the job was the most important thing to me. And I neglected some of my family life. It’s a conflict.”

    Endlicher’s son, Matthias, accompanied him to the embassy’s tribute on Saturday, and they were joined by his wife, Andrea, at the ambassador’s residence for dinner that evening.

    “I’m very happy that they saw the value of these pictures,” he said.

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  • Ronaldo set to avoid World Cup ban as FIFA confirms draw shake-up

    Cristiano Ronaldo will likely avoid missing any Portugal matches at the men’s World Cup, despite receiving a red card in a qualifier.

    Ronaldo swung an arm and struck Ireland defender Dara O’Shea with an elbow during Portugal’s 2-0 loss in Dublin earlier this month.

    FIFA published a disciplinary verdict that imposed a three-match ban, judging Ronaldo’s action to be an example of “violent conduct”.

    But two of those matches are deferred for a one-year probation period.

    Ronaldo served a mandatory one-match ban when Portugal played its final qualifying match last week, a 9-1 win over Armenia that sealed its place at the World Cup in North America and Mexico.

    FIFA cited its disciplinary rules that allowed for parts of a sanction to be probationary, though it was rare in cases of a three-match ban for two of them to be deferred.

    Draw change

    Meanwhile, FIFA announced the World Cup draw would reward the four highest-ranked teams: Spain, Argentina, France and England.

    They will be placed in separate sections of a new tennis-style seeded tournament bracket.

    Defending champion Argentina’s passage to the semifinals appears easier. (Getty Images/Soccrates: Eric Verhoeven)

    The draw procedure means the top four teams in the latest rankings will — if they finish top of their respective round-robin groups — avoid each other until the semifinals of the June 11-July 19 tournament.

    The rule aims to maintain competitive balance in the expanded 48-team format.

    At previous World Cups, the path for teams into and through the knockout phase was decided by the group in which they were drawn.

    FIFA also revealed the four pots for the final draw, which takes place on December 6 AEDT in Washington.

    The Socceroos will be drawn from pot two.

    They are the lowest-ranked team in their 12-team pot, which also includes their continental rival Japan and world number 10 Croatia.

    Forty-two teams have already qualified for the World Cup.

    The other six entries will be decided in March when European and global play-off brackets are scheduled.

    Those teams all will come out of the draw pot of lowest-ranked teams.

    AP/Reuters

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  • Paul Costelloe, Personal Designer to Princess Diana, Dies at 80

    DUBLIN (Reuters) -Irish fashion designer Paul Costelloe, personal designer to the late Princess Diana who became a fixture at London Fashion Week for four decades, has died aged 80, his family said in a statement on Saturday quoted by local media.

    Costelloe was appointed as Diana’s personal designer in 1983, shortly after establishing his own label, Paul Costelloe Collections, and their collaboration continued until her death in a car crash in Paris in 1997.

    Costelloe, who led the development of all his collections from his studio in central London, was invited to show at the city’s premier catwalk event in its inaugural year in 1984 and was there in September to present his latest spring-summer creations.

    Costelloe died peacefully surrounded by his wife and seven children in London following a short illness, the family said in the statement quoted by local media. A spokesperson for Costelloe could not immediately be reached for comment.

    Costelloe was born in Dublin in 1945, where he initially trained before moving to Paris’ revered Chambre Syndicale de la Haute Couture and then to another fashion capital, Milan, where he was designer for the luxury department store La Rinascente.

    He spent some time in New York where he established his own label before settling in London, where his partnership with Princess Diana flourished. His collections today include womenswear, menswear, bags, homeware and jewellery.

    “Paul led a remarkable life as a leading figure in Irish, UK and international fashion and business for decades. He built a hugely successful business through incredible talent, discipline, and an unwavering commitment to quality,” Ireland’s Deputy Prime Minister Simon Harris said in a statement.

    “His was and is a quite remarkable Irish success story.”

    (Reporting by Padraic Halpin. Editing by Mark Potter)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

    Photos You Should See – Nov. 2025

    Reuters

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  • Iceland Sees Security Risk, Existential Threat in Atlantic Ocean Current’s Possible Collapse

    By Alison Withers and Stine Jacobsen

    COPENHAGEN (Reuters) -Iceland has designated the potential collapse of a major Atlantic Ocean current system a national security concern and an existential threat, enabling its government to strategize for worst-case scenarios, the country’s climate minister told Reuters.

    The Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation, or AMOC, current brings warm water from the tropics northward toward the Arctic, and the flow of warm water helps keep Europe’s winters mild. 

    But as warming temperatures speed the thaw of Arctic ice and cause meltwater from Greenland’s ice sheet to pour into the ocean, scientists warn the cold freshwater could disrupt the current’s flow.

