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Oireachtas committee chair TD Alan Kelly says FAI have been ‘disrespectful to the Irish people’

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FAI CHIEF EXECUTIVE David Courell insists the organisation’s “conscience is clear” regarding their safeguarding procedures and how they dealt with historical abuse claims from female footballers in the 1990s.

But after a bruising appearance in front of the Joint Oireachtas Committee on Arts, Media, Communications, Culture and Sport, its chairperson Alan Kelly described the FAI’s display as “farcical”, “unprecedented”, and “one of the strangest committee meetings I was ever at”.

Deputy Kelly also said the FAI’s behaviour prior to attending the meeting was “disrespectful to the people of Ireland” after they initially deferred an invitation in July, only to then pull out of this appearance last week, citing legal advice as a Garda investigation is ongoing.

After Kelly said that the FAI had “doubted the committee’s intentions”, the Association performed a dramatic U-turn yesterday, and their five-person delegation faced questions for just under two hours and 40 minutes.

Deputy Kelly also admitted that the way in which the FAI conducted themselves could jeopardise the State funding that is being sought by the League of Ireland for development of academies in next month’s Budget.

The Labour TD for Tipperary North confirmed that he will be writing to Minister for Sport Patrick O’Donovan “on the basis of what we heard today” as he described the FAI’s approach as “ill-judged”.

“You can’t be bailed out by the taxpayer, be funded by the taxpayer, dependent on large significant sums being put forward in this Budget, and then say we’re creating conditionality before we even consider coming in front of you and answering questions,” Deputy Kelly told reporters after today’s session.

“So that whole, I suppose, deliberation by the FAI was ill-judged. They should have come before us the first time around, but even so, coming before us the second time around, creating conditionality and saying they wouldn’t come before us, was disrespectful to the people of Ireland, to the Oireachtas, to the taxpayers of Ireland.

“And I’m sure if the Minister feels the same way as the Committee, well then, obviously, he’ll have to take that into consideration [for funding] — whether it’s in profiling funding, whether it’s in withdrawn funding, that’s really a matter for him, but obviously we’ll be writing to him on the basis of what we heard today.”

Numerous members of the committee grew agitated and concerned by the manner in which the FAI detailed its actions relating to when they first discovered the claims of abuse.

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A joint expose by RTÉ and the Sunday Independent in July 2024 revealed allegations from female footballers during the 1990s.

The Sunday Independent subsequently reported on a series of internal FAI emails dating back to May 2023 which discussed the matter, but it emerged during the course of today’s Oireachtas committee meeting that FAI president Paul Cooke, chairman Tony Keohane and Kirsten Pakes, the Child Welfare and Safeguarding Manager, only became aware of the concerns in late January 2024.

Courell was chief operating officer at the time of those May 2023 emails, but has since ascended to CEO. Aoife Rafferty, the FAI’s People & Culture Director manager who was part of today’s delegation, was also involved in that email chain. However, they refused to provide more detail and there was annoyance from committee members at the semantics between “a concern and a complaint” being raised.

The initial proceedings in the committee saw the FAI stonewall questions about when they became aware of the allegations and that drew plenty of ire, with Fianna Fáil’s Peter ‘Chap’ Cleere decrying the FAI’s “toxic culture”.

“I think it was a session whereby quite a few remarks were made, they weren’t necessarily grounded in the reality of the situation,” FAI CEO Courell said afterwards.

“It was frustrating for the committee and the FAI not to be able to expand on some of the areas of the enquiry but, ultimately, we genuinely want to protect the ongoing investigation and justice for all of those involved, so until a point of time where that’s concluded, we won’t be able to expand further.”

When asked about if he fears the FAI’s performance in front of the committee would hamper those hopes of funding, he added: “No, I don’t believe so. As I’ve always maintained, we’ve put forward a really compelling business case.

“This is not a handout. This is an investment as a kickstart for an Irish football industry which we’ve been crying out for decades. We have an opportunity to enable that through support of more than just Government, but Government will be a key part in it, and I’m grateful for the support they’ve shown for us to date and their belief for investment in academies which will hopefully be borne out on Budget date.

“We’re making this proposal on behalf of the clubs. It’s not an ask from the FAI. Ultimately, 82% of what is being sought is intended directly for club employment.

“I think we’ve demonstrated as Dr Una May (Sport Ireland CEO) has said, she’s got huge confidence in the governance reforms we’ve undertaken in recent years. We have been in receipt of taxpayers money over the last number of years. We go through a rigorous auditing process that has been stress tested, including in front of a Public Accounts Committee as recently as a couple of years ago, so I think that lack of confidence is misplaced.”

Written by David Sneyd and originally published on The 42 whose award-winning team produces original content that you won’t find anywhere else: on GAA, League of Ireland, women’s sport and boxing, as well as our game-changing rugby coverage, all with an Irish eye. Subscribe here.

