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Corgary Road, Castlederg Google Maps

'A horrific ordeal': Masked men with pitchforks and metal poles rob Tyrone home

There were three occupants in the house at the time of the attack.

DETECTIVES IN TYRONE are appealing for information following an aggravated burglary involving three masked men armed with a pitchfork and metal poles. 

PSNI detectives received a report at around 10.50pm on Tuesday that three masked men entered a property in the Corgary Road area of Castlederg, which is about 28 kilometres from Omagh, at around 9.45pm, armed with a pitchfork and metal poles. 

There were three occupants in the house at the time – two men aged in their 60s and 70s, and a woman aged in her 60s. 

Both men were forced to lie down on the floor on their stomachs as one of the suspects stood over them with a metal pole. 

“However, they managed to take the pole off the suspect who then fled along with the other two suspects,” PSNI detective sergeant Jack said. 

A sum of money and three phones were reported stolen. 

Two of the suspects are described as being of skinny build and one is described as being of heavy build. 

One of the male occupants sustained minor injuries to his leg and face and was treated at the scene. 

“This must have been a horrific ordeal for the victims. This happened … in their home, somewhere they deserve to feel safe and they have understandably been left shaken,” Jack said. 

The PSNI is appealing to anyone who was in the Corgary Road area on Tuesday night and saw any suspicious activity, any strange vehicles in the area, or anyone who offered mobile phones for sale in suspicious circumstances to get in touch with detectives at Strand Road on the non-emergency number 101, quoting reference number 1386 of 19/02/19. 

Alternatively, information can be provided anonymously to Crimestoppers on 0800 555 111. 

We know when a person’s home or property has been targeted it can be an extremely traumatising experience for victims and their families. 

“I want to reassure the public we’re doing everything we can to identify criminals involved in this type of crime and bring them to justice, but we also need the public’s help, so we are appealing to people to watch out for their neighbours,” Jack said. 

“Please, report any suspicious activity you see in your area, whether it’s a strange vehicle or people in the area. Every piece of information is vital as it could be the key to catching the perpetrators.” 

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7 Comments
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    Mute Peter B
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    Jan 29th 2021, 12:22 PM

    Maybe the EU should have had a lawyer look at the contract before signing! Bit of legal advice maybe….?

    208
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    Mute Crispy Brown
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    Jan 29th 2021, 12:30 PM

    @Peter B: The EU couldn’t deal with youth unemployment in Southern Europe, the debacle of the Greek economy, the migrant crisis, terrorism and brexit. I never thought for one second that they could deal with this. And the sad thing is we can’t even hold them accountable. What a sham!

    232
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    Mute Gerry Ryan
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    Jan 29th 2021, 12:41 PM

    @Crispy Brown: examples of who did deal expertly with those things for a bit of balance would be good, thanks

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    Mute Eugene Norman
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    Jan 29th 2021, 1:09 PM

    @Peter B: best reasonable effort doesn’t justify selling to the U.K. first and the U.K. factories are included in the contract as if part of the EU, the contract justifies the EU position.

    107
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    Mute Eugene Norman
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    Jan 29th 2021, 1:09 PM

    @Crispy Brown: did you pop in here from the Torygraph?

    65
    J
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    Mute J
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    Jan 29th 2021, 1:18 PM

    @Peter B: clearly AZ have messed up here not the EU. They took over €300 million from the EU up front to start making it.

    84
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    Mute Noj Nikrub
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    Jan 29th 2021, 2:31 PM

    @J: after the UK had already made a deal

    11
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    Mute Ciaran O'Mara
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    Jan 29th 2021, 2:31 PM

    @Peter B: if you read the contract as now released you will see that Astra Zeneca hasn’t a leg to stand on. The Commission should go after them hard.

    36
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    Mute Eugene Norman
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    Jan 29th 2021, 2:43 PM

    @Noj Nikrub: that doesn’t matter. Contract ms don’t work like that.

