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Former lord mayor Nial Ring told by council he cannot let Dublin rental property

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A rental property owned by former lord mayor of Dublin, Independent councillor Nial Ring, is the subject of an official notice that it cannot be let until improvements directed by Dublin City Council are implemented.

The house, No 7 Caledon Court, East Wall, Dublin 3, is on a list of 156 properties in respect of which prohibition notices have been issued by the council under the Housing (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act.

Landlords are served with such notices when they fail to comply with an improvement notice directing that a particular issue or issues be addressed.

“A landlord may not re-let the private rented dwelling for rent until the contravention(s) to which the improvement notice relate have been remedied,” the council said in a statement.

It would not say what the difficulties are in respect of Mr Ring’s property.

In his declaration of interests after last year’s local elections, Mr Ring, a councillor for the North Inner City ward, disclosed he owned the East Wall property and that the tenant in the house was in receipt of a Housing Assistance Payment.

He also declared part-ownership of a commercial building, 70 Ballybough Road, Dublin 3, and shares in a company called IMC Exploration group Plc, based in the Ballybough building.

In an address to the council earlier this week, principal environmental health officer Michelle McNally explained to councillors that prohibition notices are part of a process where the council’s housing section seeks to have landlords comply with the law.

During the second quarter of this year, the council inspected 4,278 privately rented dwellings, 2,244 of which were found to be non-compliant, she said.

During the period, 657 improvement notices were issued, and 109 prohibition notices. A “reasonable” amount of time is allowed for compliance with an improvement notice before a prohibition notice is issued, she said.

Earlier this year, a receiver placed Mr Ring’s Clontarf home, a detached Victorian house on St Lawrence Road, on the market, with a guide price of €2.75 million.

Earlier this year, a receiver placed Nial Ring’s Clontarf home on St Lawrence Road on the market, with a guide price of €2.75 million. Photograph: MyHome.ie
Earlier this year, a receiver placed Nial Ring’s Clontarf home on St Lawrence Road on the market, with a guide price of €2.75 million. Photograph: MyHome.ie

However, it now appears that Mr Ring has raised new borrowings and agreed a settlement with the receiver in respect of his home.

The five-bedroom house was the subject of a Circuit Court possession order in favour of the Bank of Ireland in 2017, but this was appealed.

The possession order was rescinded in 2019 when financing was secured by Mr Ring and his wife, Joyce, for the settling of approximately €1 million in debts and costs.

That same year, a company called Calvet Properties Ltd, owned by Mr Ring, bought the house from the Rings. A mortgage was registered against the property by Business Capital and Finance (PC) Ltd, a Belfast company owned by Gareth Graham, a non-bank lender to small businesses.

In November 2022, receiver Micheal Leydon was appointed to Calvet by the Belfast company, and in March 2025 Mr Leydon took possession of the Clontarf house and placed it on the market.

However, in a recent filing to the Companies Registration Office, the receiver said a settlement had been agreed as regards possession of the property. No other details were disclosed.

Rear garden of the Clontarf home. Photograph: MyHome.ie
Rear garden of the Clontarf home. Photograph: MyHome.ie

In August, a new mortgage was recorded against the house, which is still registered as owned by Calvet. The mortgage names three companies based in Northern Ireland. Two are associated with Mr Graham’s Business Capital and Finance. The third, Kinora Investments Ltd, of Dungannon, Co Tyrone, is owned by John Patrick Turkington and Paul Francis O’Neill, of Dungannon.

In May, Mr Ring and his business partner, Liam McGrattan, had the charges against them struck out by the Dublin District Court after being found above the Ref Pub, 70 Ballybough Road, in April 2020, during the pandemic, contrary to Covid restrictions.

A request for a comment from Mr Ring met with no response.

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Spain to send warship to protect Gaza aid flotilla

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Spain’s Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez has said he will join Italy in sending a military warship to protect an international flotilla seeking to deliver aid to Gaza after it was attacked by drones off Greece.

Mr Sanchez told a press conference in New York, where he has been attending the UN General Assembly, that the citizens of 45 countries were on board to deliver food to the population of Gaza and express solidarity with their suffering.

“The government of Spain insists that international law be respected and that the right of our citizens should be respected to sail through the Mediterranean in safe conditions,” he said.

“Tomorrow we will dispatch a naval vessel from Cartagena with all necessary resources in case it was necessary to assist the flotilla and carry out a rescue operation.”

Italy’s Defence Minister Guido Crosetto yesterday said he would send a navy frigate to assist the flotilla.

