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Dublin: 7 °C Thursday 23 May, 2013

The 9 at 9: Friday

Nine things to know this morning…

Image: erix! via Creative Commons

EVERY MORNING, TheJournal.ie brings you the nine things you should know as you start your day.

1. #ULSTER BANK: Ulster Bank will continue to open some of its branches this weekend as it continues to struggle with the backlog of customer transactions. Meanwhile, the Financial Services Ombudsman has told RTÉ’s Morning Ireland that Ulster Bank customers can contact his office if they wish to lodge a complaint about the bank.

2. #JEWELLERY: Minister for Justice Alan Shatter has suggested that people struggling with their debts may have to forfeit their jewellery in a bid to pay their banks back under the new Personal Insolvency Bill.

3. #ORDER OF ST GREGORY: Former SDLP leader John Hume has been awarded a knighthood by Pope Benedict in recognition of his involvement in the Northern Ireland peace process. (Here’s what the Order of St Gregory is.)

4. #ARGENTINA: Two former Argentinian dictators – Jorge Rafael Videla and Reynaldo Bignone – have been convicted of the systematic stealing of babies from political prisoners three decades ago. Videla, 86, has been sentenced to 50 years in prison, while Bignone, 84, is to serve 15 years.

5. #STATELESS: An estimated 12 million people around the world are ‘stateless’, according to the United Nations. The Irish office of the UN High Commissioner for Refugees is launching a new photography exhibition to highlight the plight of people who are stateless, having no legal identity and no citizenship.

6. #CHINA: Chinese authorities have broken up major child trafficking gangs, arresting 802 people and freeing 181 children, the BBC reports.

7. #FOXY: The ISPCA is appealing to the public not to keep fox cubs as pets, regardless of how vulnerable the cubs appear. The organisation says that the number of orphaned foxes being found around Ireland is rising.

8. #BROLLY TIME: Despite a dry start to the day, the forecast is for much wetter conditions to move in later, with heavy rain expected over Leinster and Munster in particular. Forecasters are issuing warnings of localised flooding in parts of Munster.

9. #OOPS: A technical hitch at Fourth of July celebrations in San Diego led to the city’s holiday fireworks being set off all at the same time. The fireworks display had been scheduled to last 20 minutes – but instead lasted about 20 seconds. The brevity of the show wasn’t necessarily a bad thing, as broadcaster Ellen DeGeneres pointed out on Twitter:

San Diego



(Video credit: Andrew92106)

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Comments (14 Comments)

  • and in other financial news
    #10 Judgement due on Thomas Pringle TD’s ESM court challenge Monday 9 July at 10.30 am bit.ly/MEslYo – and judgement is due in the German constitutional court the next day at 10.00.

    Reply
  • Mr Shatter…..what if we have no jewellery to give?? will our buttons do?? or will our blood be enough?? I suppose if we are healthy maybe a few organs and limbs will surfice…..
    I hope the banks will be ok

    Reply
  • shatter wants your jewels and o’reilly wants a kidney

    Reply
  • I’m assuming Alan Shatter was talking about the likes of Gannon, McFeehily et al, the big developers who are filing for bankruptcy in every state they’ve ever visited and who probably have amassed huge collections of jewellery and art, not the ordinary Joe on the street lumped with ridiculous mortgages. Even so, suggesting selling an engagement ring is harsh…..will ya leave us with nothing but memories Minister?

    Reply
    • “….. leave us with nothing but memories”. You’ve hit the nail on the head with that one.

      Reply
    • “Joe on the street lumped with ridiculous mortgages” almost insinuates that we were all asked down to the bank to close our eyes and pull a piece of paper from a hat with a figure written on it. We all knowingly signed for our mortgage contracts as adults. Can’t see how one might get ‘lumped’ with a mortgage. Wanting the big house and the jewellery could be rooted in the entitlement culture.

      Reply
    • Yeah I see what you’re saying Gary, I should have been clearer…I didn’t intend it to imply that the ordinary Joe took on mortgages cluelessly or in some unfair lottery system. Eyes wide open for sure!

      Reply
  • Well mr shatter im sure u could find a few more ways to humiiate people if u try. Maybe along with jewellary you could get people to sell a relative or two…

    Reply
  • No report where the Govt are making an additional effort to collect voluntary taxes today, thinly disguised as a road safety campaign.
    Issuing photo fines to speeding drivers does not save lives. At best, it makes the driver aware that if they exceed the speed limit, a photo fine will arrive in the post at a later date.

    Reply
  • What if someone owed €1,000000 to the banks(state) and boasted that he and his wife each had a watch worth €60,000. I can guarantee they’ll get to keep their watches while someone that owes 100,000 on a property which is now worth half that will be stripped of their engagement rings. What a joke.
    Ps I know both couples referred to in this comment and the guy that owes the most is the less fearless of the banks.

    Reply
  • Let them eat cake

    Reply
  • why do we still have these gombeens running the country? we should have booted them out as soon a Enda signed us up to the ‘fiscal’ treaty. they clearly dont give a dam about the ordinary citizen, as long as their mates in the financial sector are doing o.k then all is well with them.

    Reply

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