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Smoke is seen rising in Khartoum, Sudan Marwan Ali/PA Images

Irish diplomat injured in Sudan as fighting rages with death toll climbing to 185 killed

The raging battles triggered a wide international outcry with appeals for an immediate ceasefire and dialogue.

LAST UPDATE | 17 Apr 2023

AN IRISH DIPLOMAT was injured when he was attacked at his home in Sudan as fighting intensified in the capital city.

Both Foreign Affairs Minister Tánaiste Micheál Martin and EU diplomatic head Josep Borrell confirmed that Aidan O’Hara, the EU’s ambassador to Sudan suffered injuries at his home in Khartoum. 

“A few hours ago, the EU Ambassador in Sudan was assaulted in his own residency,” Borrell wrote on Twitter, without detailing any injuries to the envoy.

“Security of diplomatic premises and staff is a primary responsibility of Sudanese authorities and an obligation under international law,” he added.

The Tánaiste said O’Hara was “not seriously hurt” but that the assault was “a gross violation of obligations to protect diplomats under the Vienna Convention”.

“Aidan is an outstanding Irish and European diplomat who is serving the EU under the most difficult circumstances,” Martin said.

“We thank him for his service and call for an urgent cessation of violence in Sudan, and resumption of dialogue.”

Fighting between the Sudanese army and a rival paramilitary faction has killed around 200 people and wounded 1,800 after three days of urban warfare.

The United Nations has called for an immediate ceasefire and international bodies, including the European Union, have expressed grave concern.

At least 185 people have been killed and over 1,800 wounded since the fighting erupted, UN envoy Volker Perthes said.

The two sides are using tanks, artillery and other heavy weapons in densely populated areas.

Fighter jets swooped overhead and anti-aircraft fire lit up the skies as darkness fell.

The toll could be much higher because there are many bodies in the streets around central Khartoum that no-one can reach because of the clashes.

There has been no official word on how many civilians or combatants have been killed.

The doctors’ syndicate earlier put the number of civilian deaths at 97.

The sudden explosion of violence over the weekend between the nation’s two top generals, each backed by tens of thousands of fighters, trapped millions of people in their homes or wherever they could find shelter, with supplies running low in many areas.

Top diplomats on four continents scrambled to broker a truce, with the UN Security Council set to discuss the crisis.

“Gunfire and shelling are everywhere,” Awadeya Mahmoud Koko, head of a union for thousands of tea vendors and other food workers, said from her home in a southern district of Khartoum.

She said a shell struck a neighbour’s house on Sunday, killing at least three people.

“We couldn’t take them to a hospital or bury them.”

In central Khartoum, sustained gunfire erupted and white smoke rose near the main military headquarters, a major battlefront.

Nearby, at least 88 students and staff have been trapped in the engineering college library at Khartoum University since the start of the fighting, one of the students said in a video posted online on Monday.

One student was killed during clashes outside and another wounded, he said.

They do not have food or water, he said, showing a room full of people sleeping on the floor.

Even in a country with a long history of military coups, the scenes of fighting in the capital and its adjoining city Omdurman across the Nile River were unprecedented.

‘Power struggle’

The turmoil comes just days before Sudanese were to celebrate Eid al-Fitr, the holiday marking the end of Ramadan, the Islamic month of fasting.

The power struggle pits General Abdel-Fattah Burhan, the commander of the armed forces, against General Mohammed Hamdan Dagalo, the head of the Rapid Support Forces, a paramilitary group.

The former allies jointly orchestrated an October 2021 military coup that derailed Sudan’s transition to democracy.

The violence now threatens to throw the country into a wider civil conflict just as Sudanese were trying to revive the drive for a democratic, civilian government after decades of military rule.

The US, the UN and others have called for a truce.

Egypt, which backs Sudan’s military, and Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates – which forged close ties to the RSF in recent years as it sent thousands of fighters to support their war in Yemen – have also called for both sides to stand down.

But both generals have thus far dug in, demanding the other’s surrender and ruling out negotiations.

