IrelandMorning Briefing

Your morning briefing: Cash find at Sligo murderer’s home sparked terrorism fears, Israeli firm fires Dublin woman over social posts

Who did best out of Budget 2024, changes proposed for housing those fleeing Ukraine war, Netanyahu urged to maintain aid to Gaza Strip

People sell vegetables at the Nuseirat Market in the Gaza Strip. Photograph: Samar Abu Elouf/The New York Times
Yousef Palani: Massive cash find sparked fears Sligo murders were terror-related

Anti-terrorism gardaí worked with overseas security agencies to determine if Yousef Palani, who was on Monday sentenced to life for the murder of two gay men, was engaged in terrorism.

The presence of €350,000 in cash in two suitcases in Palani’s home in Sligo town raised fears he had been paid by an Islamic terrorism group to carry out the attacks.

However, gardaí concluded there were no outside groups or individuals involved in the attack. A sentencing hearing at the Central Criminal Court on Monday heard gardaí did not believe Palani was “radicalised despite some suggestions to the contrary”.

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Anthony Burke, who was attacked by Yousef Palani in Sligo. Photograph: Tom Honan

Israel-Hamas conflict

A woman holding a girl reacts after Israeli airstrikes hit Ridwan neighborhood of Gaza City, Gaza yesterday. Photograph: Ali Jadallah/Anadolu via Getty Images

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Landlords Tax
Government targeted landlords, homeowners and tenants with different Budget 2024 measures but not everyone will gain. Illustration: Paul Scott
  • Renters, homeowners, landlords: Who did best out of Budget 2024?: With housing still the single biggest issue among voters, this month’s budget sought to ease the burden for renters, homeowners and landlords alike. But who did best? Pearse Doherty, Sinn Féin spokesman on finance, was clear that the budget favoured those renting out properties.

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  • Iris DeMent on recording In Spite of Ourselves: ‘I’d open my mouth and nothing would come out’: Iris DeMent is feeling the strain of living in a divided country. “Worried, sick worried. And I don’t use that word lightly,” she says. “It’s a constant battle not to succumb to illness from it. And that’s why I put this album out. It was medicine for me. And I figured if it helped me it might help somebody else. I’m daily thinking about how to stay afloat, worrying about what could be coming next. I’m 62. You know we’ll ride it out, do what we can, but these are dark days.”

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Nina Crofts pictured having a sleep at Trinity's Hist Guinness World Record attempt at the Debate Chamber. Photograph: Tom Honan

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Sir, – What a relief it is to know that we will no longer have to hold referendums in Ireland and that we can dispense with citizens’ assemblies. If we need to know the will of the Irish people on any subject, we simply have to ask President Michael D Higgins. – Yours, etc,

MICHAEL TYNDALL, Sutton, Dublin 13.

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