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Dublin: 7 °C Thursday 23 May, 2013

Two men injured in separate stabbings in Dublin

Two women were detained by Gardaí but subsequently released without charge.

Blanchardstown Garda Station
Blanchardstown Garda Station
Image: Leon Farrell/Photocall Ireland

TWO MEN WERE injured and two women detained by Gardaí in separate stabbing events in Dublin overnight.

A man in his 40s was stabbed at about 11.30pm at Hamilton Way in Balbriggan and removed to Beaumont Hospital for treatment. His injuries have been described as not life-threatening.

A female in her 30s was taken to Coolock Garda Station in relation to the stabbing but she was released before 6 o’clock this morning.

Separately, another man was injured during an incident at Fassaugh Avenue in Cabra at about 10.20pm. He was taken to the Mater Hospital for treatment. A 26-year-old woman was detained at Blanchardstown Garda Station but was also released without charge.

Read: Gardaí and MCD hold preliminary review of Phoenix Park concert>

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Comments (33 Comments)

  • Torpedo 11/07/12 #

    It’s time for zero tolerance. 20 years for stabbing someone. 10 years for carrying a blade. See how long it takes before the risk is to high to carry a knife.

    Reply
  • Considering the attention Dublin has received in recent days with anti-social behaviour becoming an expectation in parts, regular stabbings, blatant drug dealing and the general deterioration of parts of the city centre, you’d wonder what it would take for a focused and committed intervention from government to take place. These issues are not going away and there doesn’t seem to be any real effort to address them.

    I’m sick and tired of the complacency and planned ignoral in Ireland. It’s like we do more to enable the bad kind of behaviours than combat them. Weak justice, lack of real consequence and little prevention results in widespread disengagement throughout law enforcement for the most part. Downward spiral and concerning :(

    Reply
  • I blame dance music.

    Reply
  • Whos gonna save the would tonight?

    Reply
  • Aarum 11/07/12 #

    Poor sentencing in the courts, knife crime and using weapons in fights, needs a mandatory sentence like 5-10 yrs

    Reply
  • See enda not all violence revolves around concerts,imagine that.
    The issue is getting really out of hand, scary stuff.

    Reply
  • Brilliant.

    Reply
  • I take it they were still out since Saturday night?? … Hopefully this puts a end to all the talk of the park :)

    Reply
  • They’re all laughing their asses off at us down in limerick! :)

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    • Not really laughing Dec. Being mostly decent in Limerick, we just want to see criminality like this dealt with.
      This behaviour isn’t cool anywhere. Limerick is a nice place to see during a Heineken cup game or having a nice pint looking across the Shannon rapids to the castle. Dublin is charming looking out across the bay from Vico Road or people-watching on Grafton street. The glass can be half-full too! Choose as you will.

      Reply
  • Gerard 11/07/12 #

    Much and all as I hate to say it but Dublin city centre is one of the roughest and run down capital cities I have ever been in and I have been in alot. I can’t think of any other capital city where drug dealing, daylight anti-social behaviour, vagrancy and begging at such a high level is accepted. It’s my capital city but I’m glad I know where and where not to roam. If you take a wrong turn off alot of the streets to the northern end and some of the southern end of o’connell st, you could find yourself in a whole lot of trouble. And before anyone asks, I know Dublin city too well, I have seen the best and absolute worst parts of it.

    Reply
    • Come to London you will find rough, when you go abroad you dont go to the rough areas, you know Dublin very well you say, probably alot better than Paris, Berlin, London all have alot more crime, shootings, stabbings, drug problems than your fair city. Dublin is ranked as one of the safest cities in the world. Fact.

      http://www.squidoo.com/safest-countries-in-the-world

      And you will find many more websites with Facts that Dublin is one of the safest cities in the world, and Ireland one of the safest countries in the WORLD.