Gen Dagalo, whose forces grew out of the notorious Janjaweed militias in Sudan’s Darfur region, portrayed himself in a statement on Twitter on Monday as a defender of democracy and branded Gen Burhan as the aggressor and a “radical Islamist”.

Both generals have a long history of human rights abuses and have cracked down on pro-democracy activists.

Heavy gunbattles raged in multiple parts of the capital and Omdurman, where the two sides have brought in tens of thousands of troops, positioning them in nearly every neighbourhood.

At least six hospitals in Khartoum were shut down because of damage from fighting, nearby clashes or because they ran low on fuel, said Atiya Abdalla Atiya, secretary of the Sudan Doctors’ Syndicate.

Hadia Saeed, a housewife, said she and her three children were sheltering in one room on the ground floor of their home for fear of the shelling as gunfire rattled across their Bahri district in north Khartoum.

They have food for a few more days, but “after that we don’t know what to do”, she said.

Residents said fierce fighting with artillery and other heavy weapons raged this afternoon in the Gabra neighbourhood south-west of Khartoum.

People were trapped and screaming inside their homes, said Asmaa al-Toum, a physician living in the area.

Fighting has been particularly fierce around each side’s main bases, located amid civilian areas, and at strategic government buildings.

Ongoing battles

The military today claimed to have secured the main television building in Omdurman, fending off RSF fighters trying to seize the building for days.

State-run Sudan TV resumed broadcasting.

The military scored a significant gain on Sunday when the RSF said it abandoned its main barracks and base, in Omdurman, which the armed forces had pounded with air strikes.

Online videos on Monday purported to show the bodies of dozens of men said to be RSF fighters at the base, strewn over beds, the floor of a clinic and outside in a yard.

The authenticity of the videos could not be confirmed independently.

The military and RSF were also fighting in most major centres around the country, including in the western Darfur region and parts of the north and the east, by the borders with Egypt and Ethiopia.

Battles raged today around a strategic airbase in Merowe, some 350 kilometres (215 miles) north-west of the capital, with both sides claiming control of the facility.

Only four years ago, Sudan inspired hope after a popular uprising helped depose long-time autocratic leader Omar al-Bashir.

But the turmoil since, especially the 2021 coup, has frustrated the democracy drive and wrecked the economy.

A third of the population – around 16 million people – now depends on humanitarian assistance in the resource-rich nation, Africa’s third largest.

Concern Worldwide confirmed that its 160 staff in Sudan are safe.

“Our staff have been ordered to hibernate and Concern’s humanitarian work in Sudan is temporarily suspended,” Concern’s Head of International Programmes, Carol Morgan, said.

“The situation in Sudan is very volatile and all staff  have been ordered to remain indoors.  Conditions are challenging with electricity supplies to many communities cut, and water and food supplies running low.” 

Concern has worked in Sudan for the last 37 years and has teams working in West Darfur, West Kordofan and South Kordofan. 

International charity Save the Children has temporarily suspended most of its operations across Sudan.

It said looters raided its offices in Darfur, stealing medical supplies, laptops, vehicles and a refrigerator.

The World Food Programme suspended operations over the weekend after three employees were killed in Darfur, and the International Rescue Committee has also halted most operations.

With the US, European Union, African and Arab nations all calling for an end to fighting, the UN Security Council was to discuss the developments in Sudan later.

UN secretary-general Antonio Guterres said he was consulting with the Arab League, African Union and leaders in the region, urging anyone with influence to press for peace.

Egyptian foreign minister Sameh Shoukry discussed the violence in separate phone calls with his Saudi and French counterparts, the Egyptian Foreign Ministry said.

At a meeting of the Group of Seven wealthy nations in Japan on Monday, US secretary of state Antony Blinken said the Sudanese “want the military back in the barracks. They want democracy. They want the civilian-led government, Sudan needs to return to that path”.

Under international pressure, Gen Burhan and Gen Dagalo had recently agreed to a framework agreement with political parties and pro-democracy groups.