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    Mute jindublin
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    Jan 29th 2021, 3:37 PM

    @Peter B: Absolutely. It is a classic longform contract that each side can interpret as they want. The EU might find judges that agree with their interpretation but it’s just as likely the judges would agree with the AZ interpretation. In any case by the time it would be resolved in a court case the Pandemic will be over or we’ll be dealing with the next one! EU does a great job proving the Tories right that it is too bureaucratic for its own good!

    11
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    Mute SomeoneSomewhere
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    Jan 29th 2021, 3:45 PM

    @Eugene Norman: leave eu more likely

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    J
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    Mute J
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    Jan 29th 2021, 4:06 PM

    @Noj Nikrub: irrelevant

    4
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    Mute sean o'dhubhghaill
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    Jan 29th 2021, 5:09 PM

    @Noj Nikrub: That’s irrelevant. A contract is a contract. The date it was signed counts for nothing, it is the agreement it contains.

    6
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    Mute David Morse
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    Jan 29th 2021, 9:35 PM

    @Eugene Norman: again NO! The UK left the EU on 31st Jan 2020, before the contract was signed. They were not part of the EU since that date. During the transition period the UK was a third country already.

    2
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    Mute Bob Tallent
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    Jan 29th 2021, 1:11 PM

    I foresee this debacle is AstraZeneca shooting themselves in the foot. Over a longer period of time, they will need the EU. Remember the EU is the largest trading block.
    A business should never alienate a customer, and that is what AstraZeneca is doing.
    The EU will find a way around this problem. It will take a bit longer, but they will find it. And AstraZeneca will pay in the long run, one way or another

    213
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    Mute Parked
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    Jan 29th 2021, 3:36 PM

    @Bob Tallent: lol. EU mucked up. Simple. Now they are scrambling for excuses.

    26
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    Mute Brian Madden
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    Jan 29th 2021, 3:41 PM

    @Parked: no they didn’t

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    Mute Bob Tallent
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    Jan 29th 2021, 3:51 PM

    @Parked: how exactly?
    There’s a long time saying in business that says the customer is always right. And I used to run a business training course called the Customer is King.
    AstraZeneca is losing sight of a lot of business principles. Thats why I foresee them paying in the long term

    12
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    Mute Jim Buckley Barrett
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    Jan 29th 2021, 3:57 PM

    @Parked: please tell us who isn’t keeping up to their legal responsibility in that contract?

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    Mute J
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    Jan 29th 2021, 4:09 PM

    @Bob Tallent: exactly

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    Mute David Morse
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    Jan 29th 2021, 9:37 PM

    @Bob Tallent: this was one of the facts bounded about during Brexit, The EU is a dwindling economic power, it’s not going to be the biggest for long unless it changes.

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    Mute Mick Tobin
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    Jan 29th 2021, 12:27 PM

    No matter how often the European Commission keeps stressing that the argument is not with the Britain but with a private company, this is nonetheless like a gift for Boris Johnson, since it seems as though the commission is inadvertedly achieving the impossible: uniting Remain and Leave voters.

    140
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    Mute Gerry Ryan
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    Jan 29th 2021, 12:45 PM

    @Mick Tobin: Nobody cares what Johnson thinks anymore, not Leaver, not Remainer, he’s delivered a total mess, not quite an Eton mess but a very large mess, his days are numbered and everybody knows they’re putting the squeeze on AZ and this is the way for AZ to get out from under the Tory jackboot.

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    Mute Eugene Norman
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    Jan 29th 2021, 1:10 PM

    @Mick Tobin: the EU doesn’t care about Britain and its internal politics and why should it.

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    Mute Adrian Gannon
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    Jan 29th 2021, 3:24 PM

    @Mick Tobin: but one has to wonder how 100k dead plays out in this unification under Boris?

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    Mute Carol Oates
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    Jan 29th 2021, 12:53 PM

    Timing of the contract is pertinent. If UK was a part of the EU at the time, it is a reasonable interpretation to say EU includes the UK.
    So it seems it amounts to a UK involved company thinking they get to keep the money and take their ball with them when they leave. The company has made a pandemic vaccine political and long term will pay the price. People generally don’t sign repeated contracts with individuals, companies, and governments that don’t live up to their end.