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Dublin city centre lobby calls for Asbo-type measures against troublemakers

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A LOBBY GROUP for Dublin city centre businesses has called for new measures to tackle anti-social behaviour and violence by some individuals in the capital.

Richard Guiney, chief executive of Dublin Town, suggested on RTÉ radio that curfews and “exclusions” should be considered, in the wake of a number of incidents of serious violence in Dublin city centre, and amid ongoing debate about whether the city is safe.

Guiney told The Journal new measures were needed to address the behaviour of “young people whose behaviour is persistently difficult”, and this is the group for whom he believes a curfew of 8pm or 9pm or a general ban from entering the core city centre area could be applied. 

He added that exclusions could also be applied in other areas where kids were “congregating and getting themselves into trouble”.

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He said such anti-social behaviour order (Asbo) type measures could be used to address a “small cohort” whose behaviour is persistently “difficult and challenging”.

He said that while the vast majority of of kids who come through the juvenile liaison officer (JLO) system of the gardaí’s youth diversion programme don’t come to garda attention again, there is a minority who continue to offend.

Shoplifting

Guiney said members of Dublin Town are affected by kids stealing from shops and abusing staff. He said the problem of anti-social behaviour in the city centre has deteriorated since the pandemic, which hit some kids hard.

“The issue with teenagers being really problematic is definitely something that gets raised a lot across the city, both north side and south side, by members with us,” Guiney said.

Kids are coming in and, you know, not even hiding that they’re stealing stuff, being quite brazen and actually saying to staff ‘go on, call the guards, there’s nothing they can do, I’m whatever age’.”

Guiney said that “statistically” Dublin is a safe city, but “people don’t feel safe”. He said the underlying reasons for that needed to be addressed.

Asked whether he believed measures such as excluding some kids from the city centre could demonise young men from very deprived backgrounds, Guiney said: “No. JLOs work across the board – kids from middle-class backgrounds have been in the JLO system as well. It’s not the background of the person, it’s the behaviour.”

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First migrants arrive in UK from France under ‘one in one out’ deal

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A family of three, including a small child, are the first people to arrive in the UK under the government’s “one in, one out” agreement with France.

The move follows the removal of the four migrants being deported from the UK so far under the pilot scheme.

“This is a clear message to people-smuggling gangs that illegal entry into the UK will not be tolerated,” a Home Office spokesperson said.

“We will continue to detain and remove those who arrive by small boat.”

The “one in, one out” scheme was announced by Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer and French President Emmanuel Macron in July.

Under the treaty, France agreed to take back migrants who had travelled to the UK by small boat and had their asylum claim withdrawn or declared inadmissible.

For each person returned to France, the UK will accept someone with a case for protection as a refugee who has not attempted to cross the Channel.

Last week, an Indian national was the first person to be removed from the UK, followed days later by another Eritrean man, despite a legal bid to delay his departure.

Last Friday, Home Office sources said an Iranian male had also been returned to France, and on Monday the department said an Afghan person had been returned earlier that day.

More than 30,000 people have crossed the Channel in small boats so far this year.

The total number of small boat crossings in the English Channel this year has dipped below record levels for the first time since 3 March, new government figures suggest.

In the year to 23 September, 32,188 people arrived in the UK by small boat, 148 fewer than at the same point in 2022.

Despite crossings falling slightly below 2022 levels so far this year, 2025 has still seen more crossings than most previous years, particularly in spring and summer.

French authorities say they have prevented more than 17,600 attempted crossings this year. But under maritime law, French officers say they cannot intervene once boats are in the water unless there is a threat to life.

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The first presidential debate is happening on Monday

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THE FIRST PRESIDENTIAL debate is scheduled to take place on Monday night on Virgin Media. 

As of noon today, the ballot paper was confirmed: it would be a three-horse race between Independent Catherine Connolly, Fine Gael’s Heather Humphreys, and Fianna Fáil’s Jim Gavin. 

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The three confirmed candidates have been invited to appear on Virgin Media’s Tonight Show, hosted by Kieran Cuddihy at 10pm. Spokespersons for Connolly and Humphreys’s respective campaigns have confirmed they will be present for the debate.

RTÉ is set to hold a debate as part of Prime Time’s coverage of the campaign. It’s not expected any dates will be confirmed today, but we can expect an announcement within the next few days.

On Virgin Media, there will also be a “series of in-depth Big Interviews” over the month of October. The 30-minute one-to-one interviews will be conducted by Collette Fitzpatrick at 10pm.

Gavin is scheduled to appear on Monday, 6 October; Connolly on 13 October; and Humphreys on 20 October.

A special Tonight Show episode will follow each of the “Big Interviews” with panels analysing the candidate’s performance, and the Tonight Show will air as normal on Tuesdays and Wednesdays during the campaign. 

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