He expressed the “strongest condemnation” of the “attack” on the flotilla and said the navy vessel is en route to the area “for possible rescue operations”.

The Global Sumud Flotilla is using about 50 civilian boats to try to break Israel’s naval blockade of Gaza, with many lawyers and activists on board, including Swedish climate campaigner Greta Thunberg.

The vessels were attacked by 12 drones in international waters 56 kilometres off the Greek island of Gavdos, said Marikaiti Stasinou, a spokesperson for March to Gaza Greece, which is part of the flotilla.

Ms Thunberg told Reuters on Monday that they had drones flying over them each night.

“This mission is about Gaza, it isn’t about us. And no risks that we could take could even come close to the risks the Palestinians are facing every day,” she said in a videocall from the ship.

Irish activist Sarah Clancy, who is part of the flotilla, said drones targeting their boats are an attempt to harass and intimidate them.

She said nine or ten boats in the flotilla were hit by projectiles that emitted smoke dropped from the drones.

Photo shows Galway activist Sarah Clancy aboard on of the boats of the Gaza aid flotilla
Sarah Clancy described the drone attacks as an “act of piracy”

The Global Sumud Flotilla (GSF) departed Barcelona on 31 August, with the aim of breaking Israel’s blockade of Gaza. It currently numbers 51 vessels, most of which are off the Greek island of Crete.

Israel has repeatedly criticised the flotilla for its implied support for Hamas, but made no comment on whether it was responsible for the drones.

It launched the war in Gaza in response to attacks on 7 October 2023 by Hamas militants, which killed some 1,200 people and saw 251 taken hostage, according to Israeli tallies.

Since then, the conflict has killed more than 65,000 Palestinians, according to Gaza health authorities, and has spread famine, destroyed most buildings and displaced the population, in many cases multiple times.

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Taoiseach to discuss trade and conflict with Canadian PM

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The Taoiseach is in Canada for a bilateral meeting with the Canadian Prime Minster Mark Carney.

The two leaders are expected to discuss trade, Ukraine and Gaza.

US President Donald Trump’s tariffs on Canada have cost Canadian exporters five billion dollars so far this year, and have soured relations between the two, as have President Trumps jibes about making Canada the 51st state.

Canadians have responded with informal boycotts of US goods.

The country is actively looking to make up those losses with expanded trade links elsewhere.

Exports to the EU have gone up 26% since Mr Trump returned to the White House.

Micheál Martin said Ireland will ratify the Canada Europe Trade Agreement in the Dáil in the coming months.

Its provisional application has already seen an increase in bilateral trade.

The wars in Ukraine and Gaza will also be discussed as Canada is a significant participant in international peacekeeping and humanitarian efforts.

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More must be done to protect clean air in Ireland – EPA

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The Environmental Protection Agency said more needs to be done to protect clean air in towns, villages and cities across the country.

Although air quality in Ireland is generally good and meets all current EU legal requirements, the EPA is concerned that it will be challenging to meet more stringent pollution limits due to come into force in 2030.

A new law imposing tougher air quality standards under a new Ambient Air Quality Directive was adopted by Europe in October last year.

It has not yet been transposed into Irish law, but there is a requirement for that to happen by the end of next year.

It aims to gradually align EU air quality standards with the latest World Health Organization levels, which are extremely tough.

As a result, it is expected that Ireland will need to achieve new and updated air quality standards with very tight limits by the start of 2030.

Those new limits will include targets for ultrafine particles of pollution and black carbon, which are not covered by the current requirements.

The EPA uses an extensive network of 115 stations to monitor air quality around the country.

Its Air Quality in Ireland 2024 report said around 1,700 premature deaths occur in Ireland each year because of poor air quality.

The aim of the new EU directive is to reduce premature deaths linked to pollution in Europe by 55% by 2030.

Today’s report said Ireland is currently on course to achieve only 93% compliance with the proposed new limits for fine particulate matter, and 78% for nitrogen dioxide.

The main sources for these pollutants are solid fuel burning in open fires and emissions from road traffic.

The report said a decisive shift away from solid fuel burning, alongside the adoption of electric vehicles, efforts to reduce traffic, and the promotion of public transport, will be needed if Ireland is to meet the new standards.

Director of the EPA’s Office of Radiation Protection and Environmental Monitoring, Pat Byrne, said: “Supporting people to shift towards cleaner heating and more sustainable travel isn’t about giving something up. It is about gaining healthier air and healthier lives.”

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