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    Soldier F, the heartless Bloody Sunday killer, is named.

    By David Burke. UPDATE: Please also see the following story where Soldier F is named as David James Cleary: Soldier F and Brigadier Kitson’s elite ‘EFGH’ death squad: a murderous dirty-tricks pattern is emerging which links Ballymurphy with Bloody Sunday. A second soldier involved in both events was ‘mentioned in despatches’ at the behest of Kitson for his alleged bravery in the face of the enem ****** While ‘Soldier F’ was running amok in Derry on Bloody Sunday, 30 January 1972, murdering people in cold blood, one of his colleagues shouted out his christian name, ‘Dave’. Lord Saville wanted to name the soldier, a former lance corporal in 1 Para, but he was overruled by the Court of Appeal in London. Hence, he remained ‘Soldier F’ for the purposes of the Saville Inquiry. Last month the Northern Ireland courts confirmed his entitlement to anonymity. After the murder charges against him were dropped in July 2021, his full name appeared on at least two notices which were hung in Guildhall Square in Derry. They first appeared on Saturday 3 July. Photographs of the notice was circulated on social media. PSNI officers removed them and initiated inquiries to establish who was responsible for their erection. The justification for concealing his name was out of concern that his life might be endangered. This was fanciful in the extreme as his name has been known in Derry and beyond for decades. Indeed, so too are the names of some of his colleagues who participated in the Bloody Sunday massacre. In any event, the cat is now well and truly out of the bag. The photograph below is of one such notice. We have blurred the killer’s surname. All of Soldier F’s legal costs to date and what have been described as “welfare support” have been paid by the State. Meanwhile, Soldier F retains the support of John Mercer MP, the former Veterans Minister, as is evident from his twitter account: Soldier F is named in the following story: Soldier F and Brigadier Kitson’s elite ‘EFGH’ death squad: a murderous dirty-tricks pattern is emerging which links Ballymurphy with Bloody Sunday. A second soldier involved in both events was ‘mentioned in despatches’ at the behest of Kitson for his alleged bravery in the face of the enemy. David Burke is the author of ‘Deception & Lies, the Hidden History of the Arms Crisis 1970’  and  ‘Kitson’s Irish War, Mastermind of the Dirty War in Ireland’  which examines the role of counter-insurgency dirty tricks in Northern Ireland in the early 1970s. His new book, ‘An Enemy of the Crown, the British Secret Service Campaign against Charles Haughey’, was published on 30 September 2022. These books can be purchased here:  https://www.mercierpress.ie/irish-books/kitson-s-irish-war/ https://www.mercierpress.ie/irish-books/an-enemy-of-the-crown/ https://www.mercierpress.ie/irish-books/deception-and-lies/  OTHER STORIES ABOUT BLOODY SUNDAY, THE BALLYMURPHY MASSACRE, BRIGADIER FRANK KITSON AND COLONEL DEREK WILFORD ON THIS WEBSITE:     The covert plan to smash the IRA in Derry on Bloody Sunday by David Burke Soldier F’s Bloody Sunday secrets. David Cleary knows enough to blackmail the British government. Learning to kill Colin Wallace: Bloody Sunday, a very personal perspective Lying like a trooper. Internment, murder and vilification. Did Brigadier Kitson instigate the Ballymurphy massacre smear campaign? Where was Soldier F and his ‘gallant’ death squad during it? Another bloody mess. Frank Kitson’s contribution to the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. 300,000 have died in Afghanistan since 1979. Lying like a trooper. Internment, murder and vilification. Did Brigadier Kitson instigate the Ballymurphy massacre smear campaign? Where was Soldier F and his ‘gallant’ death squad during it? A Foul Unfinished Business. The shortcomings of, and plots against, Saville’s Bloody Sunday Inquiry. Kitson’s Private Army: the thugs, killers and racists who terrorised Belfast and Derry. Soldier F was one of their number. Soldier F and Brigadier Kitson’s elite ‘EFGH’ death squad: a murderous dirty-tricks pattern is emerging which links Ballymurphy with Bloody Sunday. A second soldier involved in both events was ‘mentioned in despatches’ at the behest of Kitson for his alleged bravery in the face of the enemy. Mentioned in Despatches. Brigadier Kitson and Soldier F were honoured in the London Gazette for their gallantry in the face of the enemy during the internment swoops of August 1971. Soldier F, the heartless Bloody Sunday killer, is named. Mission accomplished. The unscrupulous judge who covered-up the Bloody Sunday murders. Soldier F and other paratroopers have been protected by the British State for five decades. None of them now face prosecution. This perversion of justice began with the connivance of the Lord Chief Justice of England and Wales, John Widgery, a former British Army brigadier, Freemason and oath-breaker. Counterinsurgency war criminals, liars and cowards: Kitson and Wilford, the brigadier and colonel who led the soldiers who perpetrated the Ballymurphy Massacre. Brigadier Kitson’s motive for murdering unarmed civilians in Ballymurphy. The McGurk’s Bar cover-up. Heath’s Faustian pact. How a British prime minister covered up a UVF massacre in the hope of acquiring Unionist votes to enable the UK join the European Economic Community, the forerunner of the EU.