However, the deal was vague on key points of dispute, including how the RSF would be integrated into the armed forces and who would have final control.

The signing of the deal was put off repeatedly as tensions rose between the generals.

-With reporting from Press Association and AFP. 

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    Mute Frank Brady
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    Sep 27th 2013, 1:49 PM

    Disgraceful the way this woman is been treated by a super power country.She should not be in prison in the first place!

    297
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    Mute Frank Brady
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    Sep 27th 2013, 2:30 PM

    It is a human rights issue and not limited by any national borders.

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    Mute Ian Mac Eochagáin
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    Sep 27th 2013, 2:43 PM

    Even prisoners have rights. And even as a hunger striker, water is one of those.

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    Mute Erica Corcoran
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    Sep 27th 2013, 2:48 PM

    Vladimir, you sound brainwashed.

    155
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    Mute Sharon Moore
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    Sep 27th 2013, 2:49 PM

    Wow, your anger and aggression leaps off the page which totally negates your argument.

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    Mute Vladimir Kalugin
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    Sep 27th 2013, 2:50 PM

    Hah..I wonder by whom.. I am living in ireland for te last six years..

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    Mute Ian Mac Eochagáin
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    Sep 27th 2013, 2:58 PM

    In fact I’ve a rather good idea. I’ve lived in Russia. I speak fluent Russian. I don’t know first-hand, thankfully, of the state of Russian prisons, but I’ve read a lot. Care to read this?
    http://www.rosbalt.ru/blogs/2013/09/24/1179492.html

    I know full well that Russia is multi-ethnic and multi-religious and that, unfortunately, the regime since 2000 has been very favourable towards Orthodox fundamentalists and no other religions. Nobody needs to provoke the extreme Orthodox believers and incite hatred: they incite themselves! Remember that time they got “Jesus Christ Superstar” banned in Rostov-on-Don?

    All this woman and her fellow dancers did was dance in a cathedral (not sing: the song was added to the video later). This is classed as an ‘administrative’ offence, not a criminal one (more precisely as ‘minor hooliganism’) and so should have been punished with a fine, not prison. Especially not Russia’s most notorious prison.

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    Mute David Jordan
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    Sep 27th 2013, 3:05 PM

    Vlad, every tyrant and supporter of tyrants always claims that their campaign of terror against their own people was born of necessity, a claim rarely supported by truth, are you saying that the Russian Orthodox Church is such a violent, short-tempered religion that even a minor criticism could set it off on a violent crusade.
    I doubt Putin’s forces would be so quick to act if the protest was held in a mosque or synagogue but then again, unlike the Jews and Muslims, the Russian Orthodox Church has been the friend of every Russian tyrant from the Tsars, to Stalin, to Putin with only a brief hiatus under Lenin.
    I wonder, when are the Russians are going to realize that Putin is turning Russia into a state with every trait of another violent, racist, homophobic regime that their grandparents fought and died to contain?

    78
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    Mute Ian Mac Eochagáin
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    Sep 27th 2013, 3:14 PM

    Many, many Russians have. They’re either leaving Russia en masse or they can’t have their voices heard in their own country, where 70 years of disconnecting people from any possibility of affecting the outcome of their lives under the Soviets has made for a conveniently manipulable pool of ‘voters’. The mightiest tool of the Soviet governments wasn’t brainwashing – they were actually relatively bad at that – but rather decoupling people and the fruits of their labour, so that any form of effort or activism to change the world seemed pointless. Result: mass apathy and an extremely fractured collective consciousness. Only 50% of Russians turned out to vote in the Duma elections of 2011, to illustrate the point.

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    Mute Anthony Humphries
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    Sep 27th 2013, 3:35 PM

    You love you’re country so much ? Well go home so

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    Mute Hippocrateeth
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    Sep 27th 2013, 3:48 PM

    Sharon, since when did someone being angry negate the substance of their message? And 53 people are as stupid as you to believe that nonsense you spouted also?

    That’s worrying.

