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People run after police fire tear gas following clashes after the Euro 2016 soccer championship group B match between England and Russia in Marseille. Darko Bandic

Alcohol banned from around stadiums and fanzones at Euro 2016

The Republic of Ireland have their first match this evening, against Sweden in Paris.

THE FRENCH GOVERNMENT has announced a ban on alcohol near Euro 2016 venues and fanzones, after three days of drunken violence among fans in the southern city of Marseille.

“I have asked for all necessary measures to be taken to prohibit the sale, consumption and transport of alcoholic drinks in sensitive areas on match days and the day before, and on days when fanzones are open,” Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve said.

It comes after Russian and English supporters – as well as French locals – clashed in pitched battles in Marseille at the weekend ahead of their teams’ first-round encounter in the worst violence seen at an international tournament since the 1998 World Cup.

Saturday’s unrest, which left more than 30 people injured, prompted UEFA to warn both Russia and England that they risked being thrown out of the tournament if there was any repeat.

The ban will include public areas, as well as shops and off-licences, Cazeneuve said.

Senior local officials can also ban bars and cafes from serving drinks on their terraces in containers that can be used as missiles.

“The events which took place in Marseille [...] are unacceptable. Unacceptable for the authorities, unacceptable for society, unacceptable for football lovers,” Cazeneuve said.

More than 1,200 riot police were deployed to quell the unrest, which began when hundreds of supporters – many of them drunk – began pelting each other with bottles and chairs in Marseille’s Vieux Port area.

There was more trouble inside the Stade Velodrome at the end of the 1-1 draw, when Russian fans charged into an English section of the ground.

First Ireland match

The Republic of Ireland play their first match of the tournament this evening at the Stade de France in Paris, with Sweden providing the opposition (kick off is at 5pm Irish time).

Thousands of supporters have made the journey over in recent days – many making the trip without a ticket.

The latest travel advice from the Department of Foreign Affairs for France advises Irish fans to “exercise a high degree of caution” in light of the heightened security alert in the country.

Supporters heading to the Euros can also download a free smartphone app from the department that sends security alerts in the event of a terror attack. A handy guide for people travelling to France for the tournament has also been released.

“All fans heading to Euro 2016 in France can download the app and ‘favourite’ France, to get France-related security updates from my department direct to their phone,” foreign affairs minister Charlie Flanagan said as he launched the app last week.

Mothers and fathers back in Ireland can do the same.

Security worries aside, the app also provides information on local laws, entry requirements, health and emergency contacts. It also has a secure facility to register with the local Irish embassy or consulate.

Includes reporting from - © AFP, 2016

Read: Northern Ireland fan dies in France >

Read: ‘The English fans use chairs and bottles, the Russian style is only fists’ >

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110 Comments
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    Mute Adam Power
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    Jul 28th 2013, 8:49 AM

    He sounds like an inspirational man.

    107
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    Mute David
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    Jul 28th 2013, 5:44 PM

    A talented engineer with a great cause.
    Always a recipe for success.
    I wish Enda and his team, the best of luck.

    Well done to Enterprise Ireland for backing them.

    19
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    Mute Michelle McMahon
    Favourite Michelle McMahon
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    Jul 28th 2013, 8:29 AM

    Excellent idea. Hope he publishes his data. In terms of language use here, it would be preferable to say ‘children with autism’ rather than ‘autistic’.There is so much more to these children than just their diagnosis.

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    Mute Richard Powell
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    Jul 28th 2013, 8:39 AM

    Typical Irish we’d find something wrong in everything, even a good news story like this. Very cynical of you to assume people fail to see the child beyond the diagnosis. It is what it is, I don’t think worrying about how it’s put is up there on the list of priorities. And yes I have an autistic family member.

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    Mute Alan Burke
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    Jul 28th 2013, 8:43 AM

    By that logic it would be preferable to say human of lesser years rather than children.

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    Mute Michelle McMahon
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    Jul 28th 2013, 9:25 AM

    Richard, you make a lot of assumptions there. I’m a child psychologist and am very enthused about this project as I stated in my comment. As I work extensively in the area of special educational needs, it is common place to refer to children as such. You may disagree, but I know that some professionals, families and children themselves prefer less categorical descriptions.

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    Mute karla carroll
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    Jul 28th 2013, 10:36 AM

    Sounds like he knows his stuff, can’t fault anything he said.

    I’m also delighted children with language disorder are also included.

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    Mute John O'Neill
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    Jul 28th 2013, 12:14 PM

    It is factually incorrect to say that all children diagnosed with ASD or language disorders are highly intelligent individuals. This program costs €100 per week and its efficacy is unproven by proper research and evaluative studies…

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    Mute David
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    Jul 28th 2013, 5:38 PM

    He did not say ‘all’ children. Straw man.
    He left it to the common sense of the reader to determine the meaning. A dangerous assumption, with respect, to the miserati Irish.
    The program costs €100 per week. And?
    It’s a company. It has to charge to make a profit, to keep it in business. Jesus wept.
    It’s a company that has convinced enough people to invest in it, with their results and the possibility of results.
    They are constantly researching which is where results come from. It’s where all engineering and scientific progress begins with.