    A potential collapse of AMOC could trigger a modern-day ice age, with winter temperatures across Northern Europe plummeting to new cold extremes, bringing far more snow and ice. The AMOC has collapsed in the past – notably before the last Ice Age that ended about 12,000 years ago.

    “It is a direct threat to our national resilience and security,” Iceland Climate Minister Johann Pall Johannsson said by email. “(This) is the first time a specific climate-related phenomenon has been formally brought before the National Security Council as a potential existential threat.”

    Elevation of the issue means Iceland’s ministries will be on alert and coordinating a response, Johannsson said. The government is assessing what further research and policies are needed, with work underway on a disaster preparedness policy.

    Risks being evaluated span a range of areas, from energy and food security to infrastructure and international transportation.

    An Atlantic current collapse could have consequences far beyond Northern Europe. It could potentially destabilize longtime rainfall patterns relied upon by subsistence farmers across Africa, India and South America, according to scientists.

    It could also contribute to faster warming in Antarctica, where sea ice surrounding the southernmost continent as well as ice sheets atop it are already under threat from climate change.

    Scientists have warned that the world is underestimating the threat that an AMOC collapse could become inevitable within the next couple of decades as global temperatures keep climbing.

    The Nordic Council of Ministers funded a “Nordic Tipping Week” workshop in October with 60 experts assessing how societies might be impacted. They are finalizing recommendations from the meeting, organizers said.

    “There is tons of research on the likelihood of when exactly things are going to happen,” said Aleksi Nummelin, a physical oceanographer at the Finnish Meteorological Institute. “There is much less on what is the actual societal impact.”

    On Monday, scientists from more than 30 universities and international organizations sounded an alarm about the accelerated thawing of Earth’s glaciers, ice sheets and other frozen spaces.

    Other climate ministries and meteorological offices across Northern Europe told Reuters they are funding more research while weighing possible risks in their climate adaptation plans.

    Ireland’s weather service said its scientists briefed the country’s prime minister last year and a parliamentary committee last month. Norway’s environment ministry said it was “seeking to deepen our understanding of the issue through new research” before determining whether to classify AMOC as a security risk.

    Britain said it was following scientific reports that suggested an abrupt collapse was unlikely during this century, while directing more than 81 million pounds into research to understand when the Earth’s climate systems might be pushed to a point of no return.

    “The science is evolving quite rapidly and time is running out to do anything about it because the tipping point may well be quite close,” said oceanographer and climatologist Stefan Rahmstorf from Germany’s Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research. 

    Iceland is not taking any chances, as the pace of warming speeds up and greenhouse gas emissions continue to rise. 

    “Sea ice could affect marine transport; extreme weather could severely affect our capabilities to maintain any agriculture and fisheries, which are central to our economy and food systems,” Johannsson said.

    “We cannot afford to wait for definitive, long-term research before acting.”

    (Reporting by Ali Withers and Stine Jacobsen in Copenhagen; Editing by Katy Daigle and David Gregorio)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

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  • Opinion | When Irish Eyes Are Glaring

    Tensions with the U.S. will heighten under the new left-wing president.

    Robert C. O’Brien

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  • Taxes, talent add to draw for fintechs to expand AI ops in Ireland 

    At least six fintechs have said over the past five months that they will expand their AI and fintech operations in Ireland.  In fact, more than 430 companies have chosen to make Ireland their gateway to Europe in the past decade, including CRM service provider Zendesk and $371 billion State Street Bank. According to Ireland […]

    Vaidik Trivedi

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  • Egypt Opens Colossal New Antiquities Museum After Two-Decade Wait

    CAIRO (Reuters) -Prime ministers, presidents and royalty descended on Cairo on Saturday to attend the spectacle-laden inauguration of a sprawling new museum built near the Pyramids to house one of the world’s richest collections of antiquities.  

    The inauguration of the Grand Egyptian Museum, or GEM, marks the end of a two-decade construction effort hampered by the Arab Spring uprisings, pandemic and wars in neighbouring countries. 

    “We’ve all dreamed of this project and whether it would really come true,” Prime Minister Mostafa Madbouly told a press conference, calling the museum a “gift from Egypt to the whole world from a country whose history goes back more than 7,000 years.”

    Spectators including President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi gathered late on Saturday before an enormous screen outside the museum, which projected images of the country’s most famous cultural sites as dancers in glittering pharaonic-style garb waved glowing orbs and scepters. 

    They were accompanied by Egyptian pop stars and an international orchestra decked out in white beneath a sky lit with lasers, fireworks and hovering lights that formed into moving hieroglyphics.

    By opening the museum, Egypt was “writing a new chapter in the story of this ancient nation’s present and future,” Sisi said at the opening.  