    Anger is a natural response, neither good nor bad. It has absolutely no bearing on the legitimacy of an argument so put that in your pipe and smoke it you level headed boremonger.

    11
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    Mute Muiris Ó Cluanaigh
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    Sep 27th 2013, 3:49 PM

    What a muppet

    25
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    Mute Seoirse M H
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    Sep 27th 2013, 4:15 PM

    Re Frank Brady.

    Disgraceful the way she is being treated by a superpower you say?
    Another superpower, the US, detains people for over ten years in cages without trial.

    43
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    Mute Frank Brady
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    Sep 27th 2013, 4:28 PM

    Re Seoirse MH
    I am quite aware of that ,but its not the topic on this thread.

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    Mute Frank Brady
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    Sep 27th 2013, 4:31 PM

    True.

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    Mute Scarr
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    Sep 27th 2013, 4:45 PM

    Russia’s an awful kip.

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    Mute Seoirse M H
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    Sep 27th 2013, 4:46 PM

    Re Frank.

    Fair enough. However, it is relevant that an even worse injustice in relation to prisons be highlighted.

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    Mute Dublinjonny
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    Sep 27th 2013, 4:46 PM

    Then dont live here for another year mive back to the beloved motherland it has so much to offer you anyway ..

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    Mute Subliminal
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    Sep 27th 2013, 5:37 PM

    You’re crazy.

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    Mute guardian
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    Sep 27th 2013, 7:29 PM

    B lowe can’t get away frpm America bashing.

    Anyway Russia a land of greed and corruption. Its not a super power any longer. The USA and China are only two at present

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    Mute The Bourgeois Pope
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    Sep 27th 2013, 1:58 PM

    The quicker people realise that Russia does not F-about when it comes to the interests of mother Russia the better. There are no gay rights, disabled rights, rights of free expression, stop confusing Russia with the rest of Europe. They hold the power, they make the rules.

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    Mute al shamen
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    Sep 27th 2013, 3:55 PM

    Excellant comment most of the things you listed are Western liberal concepts that have no real meaning or merit outside of Europe and North America.

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    Mute Rhonda O Shea
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    Sep 27th 2013, 2:24 PM

    Linda …get à grip u heartless woman ..this is 2013 isnt it …..

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    Mute Ian Mac Eochagáin
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    Sep 27th 2013, 2:41 PM

    This is old news as her husband announced on Twitter today that she’s been hospitalised. The prison administration won’t give any documents to prove that and won’t allow her husband to see her.

    By the way, the rules for Russian prisons (to the extent that they exist on paper) say a hunger striker has to be allowed tea, water, cigarettes and matches. As far I understand the first three-four days of the strike are the worst, so she could have been relatively (stress on that word) well had she been allowed water.

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    Mute karla carroll
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    Sep 27th 2013, 1:51 PM

    Prison isn’t supposed to be a picnic. Your not supposed to want to go back. It’s not supposed to he cushy with home comforts.

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    Mute Ian Mac Eochagáin
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    Sep 27th 2013, 2:44 PM

    Water isn’t a ‘home comfort’. It’s a basic human right, even for prisoners.

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    Mute karla carroll
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    Sep 27th 2013, 6:00 PM

    My comment was in relation to the long working hours. Should have made that clear.

    As for water I quote Shakespeare ‘though this be madness, yet there is method in it’

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    Mute Ping Pong
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    Sep 27th 2013, 2:05 PM

    [Insert dry pussy joke]

    35
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    Mute J. Dunn
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    Sep 27th 2013, 2:15 PM

    Not the right time for dry humour.

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    Mute J. Dunn
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    Sep 27th 2013, 3:15 PM

    I guess I’m on the wrong side of the irony curtain.

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    Mute linda o neill
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    Sep 27th 2013, 3:53 PM

    She protested on the altar of s church… Not outside . Get ur facts in order before u comment

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    Mute J. Dunn
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    Sep 27th 2013, 3:55 PM

    So many red thumbs you’d think my name was Vladimir Punit.

