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2012 in Ireland

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Events during the year 2012 in Ireland.

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Incumbents

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President Michael D. Higgins

Events

January

  • The occupation of the Vita Cortex plant in Cork, which closed in December, continued into the new year.[1]
  • 1 January – The Government stopped paying expenses to former taoisigh (prime ministers), while sweeping price increases for goods and services, and in value added tax (VAT), affected consumers when decisions announced in Budget 2012 came into effect. A controversial €100 household charge was applied, as were large increases in transport fares, motor taxation, and health insurance costs.[2][3]
  • 3 January
  • 8 January – Fine Gael politician and RTÉ broadcaster Barry O'Neill was involved in controversy when photographs appeared on Facebook of his new wife giving Nazi salutes beside models of Adolf Hitler and other Nazis during their European honeymoon.[7]
  • 12 January – Ulster Bank announced plans to cut 950 jobs from its Irish operations by the end of the year, with around 600 to be cut in the Republic of Ireland.[8]
  • 13 January – The Criminal Law (Defence and the Dwelling) Act 2012, drafted after the 2004 death of John Ward, came into effect. The new home defence law allowed householders to defend their homes against intruders using reasonable force, including deadly force.[9]
  • 15 January – A fatal fishing disaster occurred off the south west coast.[10] Three bodies were later found; two others remain missing.[11]
  • 16 January
  • 22–3 January – A strong solar proton storm created a rare display of the aurora borealis in Ireland that was observed by thousands of people in north County Donegal,[14] and as far south as Charlestown, County Mayo.[15]
  • 24 January – Debt campaigners dressed as zombies converged on the Irish embassy in Britain to highlight the presence of zombie banks such as the Irish Bank Resolution Corporation (formerly Anglo Irish Bank).[16]
  • 25 January
  • 26 January
    • An earthquake classified as minor (magnitude 2.2) struck County Donegal.[22][23]
    • Dublin officially began its term as the European City of Science 2012.[24]
    • Dáil Éireann passed the Water Services Amendment Bill, allowing the government to charge rural dwellers for their septic tanks, as well as to inspect them.[25]
    • Taoiseach Enda Kenny, at the World Economic Forum in Davos, told the world that Irish people "went mad borrowing" from a banking system that spawned greed.[26]
    • The High Court was told that 11 gardaí were investigating sinister goings-on at Anglo Irish Bank;[clarification needed] Mr. Justice Peter Kelly called the revelation "extraordinary".[27][28]

February

March

April

  • 2 April – Female genital mutilation was made illegal by the enactment by President Higgins of the Criminal Justice (Female Genital Mutilation) Act 2012.[71][72]
  • 3 April
  • 5 April – The majority of shareholders in support services company Siteserv voted to accept a takeover proposal from the Denis O'Brien-controlled Millington, worth €45 million. The controversial deal came after French company Altrad claimed it had tried to buy Siteserv for a higher price.[75]
  • 11 April – Environment Minister Phil Hogan sought sanctuary in a Carlow cathedral after running away from protesters against his property tax in his own constituency.[76]
  • 14 April – As the Labour Party held its centenary conference at the National University of Ireland, Galway, gardaí used pepper spray to hold back anti-austerity demonstrators protesting against government cuts on the grounds, with reports of a 13-year-old child being threatened with the spray as the building was locked down amid chants of "Revolution, revolution!" and a coffin draped in the Irish tricolour.[77]
  • 17 April – Environment Minister Phil Hogan announced the establishment of Irish Water, as a subsidiary of Bord Gáis.[78]
  • 19 April
  • 24 April
    • The Garda Síochána Ombudsman Commission ruled that there were no grounds for any criminal case against any of five officers involved in an incident on 31 March 2011 known as the "rape tape" controversy, resulting from the inadvertent video recording of a sergeant in a patrol car joking about the rape of two women.[82]
    • The aurora borealis returned to County Donegal, having already made a rare Irish appearance in January.[83]
  • 25 April – A tornado was observed near Fintown in County Donegal.[84]

