Mauritius boycott by Irish likely after farcical murder trial
Ireland responds to acquittal of McAreavey's accused murderers
Published Friday, July 20, 2012, 8:26 AM
Updated Friday, July 20, 2012, 9:34 AM
The disregard for the Harte family and their feelings for their beloved daughter, not to mention the anguish of her widower John McAreavey, is stunning.
It is time Mauritius felt the lash of the Irish abroad as well as in Ireland so they might understand the savage damage they have done.
There are lots of nice places in the world to honeymoon, and plenty of sunshine spots to vacation on.
Unfortunately Mauritius, with its laughable system of justice and fairness, is not one.
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GregShox | Jul 20, 2012, 08:14 PM EDT
We probably would. It has all the elements of a popular story, including an inept police investigation and shaky trial. What astonishes me is the number of intelligent people, including the editorial writers of this site, who have jumped on the brainless vigilante bandwagon.
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seamus60 | Jul 20, 2012, 06:29 PM EDT
The questioin is, Would we even be discussing this if the victim (RIP) did not have a famous father. One who recently helped take the bad look off Mc Guinness in the Ronan Kerr saga.
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GregShox | Jul 20, 2012, 06:13 PM EDT
Woodman - 70% of the Mauritian population are not African of Asian in origin. I'm surprised you didn't know that, or perhaps to you every non-European is simply "black".
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Woodman | Jul 20, 2012, 03:31 PM EDT
I think we need to stress that Mauritius is a nice place except for a few brutal tourist murders, the perps of which are still free. Since if it wasn't these guys then someone else did it. These guys were simply robbing tourists in there hotels. Otherwise Mauritius is completely safe.
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Woodman | Jul 20, 2012, 03:23 PM EDT
Haven't you seen the hollywood movies? The accused black defendants are always innocent. Boycotting a black country would be racism at it's worst and the story implies, since race is never mentioned, that blacks are violent. The defendants and most of the country is black. The alleged victim is white. Shame on Irish Central for its biased reporting.
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GregShox | Jul 20, 2012, 02:05 PM EDT
This is lynch-mob rule at it's nastiest. Is it because Martin McGuinness, the well-known champion of judicial process, has publicly declared the acquitted men guilty? You rightly condemn gutter journalism in this article, yet go on to engage in exactly the same sort of thing. Dreadful.
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lawyer4 | Jul 20, 2012, 10:03 AM EDT
To boycott an entire country because of a failure of its police to solve a case to the satisfaction of observers thousands of miles might seem like a ludicrous suggestion (Ireland would have no British, French, German or Spanish tourists for a start), but strikes me as not so much absurd as despicable. For a media outlet to be promoting the idea editorially is irresponsible and reprehensible.
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