Since the demise of the Celtic Tiger in 2008, Ireland has officially fallen into a severe recession. Refugees living in Ireland are among the hardest hit groups, and they are struggling for survival.
The latest African leader to embrace the Trojan horse that China has placed in the heart of the developing world is Rwandan President Paul Kagame.
I witnessed a horrible sight one evening on the way to work at my previous job. As I got out of my friend’s car, I saw a group of people standing at the gate leading to the underground car park beneath my workplace. As I approached I saw an ambulance and
I have been in Ireland long enough to have experienced the huge ethnic culinary revolution which swept the country in recent decades. Quite apart from the obvious growth in posh restaurants during the ‘Celtic Tiger’ era, and their current demise,
In 1945, the world looked on with feigned disbelief and incredulity as the emaciated bodies, mass graves and charred remains bore witness to the inhumanity of man and the horrifying extent of the Nazi’s ‘final solution’. Yet for all its posturing,
While my monthly column is not meant be akin to a journal, I do want to pick up where I left off from last time with regard to my experience at university.