
8 Nov/Dec 2016
NEWS
However, conflicting reports were already cir-
culating at that stage, including one in a national
newspaper which said the councillor had been
released from hospital.
The family released a statement to
clarify the councillor’s condition
and to ask public and press to
stop phoning the hospital.
The statement reads: “There
are a number of different sto-
ries circulating about the
health of Sean McEniff ranging
from him being perfectly healthy
and flying home to give testimony
in a court case to being at death's
door. His family would like to briefly clar-
ify that he is in an induced coma and in intensive
care in Clinica Roca in San Agustin, where he has
been, almost continuously, since his admission
on October 27th”. It proceeded:
“The priorities of the staff at the hospital is on
ensuring that Sean, and indeed all their patients,
get the best of medical care. Calls take up the
valuable time of hospital staff and translators.
In one instance, the VHI could not get the infor
-
mation they needed and had to rely on family
members to access doctors on their behalf".
The statement goes on to outline the circum
-
stances of the accident.
“Sean was having an afternoon walk in the
water at the beach in the resort of Puerto Rico.
He collapsed and lost consciousness, taking in
a lot of salt water and was close to drowning but
thanks to the alertness of other tourists he was
rescued and taken to the nearest hospital”.
Councillor McEniff suffered a collapsed lung,
pneumonia and fractured ribs.
According to the statement: “He is currently in
a stable condition and the family is hopeful that
his condition will slowly improve”.
The family said they were gratified by the con-
cern for Councillor McEniff and by the many kind
words, messages of support and prayers.
Railing on
While rail-obsessive Villager is on about it: there
is no longer any need to have tram wires in his-
toric city centres such as those being installed
along Dublin’s College Green and O’Connell
Street. Years ago Bordeaux first engineered for
trams to be boosted at stops in areas where
wires were to be avoided for civic-design rea
-
sons. Seville and others quickly followed suit.
Bitter and second-rate
National Newspapers of Ireland (NNI) wrapped
up a year or two back and reinvented itself as the
more spiffy NewsBrands Ireland which pro-
moted the recent Journalism Awards 2016.
Villager noted bitterly that the awards are in fact
not for journalists but for newspaper journalists,
and that NewsBrands Ireland does not represent
news brands but in fact only print-newspaper
news brands – not online journals or, say, maga-
zines. He’s checking the misnomers out
with the Advertising Standards
Authority and the Companies
Office.
The closest
Villager gets to a
Pulitzer
Village has now got into spon-
sorship, apparently. It is
co-sponsoring a conference on
“Investigative Journalism on the Digital Fron-
tier”, the weekend of 10 November in Dublin. The
conference will be addressed by Pulitzer Prize
winner Carol Leonnig who was part of a team of
national security reporters that revealed
the NSA's expanded spying on
Americans. Not that anyone in
the USA can legitimately care
about that sort of thing now.
DUPs and DOWNs
The DUP have declined to
comment on former leader
Peter Robinson's new role as a
consultant for a property devel-
oper who was one of Nama's biggest
debtors.
The sale of NAMA's northern portfolio to
American company Cerberus is still under inves-
tigation by the National Crime Agency as well as
the subject of separate investigations by the
Stormont finance committee and the Public
Accounts Committee in the south.
MRobinson has always denied allegations of
financial wrongdoing in relation to the property
sale. Robinson is now working as a consultant
for property developer Paddy Kearney's com-
pany Kilmona Properties.
Neil Adair, a former member of Kilmona's
board of directors, was one of the people recom-
mended by the DUP to sit on a NAMA advisory
panel.
Adair, who is a former Anglo Irish Bank offi-
cial, told the Irish News in June of this year that
he was "completely unaware" that the DUP had
nominated him to a committee advising NAMA.
He said he was only informed by the Depart
-
ment of Finance in December last year that his
name had been put forward in a November 2009
letter as a nominee of then minister Sammy
Wilson.
Adair, who resigned from Kilmona in 2013,
was not appointed to the advisory board, instead
Frank Cushnahan, who was also recommended
by the DUP, took the post.
Cushnahan is now subject to a police
investigation after allegations he was taking
money from a property developer who was in
debt to NAMA.
While there is no suggestion that there is any-
thing improper about the arrangement between
Mr Robinson and Kilmona, his appearance at a
recent planning meeting this to discuss a multi-
million pound development close to
Carrickfergus raised eyebrows so soon after his
retirement from politics and while the NAMA
sale is still under investigation.
Mr Kearney was one of NAMA'S biggest North-
ern Ireland debtors and later purchased his
loans back from Cerberus at a reduced rate.
Great
Actavo, a Denis O’Brien Company, has won the
contract to supply smart meters in Scotland.
This is a good thing for the environment and for
Denis O’Brien. So everybody wins.
Law society
Linda Kirwan Head of Com-
plaints and Client Relations
at the solicitors representa-
tive and regulatory body, the
Law Society, has reported to
the Bridewell Garda Station
with her Solicitor to make a
statement in relation to allega
-
tions of fraud by her and other Law
Society personnel. The claim by Kirwan that
solicitor Colm Murphy had breached an under
-
taking he had supposedly given to the President
of the High Court was instrumental in his strike
off as a solicitor. In an affidavit seen by Village,
Kirwan insisted that she had been in the High
Court on the day the undertaking was suppos-
edly given. It was only after Murphy was struck
off that she admitted, on affidavit and in a letter
to Murphy in 2010, that she was not in fact in the
court when the supposed undertaking was
made. No such undertaking is recorded in the
order from the court issued on the day in ques-
tion. And now all this.
Greater of two evils
Congratulations to Declan Kelly, Alpha-triple
brother of former Labour Party environment min-
ister, Alpha-double, Alan. His NY-based strategic
consultancy business is said to be eyeing a stock
market IPO, valued at up to $1bn. On one occa-
sion Declan Kelly, who is assertive, kept
Presidents Clinton and Bush waiting while he
delivered an oration to Teneo to consternation.
On another, Clinton exploded in anger after Kelly
suggested to the Global Irish Economic Forum in
Dublin that Teneo had brought the former Presi-
dent there. Of course that pleasure had been
Denis O’Brien’s.
Carol Leonnig
Peter Robinson