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The Traitors is ‘main chat over pints’ – Slane looks to make most of hit RTÉ show

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The winners of The Traitors Ireland, the hit RTÉ reality TV show, may be “traitor slayers” Vanessa Ogbonna, Kelley Higgins and Oyin Adeyemi.

But host venue Slane Castle and the surrounding area in Co Meath have proven to be another star of the show.

Local people want to capitalise on the popularity of the show and hope to reap the rewards of having had the popular traitors – and faithfuls – staying in their midst.

“It absolutely has to be good for Slane,” said Meath County Council Cathaoirleach Wayne Harding, whose family run the Village Inn there.

Harding said the programme had “replaced football as the main chat over pints at the bar”.

“Everyone was commenting on how well Slane looked, so it really has put the village on the map again for a tourist destination and not only as a rock concert venue,” he said.

In the council headquarters all the talk among staff was about whether “any of the contestants were staying in the village or if I had met Paudie”, he said of the popular contestant, the 68-year-old retired prison officer Paudie Moloney.

“It really got the country’s attention and it’s a bit early to say, but I’d bet visitor numbers will be up in the coming months because of the show.”

Slane Castle has introduced tours for the show’s fans, including a visit to “the conclave” where traitors deliberated on which faithful they would “murder” on episodes. It is situated in dungeons not previously opened for 40 years.

Filming the series in March created special memories for the castle’s owner Alex Conyngham of his late father Henry Mount Charles, who had marvelled at the interior renovations for the show just three months before he died.

“He walked around the castle and was just amazed at the sets, especially the round table,” Mr Conyngham said of the decorative wooden table where contestants met nightly to try to weed out a traitor.

“The castle was full of more electrical cables than for a Slane gig with all the cameras and lighting everywhere, and Dad was just delighted how they reinvented the interiors.”

The dungeon used to be a keg store for the castle’s one-time nightclub and was boarded until it was used for the conclave’s late-night “scenes of treachery and murder”.

“It’s an incredible space – completely silent and pitch dark, so it’s perfect for secret scheming,” he said.

It was important to Mr Conyngham and his family that the whole village of Slane and not just the castle reaped any benefits from the hit series.

“I’ve definitely noticed more people stopping at the gates of the castle and taking pictures and the hits on our website and calls to Rock Farm have also increased,” he said, referring to the castle’s organic farm.

Alex Conyngham at Slane Castle, the location for The Traitors Ireland. Photograph: Andres Poveda
Alex Conyngham at Slane Castle, the location for The Traitors Ireland. Photograph: Andres Poveda

He said he hoped the television programme showcased nearby attractions such as the Hill of Slane, kayaking on the river Boyne and Slane Distillery.

Although the castle is only open to events, Mr Conyngham and his wife Carina have recently opened their home to guests who stay in the castle’s bedrooms.

There is also a new “The Traitors Tour Afternoon Tea” experience.

“People enjoy afternoon tea in the ballroom and are given an envelope to say if they are a traitor or a faithful,” he said.

“They can then play a smaller version of the game as they take a tour of the castle and the rooms used in the series, including the infamous dungeon.”

Mr Conyngham even tried on a traitor’s cloak for size.

“You do develop a different persona underneath that hood,” he said with a laugh.

He would not be drawn on whether the castle would host another series.

“I’d be very hopeful; it’s highly likely because of its success, but I can’t confirm anything yet,” he said.

“From a young age we have been used to being sworn to secrecy about concerts at the castle, so we have no problem keeping secrets when it comes to the Traitors Ireland.”

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Ex-Reform politician admits Russia-linked bribery charges

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The former leader of Reform UK in Wales has pleaded guilty to bribery charges relating to making statements in favour of Russia while being an elected member of the European Parliament.

Nathan Gill, 52, from Llangefni on Anglesey, admitted eight counts of bribery between 6 December 2018 and 18 July 2019, but denied one charge of conspiracy to commit bribery.

It was alleged he made statements in the European Parliament which were “supportive of a particular narrative” which would “benefit Russia regarding events in Ukraine”.

Gill will be sentenced in November and his defence barrister said he expected jail.

The charges stated that Gill, as an elected member of the European Parliament for the constituency of Wales in the UK, “agreed to receive financial advantage, namely money”, which constituted “the improper performance” as the holder of an elected office.

He also made these statements in opinion pieces to news outlets, such as 112 Ukraine.

The court was told he was tasked by Ukrainian Oleg Voloshyn on at least eight occasions to make specific statements in return for money and there was evidence of WhatsApp messages between the two men.

Mr Voloshyn is a former member of the Ukrainian parliament for the pro-Russian Opposition Platform for Life party.

The conspiracy to commit bribery alleged Gill conspired with Mr Voloshyn and “others” between 1 January 2018 and 1 February 2020, and that he accepted “quantities of money in cash” which was “improper performance by him of his function or activity as the holder” of a position in the European Parliament.

Prosecutor Mark Heywood said the guilty pleas were “satisfactory” because the bribery charges reflected the criminal activities, and agreed to lie the conspiracy charge on file.

They emerged after Gill was stopped at Manchester Airport on 13 September 2021 under the Counter Terrorism and Border Security Act 2019.

Peter Wright, speaking for Gill, told, the court: “It is recognised that it is inevitable that the defendant will receive an immediate sentencing to prison.”

Mrs Justice Cheema-Grubb told the court: “This is a serious matter.”

She said Nathan Gill had “admitted having ask questions, make statements and carried out other activity in support of pro-Russian parties in the European Parliament” where he was paid to do so.

