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An iconic Dublin city mural has just been removed and replaced with a ‘gaudy’ NFL display

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ONE OF DUBLIN’S best-known street murals has been painted over and replaced with NFL-themed street art ahead of an American football game in Croke Park this weekend.

The mural, titled Do Not Remove, stretched across a two-storey hoarding on Ormond Quay.

It depicted a man with bricks covering his head, with the words “Do Not Remove” painted on one of the bricks.

The site is the derelict Ormond Hotel, which famously featured in the Sirens episode of James Joyce’s Ulysses.


Artists are currently painting NFL-themed artwork over the mural. Andrew Walsh / The Journal


Andrew Walsh / The Journal / The Journal

 The hotel fell into disuse in the early 2000s, though planning conditions for its redevelopment stipulate that it must reopen as a hotel and retain the Ormond name.

In 2022, Brazilian artist Neto Vettorello and Dublin artist Asbestos collaborated on the Do Not Remove mural.

Commissioned by the Association of Brazilian Families in Ireland, with support from the Brazilian Embassy, site owners Monteco Holdings Ltd, and Dublin City Council, the project marked 200 years of Brazilian independence and was presented as a “gift” from the Brazilian community to Dublin.

The striking, colourful piece blended both artists’ styles while delivering a commentary on dereliction and the housing crisis.

Now, only fragments of the mural remain, almost entirely covered by NFL branding.

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Part of the new NFL artwork. Andrew Walsh / The Journal


Andrew Walsh / The Journal / The Journal

The removal comes as part of a wider rollout of football-themed installations across the city, including works on Tara Street, Dame Street, and Barnardo Square, where a giant helmet has been erected.

Sunday’s game is expected to draw in thousands of US visitors, as the Pittsburgh Steelers take on the Minnesota Vikings.

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A giant football helmet at Barnardo Square. Andrew Walsh / The Journal


Andrew Walsh / The Journal / The Journal

A passerby on Ormond Quay described the new NFL artwork to The Journal as “gaudy-looking.”

One of the artists installing the new artwork said that the replacement of the Do Not Remove mural had been ordered by Dublin City Council.

Artist Neto Vettorello told The Journal that he was not contacted by Dublin City Council before his mural was painted over.

“It’s quite ironic, since the title of the piece was actually “Do Not Remove”,” Vettorello said.

“The Council just did what they usually do: keep the city grey, silent, and stripped of colour and voice.”

He added that the NFL theme was disappointing, and quizzed the US influence on the Dublin artwork.

“Nobody questions it, because we live in apathetic societies where public art is rarely created as a form of questioning. That’s what made the Ormond Quay mural special, it wasn’t decoration or advertising, it was a dialogue.

“I was celebrating female symbolism and independence, while Asbestos raised the issue of how stories are constantly erased.”

The council has been contacted for comment.

The artist added that the NFL installation will be painted over following the game on Sunday.

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Irish Medical Council inspecting CHI intern programme after report flagged ‘unsafe’ conditions

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THE IRISH MEDICAL COUNCIL is conducting a three day assessment of the training programme for interns at Children’s Health Ireland (CHI), after a report flagged “unsafe” conditions for students and junior staff. 

A team of assessors visited Tallaght University Hospital and Temple Street today where they met with non-consultant hospital doctors, trainees and clinical staff, “excluding CHI directors and management,” according to an itinerary seen by The Journal.

The assessment comes as it was confirmed today that by 2027 CHI will be subsumed into the HSE entirely.

The Journal understands that most staff in CHI were only informed last night that four medical council personnel would be on site today, and for the rest of the week.

Staff were made aware that under no circumstances could consultants or members of CHI management be present for the medical council’s meetings with junior doctors and trainees.

Report on ‘toxic’ culture

An internal CHI report that became public this year flagged concerns over how a particular consultant was treating trainees.

The report said there was a pattern of “abrupt, unprofessional, intimidating and volatile behaviour towards trainees.”

It was decided that CHI would not have a new intake of trainees in 2022 until problems facing trainees were fixed.

Training at CHI sites has resumed since then, however no inspection process of training standards has happened on this scale at the three children’s hospitals since 2018.

The outcome of that inspection required an action and implementation plan being put in place at the time, but the internal report from January 2022 flagged serious concerns about training conditions in the hospitals after that implementation plan was completed.

The report also said that trainees reported a “negative” and “toxic” atmosphere which badly impacted them during their time interning at CHI hospitals.

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They also reported that one consultant had created a “psychologically unsafe” environment.

Trainees felt that they would be “punished or humiliated” for speaking up with ideas or concerns.

CHI to become a part of the HSE

Today the Minister for Health Jennifer Carroll MacNeill confirmed that CHI is to be subsumed into the HSE, which will also be responsible for the oversight of the New Children’s Hospital.

“The National Children’s Hospital Ireland will be the central hub in the network of paediatric care with links to regional paediatric units, operated overwhelmingly by the HSE. Accordingly, I have decided to integrate CHI into the HSE structure,” she said this morning.

The decision comes after a string of crises and scandals in the organisation, ranging from long waiting times for children’s spinal surgery in this country leaving some children inoperable, children undergoing unnecessary hip operations, and unapproved springs being put into children during surgeries.

Reaction from advocates and opposition

Úna Keightley, the co-lead of the Spina Bifida and Hydrocephalus Paediatric Advocacy Group this afternoon told The Journal “it was clear to us that CHI was not fit for purpose from the very beginning.”

“Subsuming CHI into the HSE does not wipe away the reality of what families have witnessed,” she added.

