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The Irish in Britain, including those of Irish descent, make up a significant part of the UK population. Here, you will find news, entertainment, events, sports and features from the local Irish Post newspaper.

 
 
 
 
News In : Tycoon gets green light to improve his mansion

HORSE racing magnate JP McManus is celebrating another victory.

The multi-millionaire has been given the go-ahead to begin putting the finishing touches to his €100million mansion.

Mr McManus and his wife Noreen plan to build a grand entrance to their exclusive home at Martinstown in Co. Limerick.

The plan was last week given the green light by An Bord Pleanala following a series of delays.

Previous decisions on the planning permission were held up following an objection by a neighbouring landowner.

The scheme involves eye-catching entrance gates complete with a natural stone archway, adjoining pillars with twin intricate turrets overlooking the entry point and a specially-constructed security building.

Other work will see the construction of a sweeping access road to the main dwelling, relocation of the entrance and access to the existing farm, a waste water treatment system and ancillary site works.

Appeal rejected

SCISSOR Sister Charlotte Mulhall has lost an appeal against her conviction for murdering her mother’s Kenyan boyfriend.

The 24-year-old mother-of-one had claimed that comments made by trial judge Mr Justice Paul Carney put the jury under pressure to reach a verdict.

But leave to appeal was rejected by the Court of Criminal Appeal which said that the jury that decided Ms Mulhall’s guilt by a 10-2 majority were perfectly entitled to find her guilty of murder.

Mulhall from Tallaght in Dublin was given a life term for murder, in March 2005 for the killing of Farah Swaleh Noor.

During her trial, the jury was told Charlotte stabbed Mr Noor up to 20 times with a kitchen knife while her sister Linda Mulhall admitted hitting him on the head with a claw hammer.

Traffic chaos

A BURNING tyre closed Dublin’s Port Tunnel for the third time in a fortnight — once again plunging the Irish capital into traffic chaos.

Four units of the fire brigade dealt with the small blaze which broke out on the wheel of a lorry in the north tunnel.

The incident came less than two weeks after the tunnel was closed for over eight hours because of an electrical fault and follows media reports questioning safety procedures in the tunnel.

Fine Gael’s transport spokesman Fergus O’Dowd called for a full safety review of the tunnel.

 
 
 
 
 
 
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