Nathan Gill served as a UKIP and Brexit Party MEP between 2014 and 2020, and was leader of UKIP Wales between 2014 and 2016.

He then served leader of Reform UK Wales between March and May 2021, leading the party’s Senedd/Welsh Parliament election campaign.

However he is no longer a member of the party.

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Russia: Zelensky ‘threat’ to hit Kremlin ‘irresponsible’

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Russia has accused Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky of making “irresponsible” threats after he said Moscow’s top officials should check for bomb shelters near the Kremlin if the country does not stop its offensive on Ukraine.

In an interview with US media outlet Axios, Mr Zelensky said Russian officials “have to know where their bomb shelters are,” adding: “If they will not stop the war, they will need it in any case.”

Russia earlier this month struck the Ukrainian government complex in Kyiv for the first time in the three-and-a-half-year conflict as it launched its biggest aerial barrage on Ukraine.

“Zelensky is clearly continuing his desperate efforts. That’s why he’s issuing threats left and right, which is quite irresponsible,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told journalists at a briefing.

US and European backing for Ukraine’s ability to strike deep inside Russia has often wavered, with Washington and European capitals nervous of provoking Moscow into an expanded conflict.

However, Ukraine is now frequently targeting Russian energy facilities, repeatedly striking notably its refineries, and Mr Zelensky said US President Donald Trump had given him the green light to continue.

The Kremlin has also said that it did not want to talk about a Bloomberg report that European diplomats had privately warned Moscow that NATO would be ready to shoot down any Russian aircraft violating European airspace.

Bloomberg reported, citing officials familiar with the exchange, that British, French and German envoys had delivered the warning at a meeting in Moscow.

Asked how Russia would respond if NATO shot down a Russian plane, Mr Peskov said: “You know, I don’t even want to talk about this; it’s a very irresponsible statement.”

He added: “It’s very irresponsible because accusations against Russia that its military aircraft violated someone’s airspace and intruded into someone’s skies are groundless. No convincing evidence has been presented.”

NATO said Russian fighter jets violated Estonian airspace last week.

A rescuer works at the site of a Russian strike in Kharkiv, Ukraine
A rescue worker at the site of a recent Russian strike in Kharkiv, Ukraine

Ukraine’s military chief says Russia’s 2025 offensives have failed

Meanwhile, Ukraine’s military chief Oleksandr Syrskyi said Russia’s spring and summer offensives this year have failed to meet their goals, adding that Russia was firing twice as much artillery as Ukraine on the battlefield.

“It can be said that the Russians’ spring and summer campaign has effectively been disrupted,” Mr Syrskyi told reporters at a meeting.

Russia has been making incremental gains across several parts of the front line, after large-scale deployment of reconnaissance and attack drones has prevented quick progress of the sort seen in 2022.

Ukraine said the small advances are coming at a high human cost. Both sides in the war only rarely discuss casualties, but some Western intelligence estimates put the number of killed and wounded in Ukraine at more than one million.

Russian President Vladimir Putin at a meeting
Russian President Vladimir Putin

Small Russian infantry assaults

Mr Syrskyi said the active front line was now 1,250km long, and that an estimated 712,000 Russian personnel were involved in the fighting in Ukraine.

Mr Syrskyi said Russian plans to create a “buffer zone” in Sumy and Kharkiv regions in the north and northeast, to take the city of Pokrovsk and to capture all of Donetsk region had failed.

The capture of all of Donetsk is a key aim of the war for Russia, which currently controls over 70% of the region.

Mr Syrskyi said that since the beginning of summer, the Russians had been attacking with a tactic that he called “a thousand cuts” – a high number of tiny infantry assaults.

“This consists of the simultaneous use of a large number of small assault groups – 4-6 servicemen who advance using the terrain, ravines, and wooded areas, with the main aim of penetrating as deeply as possible into our territory.”

Speaking about a Russian breakthrough in August near the Donetsk town of Dobropillia, Mr Syrskyi said Ukraine had cut off Russian forces along the Kazenyi Torets river in what he called a “trap”.

US President Donald Trump and Robert F. Kennedy Jr are pictured in the Roosevelt Room of the White House
This week, Donald Trump changed his view of the war from one where he said Kyiv had no cards to play to one where Ukraine could take back all of the ground it has lost

Sudden change in Trump’s rhetoric

The commander added that in the last two months, Ukraine had hit 85 military or military-industrial facilities on Russian territory, including air bases, depots and factories.

This week, Mr Trump suddenly changed his view of the war from one where he said Kyiv had no cards to play to one where Ukraine could take back all of the ground it has lost so far – roughly 20% of its total territory.

He did not, however, offer substantial new assistance to Ukraine to achieve these goals and has shifted the onus onto European allies.

Russia said it is advancing in Ukraine and that Kyiv would be best advised to negotiate peace sooner rather than later.

Ukraine has rejected Russia’s terms for negotiations, saying they would amount to surrender.

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Ex-Reform politician admits Russia-linked bribery charges

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The former leader of Reform UK in Wales has pleaded guilty to bribery charges relating to statements in favour of Russia while being an elected member of the European Parliament.

Gill, 52, from Llangefni on Anglesey, admitted eight counts of bribery between 6 December 2018 and 18 July 2019, but denied one charge of conspiracy to commit bribery.

He served as a UKIP and Brexit Party MEP between 2014 and 2020, and was leader of UKIP Wales between 2014 and 2016, and then leader of Reform UK Wales between March and May 2021.

The court was told the guilty pleas were “satisfactory” because the bribery charges reflected the criminal activities.

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