    12
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    Mute hotHanneke Vermolen
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    Sep 27th 2013, 5:00 PM

    She could have protested naked on top of the alter if she wanted, it doesn’t justify in humane treatment by refusing her water. My point was that just because worse could have happened her in other countries (your comment) doesn’t make what happened to her right or just

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    Mute Cathy Conley-Portka
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    Sep 27th 2013, 2:09 PM

    why is she complaining? she’s put herself on a hunger strike. Is she that naïve to think they care? It’s Russia, not Rhode Island. Sorry but it’s common sense.

    25
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    Mute Scarr
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    Sep 27th 2013, 2:36 PM

    It’s a protest to highlight an injustice Cathy. You’re not that dim are you?

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    Mute Ian Mac Eochagáin
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    Sep 27th 2013, 2:47 PM

    She’s gone on hunger strike to protest against 16-hour days, near starvation and death threats from prison guards. Yes, it’s not Rhode Island: so she shouldn’t be given any water to drink?

    She shouldn’t even be in prison in the first place. Her ‘crime’ is supposed to be classed as an administrative, not criminal, offence, according to Russian legislation, and so she should have been fined or perhaps given some community service, but not a prison sentence.

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    Mute linda o neill
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    Sep 27th 2013, 2:04 PM

    Get on with serving your sentence…no sympathy whats so ever for her..you can not desecrate a place of worship for your own gain..well done to Putin for laying down a marker with this

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    Mute Simon Power
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    Sep 27th 2013, 2:09 PM

    I can only hope you are a troll Linda. Such treatment of prisoners or the very act of incarceration for voicing descent has no place in the 21st century.

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    Mute Thomas Blake
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    Sep 27th 2013, 2:09 PM

    “Get on with serving your sentence…no sympathy whats so ever for her.”

    The fact that someone else’s pain and suffering makes you happy, speaks volumes about you as a person Linda.

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    Mute Steo Brady
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    Sep 27th 2013, 2:11 PM

    Linda….. Brilliant

    15
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    Mute Cathy Conley-Portka
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    Sep 27th 2013, 2:12 PM

    I agree with you Linda, she shouldn’t have gone into a church to do that. Have some respect! Hope this little kid learned her lesson. Ok lets see the red thumbs do gooders!

    20
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    Mute hotHanneke Vermolen
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    Sep 27th 2013, 2:13 PM

    Linda has commented many times on other articles with any reference to homosexuality and she does seem to genuinely have no sympathy for anyone who is gay or stands up for gay rights

    132
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    Mute Alan Burke
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    Sep 27th 2013, 2:27 PM

    Linda you should pray for her salvation or something.

    Your comments are not very christian.

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    Mute linda o neill
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    Sep 27th 2013, 3:14 PM

    I have no sympathy for her…if she did that in Saudi Arabia in a Mosque she would been met with a lot sterner punishment

    16
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    Mute hotHanneke Vermolen
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    Sep 27th 2013, 3:29 PM

    If she had protested outside a church in other countries very little would have happened! Her treatment has not been right and is not humane.

    48
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    Mute Jennifer Hislop
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    Sep 27th 2013, 3:31 PM

    Oh linda, Jesus wouldn’t want you for a sunbeam with that attitude. What happened to hate sin love the sinner? Shouldn’t you be volunteering to wash her feet?

    53
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    Mute Alan Burke
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    Sep 27th 2013, 3:56 PM

    Linda is not a true catholic as it is obvious she has not read or understood the bible.

    30
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    Mute Larry Bird
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    Sep 27th 2013, 6:02 PM

    Linda is a legend. I agree that this persons behaviour should not be tolerated, the problem in this part do the world is that everybody is too afraid of offending the next person if they say something others may find controversial. Half of it is PC nonsense the rest is just appeasing the others.

    Why should people be allowed to perform a protest dance on an alter in a church, the church is a place of worship for millions and the altar is where the liturgy is celebrated,
    It’s an insult to people who have faith. But I’m sure many of you here will have something against the church, perhaps you’ve been seduced by Richard Dawkins

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    Mute Michelle Mc Loughney
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    Sep 27th 2013, 6:36 PM

    How very Christian of you Linda.