May

  • 2 May – Cardinal Seán Brady was embroiled in controversy over a BBC television programme which contained allegations that he failed to act after one sex abuse survivor gave him a list in 1975 of other children being abused by Father Brendan Smyth.[85]
  • 4 May – RTÉ's defamation of Father Kevin Reynolds: RTÉ was fined €2,000,000 by the Broadcasting Authority of Ireland (BAI).[86] Reporter Aoife Kavanagh resigned from RTÉ over her role in the scandal.[87]
  • 9 May
    • The Abbey Theatre announced a nine-week closure when asbestos was discovered in the building.[88]
    • Archaeologists announced discovery in the Burren of evidence of settlement from 6000 BCE.[89]
  • 11 May – President Higgins received the Freedom of Galway from Mayor Hildegarde Naughton.[90]
  • 14 May – While canvassing for votes in Athlone, Taoiseach Enda Kenny told an unemployed bus driver to "get a job". The man later requested an apology and retraction, calling Kenny "a smug, arrogant git". In the same town, Kenny had an angry exchange with a man who said his son had been forced to emigrate.[91]
  • 16 May – The Garda Síochána destroyed the Occupy Galway camp in an overnight raid.[92]
  • 17 May
    • Taoiseach Enda Kenny was heckled and booed by anti-austerity treaty protesters in Galway as he attended a breakfast briefing.[93]
    • Financial irregularities were revealed at Bloxham Stockbrokers.[94]
    • Following the UN Committee Against Torture's condemnation of the Irish government's failure to acknowledge and assist former detainees of the ten Catholic-run Magdalene laundries, the Justice for Magdalenes campaign group announced its discovery that women were transferred from State-funded mother and baby homes to Magdalene laundries, where they were held against their will and without their children.[95]
  • 31 May – Voters passed the constitutional referendum to permit Ireland to ratify the 2012 European Fiscal Compact.[96]

June

July

  • 10 July – Health Minister James Reilly was named on a debt defaulters' list to the tune of €1.9 million.[119][120] This was described as "unprecedented" for a government minister.[121]
  • 13 July – It was revealed that Fine Gael Senator Fidelma Healy Eames boarded the Galway to Dublin train without a ticket. A fellow passenger alleged that Healy Eames said "she is a Senator and that she makes the law" when an inspector asked her to produce her ticket.[122]
  • 18 July – Former TV3 News Western Correspondent Jenny McCudden was named as the new editor of The Sligo Champion, becoming the first female to fill the position in the newspaper's 176-year history.[123]
  • 26 July – Galway Circuit Civil Court ordered the husband of Fidelma Healy Eames to pay more than €12,000 in unpaid fees to a tradesman employed to carry out renovations at the Healy Eames residence in County Galway. The tradesman launched a lawsuit in 2010 against the Healy Eameses for thousands of euros in unpaid fees.[124]
  • 27 July – During a case at Claremorris District Court Judge Mary Devins, wife of former Fianna Fáil TD Jimmy Devins, described social welfare as a Polish charity, sparking national outrage and a formal complaint to the police over "the possibility that she is in breach of the prohibition in the Incitement to Hatred Act from 1989".[125][126]

