Sunday Tribune

The Trib leads with an exclusive by Mark Hillard on how Irish donor kidneys were sent to the UK as acute bed shortages barred those organs being offered some 580 patients on the donor waiting list in Ireland.
Hillard writes:
It is believe to be the first time kidneys have been given away because of the inability to offer them to patients in Ireland.
The incident is understood to have led to angry exchanges between a top doctor and health minister Mary Harney, sparking a crisis meeting to ensure such a failure of life-saving is never repeated.
On the numbers and destinations of the kidneys:
The incident occured on 26 January when four kidneys and one pancreas became available for transplant. While two if the kidneys were used in the Temple Street Children’s Hospital, the other organs were sent via Beaumont Hospital to the United Kingdom Transplant Service.
The minor lead on the front of the Trib is on #glee. Jennifer Bray’s piece details how George Lee spent just a day working at BCP Stockbrokers in the late 1990′s before fleeing back to RTE.
There’s also an interesting piece in the Trib claiming that Ireland’s new European commissioner, Maire Geoghegan-Quinn is refusing to give up her €100,000+ pension as a former minister and TD. Her current job yields a salary of €238,000 plus pension.
#gleelovers be comforted by the fact that there’s loads to read on all of the papers this weekend.
Sunday Independent

A Sindo/Millward and Brown Lansdowne poll leads the Sindo. The poll reveals that a majority (62%) the electorate want a national all-party government to lead the country for the duration of the economic crisis.
The piece by Jody Corcoran goes on to look at the standing of the parties:
When the headline finding is broken down, it reveals that supporters of Fianna Fáil (66 per cent), Fine Gael (56%), Labour (64%), Green (50%) and Sinn Féin (64%) want a national all-party government.
The Sindo also has a frontpager by Ronald Quinlan reporting that Ryanair honcho Michael O’Leary has “slammed” the Tanaiste for “the loss of 500 engineering jobs which the low-cost carrier had intended to create at Dublin Airport”.
O’Leary shared correspondence with the Sindo that reveal:
… how Ryanair offered to take over the former SR Technics facility at Dublin Airport and reemploy 500 of the aircraft engineers who worked there before it closed last summer.
In making the offer, Ryanair’s only condition that Ms Coughlan, as Minister for Enterprise, or the IDA would act as intermediary with the Dublin Airport Authoriy (DAA) as it negotiated the lease of the former SR Technics hanger.
The minor lead in the Sindo by Jerome Reilly reports about how Gay Byrne has “taken a sideswipe” at Brian Cowen’s social habits saying he “should not be seen sitting on a high stool of his local pub sipping pints.”
More papers as they come to hand. Links go live to the pieces as their sites get updated.


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