Evening Round Up: Ex-Minister won't face prosecution; Teen dies in Lanzarote; No-deal Brexit warning
So that’s Tuesday nearly wrapped up. Here’s some of the stories we published on irishexaminer.com today which we hope will help you make sense of it all this evening.
TO INFORM
Exclusive: The Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP) has ordered that former Fianna Fail minister Pat Carey will not face prosecution in respect of abuse allegations widely publicised in 2015.
A culture of “putting women first” will be developed by the HSE, as an immediate step, following the publication of the latest CervicalCheck report - a 74-page document into an IT error which led to more than 4,080 women failing to receive their result of a test for HPV.
Finance Minister Paschal Donohoe has said the relationship between the UK and Ireland would “fundamentally change” in the event of a no-deal Brexit.
Tributes have been paid on the death of a 15-year-old Meath teenager who passed away this evening after a tragic fall in Lanzarote.
Malaysian officials have said they "know better" and insist a missing Irish girl has not been abducted from her room, in direct conflict with the belief of her frantic family who insist she would not have wandered off from the nature resort.
Venezuela’s vice president has said the latest US sanctions freezing the assets of Nicolas Maduro’s government are an attack on private property and a threat to world order.
Ireland head coach Joe Schmidt has departed their Rugby World Cup training camp to go back to New Zealand due to a family bereavement.
TO ENGAGE

Do you remember the summer of 2012? The months of June and July specifically, when 600,000 people were left without access to their Ulster Bank accounts? asks Joyce Fegan.
Spying on creches is no substitute for better-trained early years staff, writes Fergus Finlay.
TO ENTERTAIN
August 6, 2019: A look back at what happened on this day in years gone by.
Jennifer Rock, aka The Skin Nerd, offers advice to a woman suffering from very oily skin.
MOST READ SO FAR TODAY
Mickey Harte responds to a question about the need for Mayo and Donegal matches to be made 'free to air': "Why should anybody have the God-given right to see all games on television?"