      Reply
    • Gerard 11/07/12 #

      @mark Larson

      There are 9 million people in London, of course the crime rate is higher but you can still walk down regent st, Piccadilly circus or covent garden and you will not see as many junkies or beggars as you will see on o’connell st and you will not find unsafe streets anywhere in central London in the middle of the day. That is a fact

      Reply
    • Gerard crime rates across the world are by per capita of 100,000 inhabitants. So it does not matter if a city has 1 million people or 10 million. Obviously the more people you will get more crime. I live in central London just off Regent street and i know this city very well. About 10 years ago Piccadilly Circus had many junkies, crack heads hanging around the area mainly because the meth clinics where in that area. They moved all of the clinics out of central London to Kings X, Harlesden, Bow, Bermondsey. It cleaned the area up alot but just moved it on. I believe Dublin today has the same problem as London 10 years ago, alot of clinics in a the same area. They need to spread them out across the city. You will then find Central Dublin alot safer. And when you say you will not find unsafe streets anywhere in central London in the middle of the day, i Disagree with you, Soho right in the centre is bad with crack heads, Rupert street, parts of Chinatown, Charring X road, i could go on.

      Reply
    • As for Begging in the city, London is rife with them, all the areas you mentioned are the hotspots for them. You must have blinkers on when you travel.

      http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2051482/Child-beggars-young-making-100-000-year-gypsy-gangs.html

      http://golondon.about.com/od/personalsafety/qt/beggars.htm

      Reply
  • debbie 11/07/12 #

    It’s getting like limerick up here

    Reply
    • Debbie
      Thankfully Limericks issues have been over exaggerated over the years and it isn’t nearly as bad as people like you think it is, thank you however for assosiating it with a dublin crime issue again, it does offer a false sence of security to those who believe it is worse elswhere, I have no idea how bad it is in Dublin, I would guess however, from experience,it is not as bad as people make it out to be,

      Reply
  • All the customers in the pub where I work think this great city of Dublin is not like the friendly old Dublin of years ago. I must put on a few Dublin. songs on the Juke box, Dublin in the rare ould times is my favourite.

    Reply
  • I would never recommend visiting Dublin to anyone. It’s one of the roughest cities in the world.

    Reply
  • I genuinely think, and if you look at Greece and Spain, and places like Ballymun even during the boom, what is happening is due to poverty and disgust and nihilism, not weak laws… crime is going up, but laws aren’t getting weaker… hard to believe the inverse is gonna solve the problem…

    Yeah, more Gards would DEF help prevent crime, but that’s gonna cost money… which none of us have…

    so…

    Good luck everyone..

    Reply
    • Agreed Chris but having strong laws and more guards just serves to strengthen the front end of law enforcement. In the back end, our judicial system hands down suspended sentences by default with no real consequence being experienced by criminals. Most of these criminals also have previous convictions in the double digits. It’s madness!

      Reply
    • The problem with that logic Michael is that, you’d have to explain the rise of crime with a decrease in the strength of laws, length of sentences, etc…. no such correlation exists.

      Like I said, more Gards would help prevent crime, obviously, but you can’t scare people willing to carry knives and kill people by increasing sentences… they care as little about themselves as the people they’re stabbing…

      And btw, I do think some sentencing in Ireland is way too lenient, but if you look at the US, where punishment is much more strict AND crime is worse in many places, it shows that the correlation is as causal and the “tough on criminals” brigade always portrays it to be.

      More Gards though, yes, but tell me where the money is gonna come from or it’s just a quaint theory.

      Reply
    • I’m sorry but poverty is not an excuse for stabbing people. To suggest that implies that all poor people do not raise their children well

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    • Celtic Lady you’re confusing an “excuse” with an explanation.

      Poverty goes up, crime goes up.

      You also seem to be the one jumping to the conclusion that it’s because criminal’s parents are poor… maybe there’s a correlation, but I’d guess there’s a much bigger correlation between nihilism caused by the depression of a dead-end life and violence.

      People literally don’t care. When they have a stake in the community, they tend to care more… draw your own conclusions.

      One thing is certain, a lessening of sentences didn’t cause the crime, a strengthening of them won’t stop it.

      Reply

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