    10
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    Mute Michelle Mc Loughney
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    Sep 27th 2013, 6:38 PM

    Richard Dawkins wouldn’t need to seduce anyone with a brain.

    13
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    Mute Darragh
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    Sep 27th 2013, 1:55 PM

    And prison is there for if you break the law of the land you live in.So wheres the problem ?

    24
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    Mute Ian Mac Eochagáin
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    Sep 27th 2013, 2:49 PM

    She didn’t break the kind of law that calls for prison. Russia has two types of offence, administrative and criminal. Her dancing in the cathedral was really what the legislation calls (or used to call before they introduced that ridiculous law on “Insulting the Feelings of Believers”) ‘minor hooliganism’ and is traditionally punished by a fine.

    66
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    Mute David Jordan
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    Sep 27th 2013, 3:13 PM

    I believe it was Saint Augustine who said ‘an unjust law is no law at all’.

    And Jesus said ‘if a man strike you on the face, turn the other cheek and allow him to strike that too’.

    Too bad the Russian Orthodox Church shares the rest of Christian’s (less the peace churches) la carte view of their own teachings.

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    Mute Hippocrateeth
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    Sep 27th 2013, 4:14 PM

    Ian, ‘traditionally’ not punished by jail time is quite a hollow statement. The offense either is or is not legally punishable by jail time. Which is it? If the offense is potentially punishable by jail time then that’s that.

    Sacrilege may not mean anything to you but unfortunately (or fortunately, depending on the viewpoint) you are not the lawmaker in Russia. There are plenty of laws in Ireland I would gladly trample all over but that’s not the way things go. The Russians, just like any other state, are allowed to have their laws whether they fall in line with Ian’s viewpoint or no.
    This type of one-sided post by you know it alls makes me feel like Putin
    has impregnated me with his angry seed and the young’un is suffering from some severe restless leg syndrome deep in my dark, damp places.

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    Mute caroline morley
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    Sep 27th 2013, 3:47 PM

    I see VLad has a lot of respect for women ? Seems a lot if hatred in what you wrote for your country and women in general and we do have the right to comment here if we wish !!

    17
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    Mute susanna smyth
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    Sep 27th 2013, 3:54 PM

    Is Vlad Putins secret love child by any chance?

    13
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    Mute Steo Brady
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    Sep 27th 2013, 2:10 PM

    Putin…. Hero…. Leader…. Legend

    15
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    Mute Scarr
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    Sep 27th 2013, 2:35 PM

    Steo…..moron…..troll….plonker

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    Mute Kerry Blake
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    Sep 27th 2013, 2:55 PM

    In fairness Scarr suggesting Steo is a troll is an insult to most trolls.

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    Mute Darragh
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    Sep 27th 2013, 3:21 PM

    Steo – you forgot peacekeeper, humanitarian and potenrial nobel laureate for keeping the US missiles being launched resulting in more deaths.

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    Mute sarah kenny
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    Sep 27th 2013, 6:31 PM

    That’s disgusting how can you do that to someone!

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    Mute Jazz O'Gorman
    Favourite Jazz O'Gorman
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    Sep 27th 2013, 3:15 PM

    I’m just a little confused, is she in prison, or Mosney.

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    Mute Dermot Lane
    Favourite Dermot Lane
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    Sep 27th 2013, 6:02 PM

    Are you that thick that you can’t tell the difference? Because if that was a stab at humour you missed

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    Mute John Finnegan
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    Sep 27th 2013, 3:32 PM

    Should that not read “Vlad the impaler”

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    Mute Rísteard Ó Muineacháin
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    Sep 27th 2013, 9:00 PM

    So… if she starts eating, will they give her water?

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    Mute Lisa Whelan
    Favourite Lisa Whelan
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    Sep 28th 2013, 1:04 PM

    The video gives me the creeps. She shouldn’t even be there.

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