Community mourns loss of expectant mother, 32 By Catherine Reilly DUBLIN’S ROTUNDA maternity hospital is believed to be investigating the death of a 32-year-old Nigerian woman who was under its care, Metro Éireann understands.
An entrepreneur from Trinidad stole the show recently when she secured a €40,000 investment for her Caribbean food business on RTÉ’s Dragons’ Den.
Travelling to Parnell Square in a motorcade led by rows of uniformed gardaí, the president of the now-independent nation of Timor-Leste stopped last Monday to lay a wreath at the Garden of Remembrance.
THREE-FLOORS OF music in central Dublin will kick off European Week Against Racism in Ireland with a bang and a beat.
Filipino worker, family fear deportation after visa expiry By Simon Walsh A Filipino who has worked in Ireland for eight years fears that he and his family could face deportation after the expiration of his work visa.
POLITICIANS MAY wax lyrical on the ‘benefits of diversity’ and immigrants’ contribution to Irish society, but their policies sing to a vastly different tune, says a new publication.
The United Nations is launching a new youth video contest to explore the themes of migration, diversity and identity.
Migration policies must offer equal opportunities to reduce women’s vulnerability to exploitation, said the International Organisation for Migration (IOM) ahead of International Women’s Day last Monday 8 March.
AFRICAN COMEDY fans in Dublin were left bitterly disappointed last weekend when a famous Nigerian funny-man failed to perform at a comedy event as billed.
NIGERIANS IN Dundalk are set to participate in the town’s St Patrick’s Day parade for the very first time.
When President Obama warned his Republican adversaries that he would move forward without them if they continued to refuse to compromise, I was right behind him. At long last, this was the Obama I had been hoping for and patiently waiting to see emerge from
Robert Carry: From the Home Front Many opposed to immigration in Ireland point to the fact that large numbers of people from places not suffering from conflict arrive here and claim asylum. Among the most commonly highlighted country in this regard
Students, intellectuals, hu-man rights activists or anyone interested in understanding how a participative democracy works should consider a trip to Venezuela.
Fiona Coghlan\'s Rugby Diary We are at the halfway point of this year’s Six Nations championship, and we are sitting fourth in the table with one win and two losses. This leaves us with two colossal games to play at home, against Wales and
Aside from meeting Ireland’s leaders and receiving an honorary degree from UCD, the state visit by President José Ramos-Horta of Timor-Leste last Monday 8 March provided a special opportunity to thank the Irish people for their contributions
In an act of sheer political opportunism, Fine Gael is fluttering its political eyelashes at Ireland’s animal abuse community.
Recently, Mozambique’s former transport minister Antonio Munguambe was sentenced to 20 years imprisonment for his part in the embezzlement of US$1.7m (€1.25m) from state funds.
The lack of leadership has been a recurring problem in Nigeria since the country’s independence. Leadership should be about vision and creativity, but our leaders are like rotten trees that bring bad fruit.