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    Supply, and Student Housing

    By Niamh Alexander. Despite expectations due to the pandemic, the cost of student accommodation in Dublin has remained steady – and costly. Two semesters in the cheapest campus accommodation in UCD will set you back just over €8,000, with the most expensive coming in at almost €14,500, per annum. Sky-high costs can have the effect of pushing students towards private landlords, creating more demand in a market that is already at capacity. Private rentals also bring with them their own issues. With the average cost of a room in a shared property costing around €680 per month, according to a Student Housing Report done in 2020, rent is not much more affordable in private properties. There is also the fact that most private landlords will only accept a 12-month lease, meaning students can be stuck paying for accommodation in the summer months when college is finished. In the current market, landlords can get away with just about anything. I once viewed a room that was completely taken up by the bed and had no floor space at all. There have been accounts of rooms with just one bed sleeping two to three people. In 2017, the Government launched the National Student Accommodation Strategy – a scheme aiming to provide more purpose-built student accommodation (PBSA) in a bid to free up private rental properties that would otherwise be occupied by students. The Higher Education Authority (HEA) estimates that 75,640 bed spaces will be required by 2024 to satisfy demand for student accommodation. It estimates that around 55,000 will be completed by this time. However, a report by Mitchell McDermott, a construction consultancy group, believes this “appears ambitious” due to the fall in construction activity during the pandemic. According to the report, around 3,500 units were built in 2020, and this is expected to fall to 1,600 in the coming year. However, according to Dr Lorcan Sirr, a housing lecturer at TU Dublin, supplying more PBSA is not the answer. “Some [PBSA][/PBSA] were looking for change of use even before the pandemic, which suggests to me that the market is oversupplied”, he says. The notion that supplying more PBSA is the best way to take students out of the private rental sector simply isn’t accurate. “Traditionally, Irish students don’t stay in student accommodation. Many attend college close to home and commute, and if they don’t, they typically stay in suburbia, along bus routes, mainly because it’s cheaper”, says Sirr. The key issue is that a lot of the accommodation is being supplied by profit-driven private companies. These companies have discovered a highly profitable, sometimes extortionate, business model: luxury purpose-built student accommodation. What little accommodation is being built is largely luxury accommodation out of the price range of the average family. Aparto is a private company with five student residences across Dublin city. Prices start at €210 per week for a shared room in its Dorset Point property, located a 20-minute walk from TU Dublin’s Grangegorman campus. The most expensive option is the Platinum Ensuite in Beckett House priced at €285 per week, meaning two semesters here will cost a shocking €11,685 in total. Many of Aparto’s properties boast amenities such as games rooms, gyms, and ‘stylish’ cinema rooms, which is exactly what every student working a minimum-wage, part- time job is looking for. Some even have ‘house pets’. The question that needs to be asked is, with so many students struggling to find reasonably priced accommodation, why has there been a surge in high – priced accommodation with such unnecessary luxuries? The answer, it seems, is international students. According to the HEA, in 2019, 12% of all students in Ireland were international students. However, a report conducted by EY found that international students represented 79% of the total students living in PBSA. Privately-owned PBSA is profit-driven and was never marketed to Irish students, but instead to wealthy overseas students, says Sirr. Developers can get away with charging international students three times the price they would Irish students. With so much uncertainty surrounding international students in Ireland post-Covid, the student accommodation market is extremely volatile. With fewer international students expected to

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