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The Killarney Coffee Cup scheme shortlisted for National award

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The Killarney Park and The Ross have been announced as among finalists in this year’s individual Pakman Award categories.

Winners will be announced at a ceremony in The Shelbourne Hotel on Thursday October 26.

The Pakman Awards are Ireland’s leading national environmental awards which recognise and celebrate excellence in recycling and waste management across businesses, organisations and community groups. This year’s awards will also see a new individual category, ESG Leader, announced on the night.

The Killarney Park and The Ross has been nominated for the Community Recycling Initiative, the Environmental Education and Awareness Initiative and Business Recycling Champion Award and the Innovation in Waste Resource Products or Service Award.

The Killarney Park and The Ross set up a grassroots project called The Killarney Coffee Cup Project with the goal of eliminating single use coffee cups from Killarney town centre. This initiative has resulted in the elimination of almost 70,000 cups. This project endeavours to change behaviours and perceptions towards single use items and strives to promote a beneficial transition to a circular economy.

“We received an incredible number of strong entries this year and I am delighted to announce this groundbreaking initiative among those shortlisted for the 2023 Pakman Awards. The awards recognise businesses, organisations and community initiatives that represent a clear commitment to environmental sustainability and social responsibility in waste management,” said Repak CEO, Séamus Clancy.

“We’re excited to showcase the hard work of all businesses, organisations, and individuals who are paving the way for a more sustainable future for Ireland. We look forward to welcoming all finalists to the Pakman Awards.”

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Weather alert casts doubt on tomorrows parade

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The third Magic Street Parade, scheduled for Saturday, may not go ahead due to adverse weather conditions.

The organisers of the Christmas in Killarney festival are currently monitoring the weekend weather warnings.

A final decision on whether the parade will proceed will be made early on Saturday.

A Status Yellow rain warning has been issued for a number of counties, including Kerry, this Saturday with a possibility that it could be upgraded to a Status Orange.

Met Éireann has advised of the threat of spells of very heavy rain with an increased risk of floods which could lead to difficult travelling conditions and poor visibility.

As of 3.00pm on Friday afternoon, the plan is expected to go ahead as planned. However, the Christmas in Killarney Festival committee will continue to review the situation and will be guided by advice from Met Éireann and the local authority.

A definite decision will be confirmed Saturday morning on whether the parade will proceed.

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Belfast rap trio Kneecap to play two gigs in INEC this weekend

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The rise and success of Ireland’s favourite Irish language group
By Eoghan McSweeney
Since hip-hop group Kneecap last played in Killarney, so much has changed for the band.

The trio experienced an explosion in popularity at the back end of last year due to the release of their album Fine Art in June, and then of their semi-fictionalised and self-titled biopic in August.

The award-winning movie detailed the beginning of their music careers and their rise to prominence, with both album and movie receiving overwhelmingly high acclaim.

Just one month after Kneecap last played in the INEC, the group won a legal case against then business secretary and now Conservative Party leader Kemi Badenoch after she blocked an arts grant of £14,250 or €16,000 for the band.

She cited anti-British politics as the reason. Kneecap claimed the denial of the grant was an “attack on artistic culture, and an attack on the Good Friday Agreement itself”.

At a hearing in Belfast’s High Court the withholding of funds was deemed “unlawful and procedurally unfair.”

Kneecap donated the grant to two Belfast youth clubs.

These events are significant milestones in helping Kneecap to achieve notoriety.

The band was cast further into the spotlight during the US music festival Coachella in April of this year.

As Kneecap performed in front of the raucous American crowd, the jumbotron behind the band read “Israel is committing genocide against the Palestinian people” before switching to a new message, “It is being enabled by the US government who arm and fund Israel despite their war crimes.”

There were cries of outrage because of the stand made by Kneecap that night.

Their American booking agent dropped them, and their visas were rendered invalid.

It was just one month after this when one of Kneecap’s members Mo Chara found himself being charged with a terror offence.

He was alleged to have showed support for Hamas and Hezbollah during a show in London in November of 2024.

Hamas and Hezbollah are deemed proscribed terror organisations by the British state, which means vocalising support for them is illegal.

Although Mo Chara’s case would eventually be dropped in September, it still meant Kneecap would be subject to a three-year ban from Hungary directly before their scheduled performance in the Sziget Festival in Budapest.

Hungary was not the only nation Kneecap would be barred from performing in.

In September the trio was banned from entering Canada ahead of four shows set to be played in Vancouver and Toronto, with Canadian officials citing Mo Chara’s terror charge. Canadian MP Vince Gasparro stated the group has “amplified political violence and publicly displayed support for terrorist organisations.”

Kneecap has since taken legal action against Gasparro regarding his defamatory comments.

As Kneecap return to Killarney to play two gigs this weekend and the scramble for tickets comes to a close, it makes you wonder how any of this ever came to fruition.

Just a few short years ago, the idea of an Irish language rap group making headlines and playing sold out shows globally would’ve been deemed utterly absurd and completely unrealistic.

This seemingly impossible achievement shows how there is a desire amongst young Irish people to have a language and culture of their own, and how our language can be more than a just a mistaught school subject.

It is vital that more creatives like Kneecap continue to be supported if we want our language to survive.

A language learner can only feel passionate about learning if the content of what they are learning is relatable; this is the reason that a hip-hop trio from Belfast has done more to motivate young Irish people in just the last few years to speak their own language than this government ever has.

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