    The audience included German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier, Dutch Prime Minister Dick Schoof, Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban, Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, Democratic Republic of Congo President Felix Tshisekedi, and the crown princes of Oman and Bahrain. 

    The museum’s most heavily promoted attraction is the expansive collection of treasures from Tutankhamun’s tomb, uncovered in 1922, including the boy-king’s golden burial mask, throne and sarcophagus, and thousands of other objects. 

    A colossal statue of Ramses II that sat for decades in a downtown Cairo square bearing the pharaoh’s name now adorns the grand entry hall. 

    The complex’s sleek design evoking the Pyramids cuts a marked contrast to the dusty and often outmoded displays in the neoclassical Egyptian Museum that opened over a century ago in central Cairo overlooking Tahrir Square.

    The old museum suffered indignities in recent years, including the looting of several display cases during Egypt’s 2011 uprising, when antiquities theft was rife.

    In 2014, the beard of Tutankhamun’s burial mask broke off when workers were changing the lights in the display case, then clumsily glued back on. The following year the mask was more properly restored and put back on display. 

    Officials hope the new museum can end a perception fueled by such events that Egypt has been remiss in caring for its priceless treasures, and add weight to its claims for Egyptian objects held in museums abroad to be returned. 

    “Is it a national shrine or a global showcase? A gesture of cultural sovereignty or a tool of soft power?” read an article in a special edition of state-run Al-Ahram Weekly devoted to the museum, which it called “a philosophy as much as it is a building.”

    “The GEM is not a replica of the Louvre or the British Museum. It is Egypt’s response to both. Those museums were born of empire; this one is born of authenticity.” 

    The museum’s more than $1 billion price tag was funded in large part by Japanese development loans. Designed by an Irish firm, Heneghan Peng Architects, it covers some 120 acres, making it roughly the same size as Vatican City.

    Officials are also betting that the museum, the latest in a series of mega-projects launched or completed since 2014, can accelerate a revival of tourism, a vital source of foreign currency for an economy battered by years of regional conflicts and economic uncertainty.

    A series of galleries had been opened late last year but many exhibits were not accessible to the public. 

    (Reporting by Alex Dziadosz; editing by Mark Heinrich)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

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  • Left-Winger Connolly Wins Irish Presidency in Landslide

    DUBLIN (Reuters) -Catherine Connolly, an independent lawmaker on the far left of the Irish political spectrum, was elected president on Saturday after winning 63% of the first preference vote for the largely ceremonial role.

    (Reporting by Padraic Halpin, Editing by Timothy Heritage)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

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  • Ireland’s Catherine Connolly set to be president after rival concedes election

    Left-wing independent Catherine Connolly is set to become Ireland’s next president after her rival conceded defeat in the country’s presidential election Saturday.

    Vote counting was still underway but ahead of the official result being declared, Heather Humphreys, of the center-right party Fine Gael, told reporters that she “wanted to congratulate Catherine Connolly on becoming the next president of Ireland.”

    “Catherine will be a president for all of us and she will be my president, and I really would like to wish her all the very, very best,” she said.

    Polls have suggested consistent and strong voter support for Connolly, 68, over rival Humphreys, 64, for president, a largely ceremonial role in Ireland.

    Connolly, a former barrister, and an independent lawmaker since 2016, has been outspoken in criticizing Israel over the war in Gaza.

    She has garnered the backing of a range of left-leaning parties, including Sinn Féin, the Labour Party and the Social Democrats.

    She and Humphreys were the only contenders after Jim Gavin, the candidate for Prime Minister Micheál Fianna Fail party, quit the race three weeks before the election over a long-ago financial dispute.

    Independent candidate Catherine Connolly casts her vote in the election for the next Irish president at Claddagh National School in Galway city, Ireland, Friday, Oct. 24, 2025. (Brian Lawless/PA via AP)

    Galway / AP


    Martin, who heads Ireland’s government, had personally backed Gavin as a presidential candidate. Though Gavin had stopped campaigning, his name remains on the ballot paper because of his late withdrawal from the race.

    While Irish presidents represent the country on the world stage, host visiting heads of state and play an important constitutional role, they do not have the power to shape laws or policies.

    The leader of the Irish Labour Party said Connolly has united parties “with an alternative vision.”

    Ivana Bacik said left-wing parties could now look at how they can “combine together” and “offer a real alternative” in the next general election.

    Humphreys, a former cabinet minister, has stressed that she is a center-ground, pro-business, pro-EU candidate who will strive for unity.

    Others — including musician Bob Geldof and the former mixed martial arts champion Conor McGregor — had indicated they wished to run for president but failed to receive enough backing for a nomination.

