R806 road | |
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Bóthar R806 | |
Location | |
Country | Ireland |
Primary destinations | |
Highway system | |
The R806 road is a regional road in Dublin, Ireland.
The official definition of the R806 from the Roads Act 1993 (Classification of Regional Roads) Order 2006 states: [1] [2]
On the morning of 29 January 2012 a woman's body was discovered in a large holdall bag in front of a house on Saint David's Terrace, a short distance from Blackhorse Avenue and McKee Barracks. [3] The scene was sealed off and the State Pathologist was alerted. [3] It was believed her body was deliberately dumped near bins in the hope it would be collected as rubbish. [4] Later that day the Gardaí identified the woman as a Malawian student who was in her 20s and had died by asphyxiation, but would not officially name the victim until her relatives have been informed. [5] Two days later the victim was identified as 26 year old care worker Rudo Mawere [6] who had been living on Leinster Road, Rathmines. [7] That same day Gardaí searched a house in Aughrim Street, Stoneybatter, a short distance away, where her boyfriend lived and which had been linked in connection with her murder. [8] On 1 February 2012 the main suspect in her murder, a Zimbabwean national, was found dead in a Kent wood by a dog walker. [9] It was believed the man left the country through Northern Ireland and had travelled onwards by ferry to Britain. [10]
The Northside is the part of Dublin city that lies to the north of the River Liffey. It is an informal but commonly used term. While it is sometimes regarded as less wealthy than the city's Southside, the Northside was originally the home of the city's upper classes and the more privileged of the two. Today, some of the wealthiest areas in Ireland lie north of the river, such as Malahide, Howth, Clontarf, and Castleknock.
Blanchardstown is a large outer suburb of Dublin in the modern county of Fingal, Ireland. Located ten kilometres (6 mi) northwest of Dublin city centre, it has developed since the 1960s from a small village to a point where Greater Blanchardstown is the largest urban area in Fingal.
Dublin West is a parliamentary constituency represented in Dáil Éireann, the lower house of the Irish parliament or Oireachtas. The constituency elects 4 deputies on the system of proportional representation by means of the single transferable vote (PR-STV).
The Fingal hurling team is an inter-county hurling team representing Fingal in the Kehoe Cup, the National Hurling League and the Nicky Rackard Cup. It is organised by the Dublin GAA and was established in 2008. Fingal are currently managed by Mick Kennedy of the Fingallians club.
Linda and Charlotte Mulhall are sisters from Dublin, Ireland, who killed and dismembered their mother's boyfriend, Farah Swaleh Noor, in March 2005. Noor was killed with a Stanley knife wielded by Charlotte and struck with a hammer by Linda following a confrontation with the sisters and their mother, Kathleen Mulhall. His head and penis were sliced off and the rest of his corpse dismembered and dumped in the Royal Canal in Dublin where a piece of leg still wearing a sock was spotted floating near Croke Park ten days later.
Armed Support Units (ASU) are specialist armed response units of the Garda Síochána, the national police force of Ireland. Based in all six Garda regions in the country, Garda ASU officers carry a combination of lethal firearms and non-lethal weapons, as opposed to regular uniformed Gardaí who are unarmed. They are similar to Authorised Firearms Officers of British police forces.
The R102 road is a regional road in Dublin, Ireland, which describes a broad arc across the north of the city, connecting the N3 — at its M50 motorway intersection — to the R107 on the other side of the city.
The R121 road is a regional road in south County Dublin and Fingal, Ireland.
The Westies was the name given by the Irish media to a criminal gang based in Blanchardstown, west Dublin, Ireland.
Elaine O'Hara was an Irish childcare worker who was murdered in August 2012 by architect Graham Dwyer. She was last seen alive at a public park in Shanganagh, Dublin, Ireland, on 22 August. The remains of her body were discovered on Killakee Mountain, south of Dublin, in September 2013. The investigation of her disappearance and later of her death was widely reported.
Declan Flynn was an Irish gay man attacked and killed in Fairview Park in Dublin. His murder is seen as the catalyst for the LGBTQ Pride movement in Ireland. His death came about as a result of a series of beatings meted out to gay men in Dublin who used Fairview Park as a meeting place at the time.
The Hutch–Kinahan feud is a major ongoing feud between two criminal organisations in the Republic of Ireland that has resulted in the deaths of eighteen people, the majority of which have been perpetrated by the Kinahan family. The Hutch gang, led by Gerry Hutch, and the Kinahan Family, led by Daniel Kinahan, are the main participants.
The murder of Patricia O'Connor occurred in Dublin. Patricia O'Connor was an Irish woman whose dismembered remains were found scattered along a road in the Wicklow Mountains in June 2017. Several members of her family were subsequently convicted of concealing her murder by Kieran Greene.
Keane Mulready-Woods of Drogheda, County Louth, was an Irish teenager who disappeared on 12 January 2020, and whose dismembered body was then found in Coolock, Co Dublin. More of his remains were found in Drumcondra in a burnt out car, Ireland the following week.
Garda Colm Horkan was a detective in the Garda Síochána, the national police service of Ireland, who was shot dead by a 43-year-old man in Castlerea, County Roscommon, Ireland on 17 June 2020, while on an anti-crime patrol.
The COVID-19 pandemic in the Republic of Ireland has impacted the country's judicial system. Several people were arrested for COVID-19-related offences, while prisoners were released. Two operations, Operation Fanacht and Operation Navigation, were launched.
On 30 December 2020, the Garda Armed Support Unit shot 27-year-old George Nkencho in Clonee on the Dublin–Meath border, after graduated attempts to detain him failed. He had assaulted a shop staff member and threatened others with a knife. Nkencho had been suffering from mental health issues in the preceding months and according to Gardaí, he did not have any criminal convictions.
Events during the year 2021 in Ireland. As in most of the world, the COVID-19 pandemic has dominated events in Ireland during this year.
Events during the year 2022 in Ireland.
Events during the year 2023 in Ireland.