Irish presidential frontrunner attacks Dublin for failure to sanction Israel

Irish presidential frontrunner attacks Dublin for failure to sanction Israel
Irish presidential candidate Catherine Connolly, who is running as an independent in this year's election, attends the Irish National Ploughing Championships in Screggan, Ireland September 16, 2025. (REUTERS)
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Updated 09 October 2025
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Irish presidential frontrunner attacks Dublin for failure to sanction Israel

Irish presidential frontrunner attacks Dublin for failure to sanction Israel
  • Connolly leads in opinion polls before the October 24 vote
  • She urged Dublin not to buckle to pressure from big US companies by watering down the law and stopping just a trickle of trade in goods, not services

DUBLIN: The frontrunner to become Ireland’s next president has criticized the government for inaction on a planned law to impose sanctions on Israeli settlements in protest over Israel’s military campaign in Gaza.
Catherine Connolly, an independent leftwing lawmaker backed by the main opposition Sinn Fein party, urged Dublin not to buckle to pressure from big US companies by watering down the law and stopping just a trickle of trade in goods, not services.
She was speaking before US President Donald Trump said Israel and Hamas had reached a deal for a ceasefire in Gaza and a hostage release under his plan for ending the two-year-old war in the Palestinian enclave.
Ireland’s government has been fiercely critical of Israel’s offensive in Gaza against Hamas. But sources told Reuters the bill is set to be blunted, however, after lobbying by US businesses.
“We cannot allow the government to fail the Palestinian people on this,” she told Reuters, accusing the center-right governing coalition partners Fianna Fail and Fine Gael of “dragging their feet.”
“I will continue to press for the occupied territories bill to include services, as it was always intended,” Connolly said, calling any limitation to goods an “appalling capitulation to corporate interests” and an “unforgivable betrayal.”
Ireland’s president is largely a figurehead but can exercise influence over the government, having powers to refer proposed new laws to the supreme court to determine whether they are in line with the constitution, although this is rare.
Connolly leads in opinion polls before the October 24 vote.
Connolly’s comments were echoed by Frances Black, an independent member of the upper house of parliament who first brought forward the legislation to impose sanctions over Israeli settlements seven years ago.
“The government needs to be ... strong on this. They need to be courageous. It’s absolutely vital that we have goods and services on the bill,” Black told Reuters. “We need to match our words with action.
The Irish government declined to comment.
Ireland has been preparing to impose sanction over trade with Israeli settlements for a year, provoking criticism from Israel, international company lobby groups and threats of reprisal from US lawmakers.
Earlier this week, a group of US lawmakers wrote to Irish prime minister Micheál Martin, saying that passing the bill would damage US-Irish relations and impact American companies in Ireland.


Indonesia probes student after nearly 100 hurt in school blasts

Indonesia probes student after nearly 100 hurt in school blasts
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Indonesia probes student after nearly 100 hurt in school blasts

Indonesia probes student after nearly 100 hurt in school blasts
  • Explosions that injured dozens of people during Friday prayers could have been an attack, officials said, with a 17-year-old student the suspected perpetrator

JAKARTA: Indonesian authorities said Saturday they were investigating a student over their alleged involvement in explosions that wounded nearly 100 people at a school in the capital Jakarta.

The blasts hit a school mosque in North Jakarta just as people were gathering for Friday prayers, sparking panic among worshippers.

The national police chief said investigators had gathered “several pieces of evidence” as part of their probe.

“There’s writing, and there is also evidence of powder that could potentially have caused an explosion,” Listyo Sigit Prabowo said in comments broadcast by Kompas TV.

Authorities so far have identified one suspect, a student who was wounded in the explosions, but Listyo did not rule out the involvement of others.

Investigators are also examining the suspect’s family and social media, the police chief added.

Ninety-six people were wounded in the incident, Listyo said, revising the police’s earlier casualty figure of 54.

At least 14 victims remain hospitalized, two of whom are in intensive care, he said.

Mayndra Eka Wardhana, spokesman for the counter-terrorism police unit Densus 88, said that investigators had searched the suspect’s home.

He added that they were still probing the motive behind the incident.

A witness told AFP there was confusion over what happened.

“At first we thought it came from some electronic equipment, maybe the sound system... but it turned out the explosion came from under the prayer mat,” Kinza Ghaisan Rayyan, a 17-year-old student, said Friday.