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  • NEWS
  • Martin wades into abortion debate

    As the Dáil committee hearings continue on the abortion bill, Archbishop of Dublin Diarmuid Martin has waded into the debate saying it is important that Christian believers "be, and seen to be, on the side of life, especially when life is most vulnerable".

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    Limits on rent supplement payments set by the Government are forcing thousands of families to make undeclared top-up payments to landlords to secure places to live.

  • WORLD
  • Anger as North Korea launches another missile

    North Korea fired a short-range missile from its east coast, a day after launching three more of these missiles, a South Korean news agency said.

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    WHEN Star Trek creator Gene Roddenberry first dreamed up the concept of a television show based in the unexplored universe of Outer Space in 1964, the world was a very different place.

  • BUSINESS
  • Warnings over future of eurozone

    The eurozone is heading towards a break up unless there are moves towards much closer political and fiscal union, according to chief economist with State Street Global Advisers, Chris Probyn.

  • Bruton defends corporate tax rate

    Ireland will be able to maintain its current corporation tax code in the face of international pressure to prevent multinational corporations avoid paying their fare share of tax, Minister for Jobs, Enterprise and Innovation, Richard Bruton said yesterday.

  • SPORT
  • Mayo’s statement of intent

    Galway 0-11 Mayo 4-16 Five minutes to go in Salthill yesterday and James Horan was still cajoling his men to sew it into Galway.

  • Wilkinson inspires Toulon to glory

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  • LIFESTYLE
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    LENNY Abrahamson has directed three feature films: Adam & Paul, Garage and What Richard Did.

  • Why do women love to dress up?

    Trying on clothes, said Ewart, produced "sensations which bring deep peace and perfect contentment" to the female mind.






Valentia campaigns to protect coastguard

Renewed plans to close the Valentia Coast Guard Station in Co Kerry and shift its operations to Dublin are being stoutly resisted.

The threat to the station, one of the busiest in the country, has come as a shock to south Kerry, which believed a similar plan to axe Valentia under the previous government had been seen off.

Hundreds of thousands of euro worth of new radio and communications equipment are to be installed next month in the island station, and a new helipad is also on the cards. The station’s main operations room is being upgraded and other rooms have been prepared to host the equipment for a new automated service.

Furthermore, Kerry County Council has spent €150,000 upgrading the road to the only manned Coast Guard station in the south west.

The plans, revealed in July after a Government cost cutting report, have come as a surprise after a similar threat to close the rural Coast Guard stations at Malin in Co Donegal and Valentia under the previous administration were shelved after political pressure from then back bench TDs.

At the time, former ceann comhairle John O’Donoghue, then the local Fianna Fáil TD, whose house overlooks the island, was embarrassed at the threat. A huge lobby was set in motion by his party colleague, Senator Mark Daly.

The Kenmare senator is again sounding warning bells, this time from the opposition. He says senior sources in the Coast Guard have warned Valentia and Malin are both to close.

Mr Daly is hoping to have senior Coast Guard personnel appear before the Oireachtas Transport and Communications Committee to explain the rationale for the closures.

Yesterday, Timothy Lyne, spokesman for the island’s Save our Station action group said: “The decision was made four years ago to keep the station. There is no good reason to close it.”

Each year, Valentia, with its 16 staff, handles about 150 — two-thirds — of the major search and rescue events on this island.

It also liaises with the international coastguard.

As well as an acknowledged bank of expertise, the station’s jobs are felt to be vital to the island’s economy.

Transport Minister Leo Varadkar has confirmed an action plan is being prepared and tough decisions will have to be made in October. Home

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