Taoiseach 'absolutely appalled' at attack that led to death of ...

3 days ago

The Taoiseach has said that said he is “absolutely appalled” at the vicious attack that led to the death of a Canadian tourist in Dublin.

Neno Dolmajian - Figure 1
Photo Irish Examiner

41-year-old Neno Dolmajian, who was from Montreal, was attacked on O’Connell Street and Cathal Brugha Street, Dublin 1, in the early hours of Sunday, June 23.

He was taken to Dublin’s Mater Hospital but died on Tuesday. His parents and sister had travelled to Ireland to be at his bedside.

To date, four men have been arrested in connection with the incident.

Two of the men have been charged and appeared before the Criminal Courts of Justice.

“I’m absolutely appalled at the recent vicious attack in Dublin city centre which resulted in the death of Neno Dolmajian," Mr Harris said on Wednesday. 

“A man who came from Montreal to enjoy the best of our city and best of our country, he came here on his holidays.

Mr Harris said the the attack was "absolutely reprehensible and the gardaí have already made arrests and indeed charges in relation to this attack. Therefore it limits me somewhat on what I can say on this specific horrific tragedy.

The Taoiseach told the Dáil that there would now be a full murder enquiry and that "everybody in this House thinks of his family at this very difficult to time.”

Neno came to Dublin to experience all the greatness of our capital city. That he didn’t get to go home is heart-breaking

Sinn Féin leader Mary Lou McDonald urged the Government to further invest in daily garda operations in Dublin city centre.

Ms McDonald said the centre of Dublin city is “scourged” with antisocial behaviour, open drug-dealing and drug consumption as well as by gangs who create a “daily atmosphere of fear and intimidation”.

Neno Dolmajian - Figure 2
Photo Irish Examiner

Expressing her sympathy to the parents and family of Mr Dolmajian, Ms McDonald added: “Neno came to Dublin to experience all the greatness of our capital city. That he didn’t get to go home is heart-breaking.

“The vicious attack that led to Mr Dolmajian’s death again highlights the hard reality that our city centre is not safe. I say this as a very proud Dubliner, as a Dubliner who believes that this is the greatest city in the world, with the best people and the best communities.

“In the aftermath of the Dublin riots government made big promises, but the truth is you continue to fail the people of this city.

“Taoiseach, people need to know that they are safe in the city of Dublin at any time. That is the bare minimum that people are entitled to.

I want the people of Dublin to know and indeed I want the people of Ireland and anyone visiting this country to know that we take extraordinarily seriously the safety of people in our city

“We need real action from the Government, and we need proper investment of resources.

“Dublin City Centre needs a proper, ongoing Garda presence of a scale necessary to meet this challenge.

“That means strong, visible daily operations to ensure that people are safe and that the centre of our city is returned to the people – to those who live here, work here, who operate businesses in Dublin and to those who visit our great city.”

Mr Harris said the Government is allocating additional resources to up garda presence in the city centre.

Taoiseach Simon Harris speaking to the media outside Government Buildings in Dublin (Grainne Ni Aodha/PA)

He said he wanted the people of Dublin, Ireland, and anyone from overseas that the Government takes the safety of those visiting Dublin "extraordinarily seriously".

“In terms of public safety, the Garda Commissioner has put significant additional resources into high visibility policing in Dublin city centre.

“Specifically, in relation to Dublin, we’ve now seen Operation Irene commence. It is a specific operation that commences for the summer months, it runs from June to September across the Dublin metropolitan region," he added.

“It is a multi-agency operation and with the aim of identifying and preventing antisocial behaviour, combating alcohol consumption at an underage level, consumption of alcohol in public places and generally putting a garda focus for the summer months specifically on the issue of antisocial behaviour, with the overall aim of Operation Irene to enhance community safety and community confidence."

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