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The boss of Ryanair has hit out at the UK and Irish governments' handling of the coronavirus crisis, telling Sky News there is a 'greater danger of catching COVID in Bolton than Barcelona'.
Michael O'Leary used an Ian King Live interview to describe Boris Johnson's performance as 'lamentable' amid deep frustration in the aviation sector over shifting restrictions imposed to control the spread of the virus - rules, the industry argues, that are killing passenger demand.
He said that Ireland was 'by far the worst' and that the country - the company's home market - was effectively 'closed for business' given the severity of its COVID-19 quarantine regime.
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Mr O'Leary argued there was too much focus among European governments on rising coronavirus cases when determining travel curbs - demanding 'common sense' was applied.
He suggested hospital admission statistics showed the threat posed by the virus was not as severe as it had been at the start of the crisis.
Ryanair announced several weeks ago that it was cutting flight capacity by 20% during September and October.
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Mr O'Leary said the decision was a consequence of the industry becoming 'bedevilled' by government mismanagement.
'Our customers are struggling to make any bookings with confidence when you have, for example, the British government locking down Bolton one day, Preston another day, inventing this new restriction that social settings will be reduced to six people,' he said.
'They're just making the stuff up as they go along to cover up the fact that test and trace is effectively non-existent.'
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Like rival easyJet earlier this week, which has also cut capacity, the Ryanair boss called on the UK government to slash Air Passenger Duty to help stoke demand among UK passengers.
He said it would amount to a boost for airlines on a level similar to what the Chancellor Rishi Sunak's Eat Out to Help Out scheme did for restaurants.
He said of Boris Johnson's performance over the crisis to date: 'He ruled out wearing face masks originally, he was running around shaking hands with everybody. He's consistently called the entire COVID pandemic wrong.'
He added: 'I wouldn't take any advice or guidance from him'.
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Senior Sinn Féin TD Eoin Ó Broin has said a party member who called to a young activist’s house to tell her to delete critical tweets was “wrong” to do so.
Christine O’Mahony (22) quit Sinn Féin’s youth organisation last week amid the controversy over Laois-Offaly TD Brian Stanley’s bizarre social media post referencing Tánaiste Leo Varadkar’s sexuality.
She also raised separate concerns about alleged racism in the wake of Mr Varadkar’s claim that he has been the target of such abuse from Sinn Féin supporters.
Ms O’Mahony spoke of how a Sinn Féin member called to her parent’s home while she was upstairs in the middle of a college lecture. She said her parents were told she shouldn’t be criticising the party online and her tweets should be deleted.
Ms O’Mahony told TheIrish Times she made the decision to resign after this, as she believes members are being “silenced”. She also posted on Twitter: “As a black and bisexual woman I can’t stay silent on these issues. My principles before party.”
On RTÉ’s The Week in Politics, Mr Ó Broin was asked about the issue and an “online pile-on” that Ms O’Mahony, and the reporter who told her story, were subsequently subjected to.
Mr Ó Broin said: “The people who were engaged in that pile-on did the wrong thing.
“They are not in any way aiding or assisting our party and if they think they are, my message to them is stop doing those types of things.”
Fine Gael Minister Simon Harris said it was “extremely concerning” that a young woman would get a “knock on the door to be told that that tweet is not liked and that Sinn Féin’s response would be internal matters should be dealt with internally”.
He added: “God knows enough people tweet things about me that I don’t like – we don’t send the heavies around to knock on the door.”
Mr Ó Broin took exception to the use of the word ‘heavies’, saying it was “inappropriate”, and the show’s presenter also said the individual was entitled to their good name.
Mr Harris asked Mr Ó Broin if he thinks what happened was acceptable. And he questioned what disciplinary actions would result.
Mr Ó Broin said: “What the individual in question did was wrong. Nobody should have called to the activist’s door. People should be allowed to engage in political discourse publicly as they see fit.”
He said that when complaints are made to the party, it has a clear independent disciplinary process.
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Mr Stanley has sought time to address the Dáil next week in relation to the controversy over his tweets about the death of British soldiers in Ireland and another about Mr Varadkar when he became Fine Gael leader in 2017, where he said: “Yippie 4 d tory. it’s Leo. U can do what you like in bed but don’t look 4 a pay rise in the morning.”
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He apologised for the tweet about British soldiers. On the other tweet, he insisted he has been campaigning for gay rights “before it was popular” and he doesn’t need to say sorry to the LGBT community for the post. He has since deleted his Twitter account.
Mr Ó Broin said the tweets were “colossal errors of judgment” and a statement to the Dáil is “the right thing to do”.