August

  • 2 August – It was confirmed that a car belonging to Fidelma Healy Eames was seized in July for not having a current tax disc.[127]
  • 15 August – Geraldine Kennedy and Justine McCarthy were appointed Adjunct Professors of Journalism at the University of Limerick.[128]
  • 17 August – Staff at Letterkenny General Hospital were informed of the closure of County Donegal's only gynaecology ward. Nursing unions, patients and staff reacted with shock to the news.[129]
  • 20 August
    • Three investigations into a nursing home in Oughterard, County Galway, found most residents had not washed for at least a month, were being starved and lived in squalid conditions.[130]
    • Fidelma Healy Eames was involved in controversy over her decision to charge a state agency the cost of a plane ticket for her husband to accompany her on a hotel break to Kenya. When news of this was reported in the Irish media, Healy Eames said she would pay back the money within "a couple of weeks".[131]
  • 22 August – On the 90th anniversary of the death of revolutionary Michael Collins, the Taoiseach Enda Kenny gave the commemoration speech at Béal na Bláth, the first serving head of government to do so. He also erroneously credited Collins with bringing Vladimir Lenin to Ireland.[132]
  • 24 August – Journalist Charlie Bird informed RTÉ management of his retirement.[133][134]
  • 27 August – The board of Independent News & Media elected Cork businessman Leslie Buckley, a close associate of Denis O'Brien, as its new chairman, replacing James Osborne who was ousted in April.[135]
  • 28 August
    • Amateur astronomer David Grennan discovered his second supernova from his observatory in Raheny two years after he discovered his first one. He is the only one ever to have discovered supernovae from Ireland.[136]
    • Hundreds of jobs were lost when College Freight, operating as Target Express, the country's largest privately owned transport company, announced it had ceased trading. Workers began sit-ins in Carlow, Cork and Limerick.[137]

September

October

  • 9 October
    • Thousands of farmers marched through Dublin city in protest at government cuts.[153]
    • A walkout occurred during a Public Accounts Committee meeting with the Health Service Executive when health officials were told they were not fit for office.[154]
  • 16 October – A report on St. Patrick's Institution found a culture of human rights abuse.[155]

November

  • 5 November – Students marched against austerity in Cork.[156]
  • 8 November
    • Two days ahead of the children's referendum, the Supreme Court – ruling against the government's distribution of information on the referendum – found the government had breached the 1995 McKenna judgement requiring that referendums be explained to the public in an unbiased manner. The referendum's website was immediately taken down.[157]
    • Barry Andrews, the former Fianna Fáil Minister of State for Children, was appointed chief executive of aid charity GOAL, replacing John O'Shea.[158]
  • 10 November
  • 13 November – The death of Savita Halappanavar on 28 October at a Galway hospital became public.[161]
  • 14 November
  • 24 November
    • Ten thousand people marched against austerity in Dublin, amid calls for a general strike to shut down the country.[164]
    • Irish Daily Star editor Michael O'Kane resigned over his role in the publication of topless photographs of Kate Middleton.[165]
  • 28 November
    • Students marched through Letterkenny, and distributed a thousand letters of protest to the office of their local government (Fine Gael) TD, Joe McHugh.[166]
    • An X Case Bill, which proposed legislating for abortion in the event of risk to a woman's life, was defeated by 101–27 in the Dáil.[167]

December

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The arts

Architecture

Film

Literature

Music

Television

Theatre

  • May – A new Smock Alley Theatre opened in Dublin.[186]
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Sport

Association football

Euro 2012
Friendly international matches
League of Ireland
  • 2 March – League begins.
  • 6 August – Gardaí investigated the alleged throwing of bananas at Gaël Clichy in Limerick.[194]
  • 28 October – League ends.
  • 4 November – FAI Cup Final.
World Cup 2014 qualifiers

Boxing

Gaelic games

Camogie
  • 9 September – Wexford Camogie teams beat Cork in the All-Ireland Final to claim a three-in-a-row title.[citation needed]
Football
Hurling

Summer Olympics

Rugby union

Heineken Cup
Six Nations
  • 4 February – Ireland 21–23 Wales[220]
  • 25 February – Ireland 42-10 Italy[221]
  • 4 March – France 17-17 Ireland.[222]
  • 10 March – Ireland 32-14 Scotland[223]
  • 17 March – England 30-9 Ireland[224]

Running

  • 6 February – In Sydney, Richard Donovan from Galway completed seven marathons in 4 days, 22 hours, 3 minutes.[225]
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Deaths

January

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Jim Stynes
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Barney McKenna

February

March

April

May

  • 6 May – Neilli Mulcahy, 87: fashion designer, short illness.[264]
  • 20 May – Geoffrey Evans, 69: serial killer, illness.[265]

June

July

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Maeve Binchy

August

September

October

November

December

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References

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