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Tributes paid as Donegal fisherman named locally

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The fisherman who lost his life off the north west coast has been named locally as Kevin McCloskey.
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Bodies of child and man found at house in Dublin

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Gardaí (Irish police) are investigating after the bodies of a girl and a man were found at a house in Dublin on Saturday.

Emergency services were called to Finglas in Cappagh shortly before 20:00 local time.

The bodies remain at the scene and the location has been preserved for forensic examination.

The coroner has been notified and the services of the Office of the State Pathologist have been requested.

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Man and young child found dead at house in North Dublin

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Gardaí have launched an investigation into a suspected murder-suicide after two bodies were discovered at a property in Co Dublin.

Gardaí have confirmed that the body of a man and a young girl was discovered at a house in the Heathfield estate in the Cappagh area of Finglas in north Dublin at around 8pm on Saturday evening. The location has been preserved to allow the Garda Technical Bureau carry out a forensic examination of the scene.

The two bodies currently remain at the scene, pending preliminary technical examination, and will be removed for a post-mortem examination, which will take place in due course.

The Coroner has been notified and gardai have also requested the services of the Office of the State Pathologist. Gardai have said they are “investigating all the circumstances surrounding” the discovery of the two bodies.

A garda spokesperson said: “Gardaí are investigating all the circumstances surrounding the discovery of two bodies at a domestic residence in Finglas, Dublin, on Saturday, 27th September 2025.

“Gardaí and emergency services were called to the residence in the Cappagh area shortly before 8:00pm. The bodies of the deceased, an adult male and a female child, remain at the scene.

The location has been preserved for forensic examination by the Garda Technical Bureau. The Coroner has been notified and the services of the Office of the State Pathologist have been requested. No further information is available at this time.”

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Pupils still learn in village hall years after school fire

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32 minutes ago

Aled ScourfieldBBC Wales

imageBBC

Pupils who still learn in a village hall three years after a fire destroyed their school now face its closure.

Children at Manorbier VC School have been educated at a nearby village hall ever since a fire broke out in the roof space in October 2022.

Parents have accused Pembrokeshire council of letting down the children and the community and breaking promises to rebuild the school, with proposals to now close it permanently.

Cabinet members declined to be interviewed and said “all views will be taken into consideration” during a consultation.

imageA fence outside the school shows a wooden placard reading: "SAVE OUR SCHOOL PLEASE SIGN THE ONLINE PETITION OR WE WILL LOSE" handwritten in black ink, all in capitals.

Manorbier is a voluntary controlled school, which means that although it is funded by the local authority, it is affiliated with the Church in Wales.

In May, a majority of councillors from all parties voted to hold a consultation with St David’s Diocese on the closure of Manorbier and Ysgol Clydau in North Pembrokeshire.

More than 1,000 people have now signed a petition on the council’s website calling on it to “honour its promise” and “rebuild the school.”

In July, the St Davids Diocesan board of finance said it had “always required that the school be reinstated” and until May had “always been led to believe that the school would be reinstated by Pembrokeshire County Council.”

Manorbier School opened in 1873, and the building would have celebrated its 150th anniversary in January 2023 had it not been for the fire.

imageA banner shows the name of the school and its logo outside the village hall building

Since the blaze, pupils have been educated at nearby Jameston Village Hall. There are now 28 pupils at the temporary school.

The council said in May that Manorbier VC School had the highest level of surplus places of all Pembrokeshire schools at 77.9%.

Becky, a former pupil and mother of a Year 2 student, praised the efforts of staff but said the village hall was not a permanent solution.

“It’s not big enough and not set up to be a school.

“They’ve done so well setting it up, but we need our building back. I feel like the council has really let us down.

“They led us to believe they were going to rebuild it. They’ve given us false hope and false information. They’ve really let the community and the children down.

“If a community doesn’t have a school, the community doesn’t thrive.”

imageBecky with daughter Isobel. Isobel is wearing a school dress and a white top and has long dark blonde hair, and Becky has long light brown hair and wears a striped cardigan. They are standing next to the temporary school grounds.

Charlotte, who has two daughters at the school, added: “This is a wonderful building, but it’s not a school. They had a school.

“It wasn’t their fault that it was taken from them, so why can’t they have it back?”

She claimed there had been no support from the council.

“They didn’t help with anything. It wasn’t acknowledged for months. They didn’t reach out. A lot of us are really angry.

“We moved into the village hall alone, without support – no one came to help us carry the books we could salvage from the fire.

“It was all the parents, teachers, and the local community. I hope they see that we’ve all worked hard and fought hard for this. The kids deserve their school, and so do the teachers.”

imageCharlotte and her two daughters Bella and Cleo. They all have long dark hair and the children are wearing school uniform, standing next to their temporary school.

In May, officials cited “a falling demographic over several years, significant surplus places, and only 18.5% of children living in the catchment.”

The council also said the capital cost of reinstating the school buildings and the funding per pupil, which is the highest in Pembrokeshire, were prohibitive.

The capital cost of rebuilding Manorbier VC School is estimated to be about £2.6m.

imageManorbier school

Conservative Senedd member for Carmarthen West and South Pembrokeshire, Sam Kurtz, accused the council of breaking promises.

“There have been promises to rebuild this school from both the current and previous council leaders, yet we are still here now, in a consultation, talking about closing the school.

“That’s wholly unacceptable, given what this school, the community, and the pupils have been through. I think they’ve been forgotten by the council.

“They’re using the excuse of the fire as a reason to bring it forward for closure. Would this school have been earmarked for closure had the fire not happened? I don’t think it would have.”

imageExterior of Manorbier school with a printed banner asking people to sign the petition, with a QR code

The council cabinet said in a statement that it could not comment on specifics while a consulation, which is in its final stages and will go live within the coming weeks, is under way.

“All views during this process will be taken into consideration before any decisions on proposals to discontinue schools are taken.

“We appreciate the strong feelings of parents in the Manorbier area, and the petition will be discussed by council in due course.”

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