    The winner will succeed Michael D. Higgins, who has been president since 2011, having served the maximum two seven-year terms. Connolly or Humphreys will be Ireland’s 10th president and the third woman to hold the post.

    Voting slips were being counted by hand. The final result will be declared later Saturday once all 43 electoral constituencies across the country have completed counting.

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  • Meta removes AI deepfake video of Irish presidential candidate

    Meta has removed a deepfake AI video of Irish presidential candidate Catherine Connolly, which featured a false depiction of the politician saying that she’s withdrawing from the election. According to The Irish Times, the AI-generated video was shared nearly 30,000 times on Facebook just days before Ireland’s election on October 24 prior to it being removed from the website. Connolly called the video “a disgraceful attempt to mislead voters and undermine [Ireland’s] democracy” and assured voters that she was “absolutely still a candidate for President of Ireland.”

    The video was posted by an account which had named itself RTÉ News AI, which is not affiliated with the actual Irish public service broadcaster Raidió Teilifís Éireann. It copied the likenesses not just of Connolly, but also of legitimate RTÉ journalist Sharon Ní Bheoláin and correspondent Paul Cunningham. “It is with great regret that I announce the withdrawal of my candidacy and the ending of my campaign,” the AI version of Connolly said in the fake video. Ní Bheoláin was shown reporting about the announcement and confirming the candidate’s withdrawal from the race. The AI version of Cunningham then announced that the election was cancelled and will no longer take place, with Connolly’s opponent Heather Humphreys automatically winning. Connolly, an independent candidate, is leading the latest polls with 44 points.

    Meta removed the RTÉ News AI account completely after being contacted by the Irish Independent. The company told The Irish Times that it removed the video and account for violating its community standards, particularly its policy prohibiting content that impersonates or falsely represents people. Irish media regulator Coimisiún na Meán said it was aware of the video and had asked Meta about the immediate measures it took in response to the incident. Meta has been struggling to keep deepfake and maliciously edited videos featuring celebrities and politicians under control for years now. The company’s Oversight Board warned it earlier this year that it wasn’t doing enough to enforce its own rules and urged it to train content reviewers on “indicators” of AI-manipulated content.

    Mariella Moon

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  • Anti-Immigrant Protesters Burn Police Van in Dublin After Young Girl Attacked

    DUBLIN (Reuters) -Anti-immigrant protesters burned a police vehicle and attacked officers near a building housing asylum seekers in Dublin on Tuesday, the justice minister said, a day after a man was arrested for an attack on a young girl nearby.

    The incident comes two years after anti-immigrant protesters triggered a major riot in the centre of Dublin after the stabbing of three young children.

    The Irish Times, which published a video of a burning police van, reported that over 500 people were involved in the protest outside the building in West Dublin on Tuesday evening.

    Videos posted on X by Irish media outlets and anti-immigrant activists showed people holding Irish flags and placards with anti-immigrant slogans. Protesters threw glass bottles and fireworks at police.

    “The weaponising of a crime by people who wish to sow dissent in our society is not unexpected,” Justice Minister Jim O’Callaghan said in a statement. “This is unacceptable and will result in a forceful response.”

    Police on Tuesday said a man in his 20s had been charged in the area following an alleged serious assault of a female juvenile.

    The leader of the largest opposition party Sinn Fein in parliament on Tuesday cited reports that the man had a deportation order issued against him in March this year.

    O’Callaghan said he has asked the most senior official in his department for a detailed account of the management of the asylum application in the case. Police did not respond to a request for comment.

    While Ireland is almost unique in Europe in having no far-right members of parliament, recent years have brought a sharp rise in the profile of anti-immigrant groups with regular rallies to demand curbs on immigration.

    (Writing by Conor Humphries; Editing by Padraic Halpin)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

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  • CBP Has Processed Nearly 24 Million Parcels That Would Have Been Duty-Free Since US Ended De Minimis Exemption

    LOS ANGELES (Reuters) -U.S. Customs and Border Protection has processed nearly 24 million packages that would have received duty-free treatment since President Donald Trump ended the de minimis exemption on August 29, an agency spokesperson said on Tuesday.

    Nearly 1.4 billion packages entered U.S. under the de minimis exemption for packages valued below $800 in 2024, according to CBP data. 

    Data from the U.N.’s Universal Postal Union showed that on August 29, total postal shipments to the U.S. had fallen 81%.

    That led to severe disruptions in global mail shipment to U.S. shoppers and small businesses. Large delivery firms like United Parcel Service and FedEx also felt the crunch after formerly booming direct-to-consumer e-commerce shipments from Chinese e-commerce firms Shein and Temu dropped.

    (Reporting by Lisa Baertlein in Los Angeles)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

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