Keightley said that a statutory inquiry into CHI’s failings is needed, and transparency is needed on why this decision has been made, as she described it as a “complete U-turn from the Government”.

Sinn Féin’s spokesperson on Health, TD David Cullinane, today said that the Government has rearranged “the deck chairs of executives and board members” and that the decision will not improve outcomes.

“The minister has announced a plan to fold Children’s Health Ireland into the HSE. This will need to be teased out further.

“It is clear that significant changes are needed in Children’s Health Ireland, but whether that will be addressed by merging it with the HSE – which has many of its own challenges – is yet to be proven,” he said.

Cullinane echoed Keightley’s call for a public inquiry into CHI.

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Here’s What Happened Today: Wednesday

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NEED TO CATCH up? The Journal brings you a round-up of today’s news.

IRELAND


Independent presidential candidate Maria Steen with her husband Neill outside Leinster House after she failed to get the required 20 nominations to become a candidate in the presidential election. Leah Farrell


Leah Farrell

INTERNATIONAL

the-body-of-the-shooting-suspect-is-placed-in-the-medical-examiners-van-outside-the-apartment-building-near-the-scene-of-a-shooting-at-a-u-s-immigration-and-customs-enforcement-office-in-dallas-on-we
The body of a shooting suspect is placed in the medical examiners van near the scene of a shooting at a US Immigration and Customs Enforcement office in Dallas. Alamy Stock Photo


Alamy Stock Photo

#ICE: Two detainees were shot dead and one was wounded in a sniper attack at a US immigration facility in Dallas, the Department of Homeland Security said.

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#KIMMEL: Jimmy Kimmel has made his return to late-night television in the US after broadcasters facing pressure from US government regulators abruptly pulled it off the air last week.

#ESCALATORGATE: The White House launched an investigation after UN escalator stopped working when Trump stepped on.

PARTING SHOT

It’s one month to the day until voters head to the polls for the presidential election.

Lampposts will soon fill up with the names and faces of Áras hopefuls. But as the posters multiply, so does the debate around them: are they still necessary?

Some feel that the posters represent unnecessary waste and unsightly clutter. For others, they are considered an essential part of the election process.

So, take our poll and tell us your thoughts: Should election posters be banned? 

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‘Anti-ICE’ message on ammunition at Dallas shooting that killed two immigration detainees

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26 minutes ago

Ben HattonWashington DC

Two detainees have died and another is critically injured after a rooftop sniper opened fire at an Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) centre in Dallas, Texas, officials say.

The gunman fired indiscriminately at the ICE facility and at a nearby unmarked van, law enforcement officials say, before dying from a self-inflicted gunshot wound.

No law enforcement were injured. FBI Director Kash Patel posted a photo on X of unused ammunition recovered from the scene. One casing has the phrase “ANTI-ICE” on it.

It is the latest in a string of attacks on ICE facilities in recent months as the agency ramps up efforts to deliver on US President Dobald Trump’s pledge for mass deportations.

imageKash Patel/FBI An unused ammunition clip with "ANTI-ICE" written on one of the bulletsKash Patel/FBI

“While the investigation is ongoing, an initial review of the evidence shows an ideological motive behind this attack,” Patel wrote on X.

“These despicable, politically motivated attacks against law enforcement are not a one-off.”

FBI special agent Joe Rothrock told a news conference that rounds found near the gunman contained “messages that are anti-ICE in nature”.

“This is just the most recent example of this type of attack,” he said. He said the FBI was investigating it as “an act of targeted violence”.

Dallas police said a preliminary investigation determined the suspect had opened fire from an adjacent building.

“The shooter fired indiscriminately at the ICE building, including at a van in the sallyport where the victims were shot,” the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) said in a statement.

Reuters news agency reported that the building targeted is an ICE field office used for short-term processing of recently arrested detainees, and is not used as a detention facility.

Acting director of the Dallas ICE office Joshua Johnson told the news conference it was the second time he has had to stand in front of the media and talk about a gunman at one of his facilities.

“The takeaway from all of this is that the rhetoric has to stop,” he said.

Texas Senator Ted Cruz also spoke at the news conference, condemning “politically motivated violence”.

“Your political opponents are not Nazis,” he said, urging people not to demonise each other for partisan reasons. “The divisive rhetoric, tragically, has real consequences.”

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Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said in a statement: “This shooting must serve as a wake-up call to the far-left that their rhetoric about ICE has consequences.

“Comparing ICE Day-in and day-out to the Nazi Gestapo, the Secret Police, and slave patrols has consequences.”

US Vice-President JD Vance posted on X: “The obsessive attack on law enforcement, particularly ICE, must stop. I’m praying for everyone hurt in this attack and for their families.”

Republican Governor of Texas Greg Abbott said on X the shooting would “NOT slow our arrest, detention, & deportation of illegal immigrants”.

The ICE field office in Dallas has been targeted by a series of protests this summer.

A man was arrested in August after he entered the facility claiming to have a bomb in his backpack, according to the DHS.

The 36-year-old US citizen, Bratton Dean Wilkinson, had shown the building’s security staff a device on his wrist that he described as a bomb “detonator,” the DHS said.

Last month shots were fired at ICE offices in San Antonio, Texas. No injuries were reported in that incident, which ICE blamed on “political rhetoric”.

Another shooting occurred on the 4 July public holiday at an ICE facility in Alvarado, Texas, after a protest escalated into a face-off with police. An officer was shot in the neck, and survived. Eleven people have been charged over that attack.

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