    Now, to go back to bed, son.

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    Mute John O'Neill
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    Jul 28th 2013, 9:02 PM

    Read back on your comment David and ask yourself should you have really posted such a moronic response.
    You find it acceptable for a company to convince people to invest in their programme, ( nay, in the future of their children), because they need to make a profit!….?
    ” The program costs €100 per week. And?It’s a company. It has to charge to make a profit, to keep it in business. Jesus wept. It’s a company that has convinced enough people to invest in it, with their results and the possibility of results. ”
    They have NO EMPIRICAL RESULTS whatever as to the efficacy of the program.
    You say, “They are constantly researching which is where results come from. ”
    I suspect that you’re a low-life trollix, or an investor in said company.
    Before I go back to bed as you suggested, I’d like to inform you that I’ve been deeply involved in the welfare and education of children with ASD for the past fourteen years and have learned during that time to view ALL ” sure cure programmes” with a very jaundiced eye.
    I personally would be very reluctant to pay €100 per week for a program, not shown by proper research to be in any way effective, the sale of which is based solely on the assurance by the CEO of the company that it helped his children.
    Basing a business on the hopes and dreams of people who struggle to cope with ASD and its impact on their daily lives, without proof of success, leaves a bad taste in my mouth.
    I have expertise in this area…what do you have, “son”?

    9
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    Mute David
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    Jul 28th 2013, 10:43 PM

    You cannot even get the basics right.
    1. It’s €100 per month, not per week. You were corrected already.

    “You find it acceptable for a company to convince people to invest in their programme, ( nay, in the future of their children), because they need to make a profit!….?”

    Another straw man. 2 in the one article. Maybe you are just confused.
    1. Consumers don’t invest, they pay a price for a product/service.
    2. Investors, invest, to make a profit or else they invest to make a loss. Anything else is charity. Profit is the indication of efficiency. It’s what pays the wages and brings the product to the market.

    “I suspect that you’re a low-life trollix, or an investor in said company.”
    Ah, the Irish use of the word, Troll. i.e for anyone whose points, you cannot refute.
    I am not an investor in this private company although I wish I was.

    ‘Jaundiced eye’ means bias. You are taking an opinion before appraised of the facts. Page one of the scientific method. You have made statements that you have no evidence to back up. You know nothing about this company yet have already condemned it.
    Pixar have put their name behind it. Whose due diligence is better, yours or theirs.
    Enterprise Ireland have put money into it but you know better.

    “ot shown by proper research to be in any way effective, the sale of which is based solely on the assurance by the CEO of the company that it helped his children.”
    Gee, if only EI and Pixar had thought of that.
    More supposition. Do you understand the difference between a commercial product and a scientific experiment? I have an Iphone and Imac, not backed by peer review, yet for some strange reason, they perform excellently. I can see they perform excellently hence I buy them.
    Their product and their internal tests are empirical results. What you mean is that they have not been independently peer reviewed(even that, is only an assumption) Stop using words that you don’t understand.
    ‘Without proof of success…’
    Why the did Pixar, EI invest then?
    “I have expertise in this area…what do you have”
    12 HL Languages, 5 Assembly languages and years of successful product implementation.
    Anything else?
    No, well get out of the way then and let the engineers go to work, making the world better.

    Ireland. Unbelievable sometimes.

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    Mute John O'Neill
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    Jul 28th 2013, 11:11 PM

    Rather than waste time pointing out the multiple inaccuracies in your response I will merely remark that your whole view of this business is based on a sociopathic “greed is good” premise, showing no concern whatever for the welfare of the ASD children.

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    Mute John O'Neill
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    Jul 28th 2013, 11:13 PM

    Oh, and by the way, there’s actually nothing wrong with charity. Perhaps this is where our opinions diverge…

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    Mute Úna O Connor Barrett
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    Jul 28th 2013, 10:57 AM

    I met this man and he is a genius.When you have a child who cannot communicate you have behaviour issues and frustration.I wish this project was there when my child was non verbal.

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    Mute Emma Burroughs
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    Jul 28th 2013, 6:32 PM

    In starting this with my son next week and its not €100 a week, it’s €100 a month. Well worth the money considering one 45 min session with speech therapist is €65+. This is exactly what my son needs. And those with the negative comments, it’s obvious that this is not an everyday worry for you and if ye knew what it was line , you would realise this is a god send. Just think about all the proof that would of had to be given for Pixar to put their name to it.
    Talked to Enda myself and he is a lovely man. A gentleman and a big thank you to him for this. He has experienced all sides of autism so knows what he is talking about.
    Go Enda!!

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    Mute David
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    Jul 28th 2013, 10:46 PM

    Best of Luck, Emma, to you are your son.
    It is an exciting prospect.

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    Mute David
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    Jul 28th 2013, 5:43 PM

    This is great news.
    Well done to Enda Dodd, his team and Enterprise Ireland.

    13
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