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    Mute Gerard
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    Jan 29th 2021, 12:55 PM

    @Carol Oates: The contract explicitly had a provision that for manufacturing site purposes, the EU was to be interpreted to include the UK (5.4).

    It doesn’t have a provision that “due to the transition period” (which you could argue implicitly terminated the provision on 1 January) and it doesn’t otherwise mention a time limit for when the provision ends.

    62
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    Mute Carol Oates
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    Jan 29th 2021, 1:10 PM

    @Gerard: It could be argued all right and should be argued in court. Negotiation has obiviously failed. It is very obivious the spirit of the contract was the company would make every effort to deliver and are not doing so. Countries need to know one way or another what is happening. If the UK government thinks supporting their stance will earn them any points in future negotiations with the EU or the company thinks making it an arguable contract will work to their favor in future, they are living in dreamland. Its the EUs fault for trusting them to live up to the spirit of the contract and actually make the best effort promised.

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    Mute Eugene Norman
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    Jan 29th 2021, 1:18 PM

    @Carol Oates: there’s no argument. It’s in the contract.

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    J
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    Mute J
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    Jan 29th 2021, 1:31 PM

    @Carol Oates: this won’t go to court. AZ will just have to find a way or face the consequences.

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    Mute Carol Oates
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    Jan 29th 2021, 4:17 PM

    @Eugene Norman: There is an argument only to the point that anything can be argued, even if facts don’t support it. Whether AZ should argue it or can possibly find a winning argument is the question.

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    Mute On the right side
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    Jan 29th 2021, 5:22 PM

    @Carol Oates: The UK left the EU on the 31 January 2020 after that was a transition period, there was nobody representing the UK in the EU after that date and they were not paying into the EU either.

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    Mute David Morse
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    Jan 29th 2021, 9:38 PM

    @Carol Oates: this is the issue though, The UK left The EU on the 31st Jan 2020, so it wasn’t part of the EU when the contract was signed.

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    Mute Eugene Norman
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    Jan 29th 2021, 1:14 PM

    It seems pretty clear to me that the contract justifies the EU position. Best reasonable effort doesn’t mean you get to sell to another customer in preference. Any other contract they entered into is irrelevant to this one. The factories in the U.K. are considered to be part of the deal. Where are the mouth breathers who opine that this proves the U.K./AZ position coming from?

    81
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    Mute Joan Murray
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    Jan 29th 2021, 1:54 PM

    @Eugene Norman: best reasonable effort could however be subject to other agreements taking precedence…like a contract signed 3 months earlier.

    37
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    Mute Eugene Norman
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    Jan 29th 2021, 2:24 PM

    @Joan Murray: no it couldn’t. That’s not the way contract law works. What’s signed when means nothing. If I sign a contract with a candle maker for 100 candles that he has guaranteed then he owes me 100 candles. A best effort clause would only apply if there was a shortage of candle wax or whatever. Privileging other clients doesn’t work.

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    Mute David Morse
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    Jan 29th 2021, 9:41 PM

    @Eugene Norman: but in your analogy there was a shortage of candle wax. The production from the continental sites was not high enough to meet the best efforts?

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    Mute Ger
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    Jan 29th 2021, 1:15 PM

    Yesterday I was blaming the EU but it seems that AZ are at fault after all. The vaccines manufacturered in the UK should be part of the EU supply as per the contract. It’s an ugly row and hopefully it will get sorted out soon.

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    Mute Gerard
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    Jan 29th 2021, 1:09 PM

    But the argument of AZ appears to be the UK ordered first, so that makes it priority, because of the “best effort provision”. If you can’t do it, you can’t do it, and so you have made your best effort. But if you CAN do it, it’s just you promised it to someone else first, and the contract doesn’t say you can do that, I don’t see how that’s “best effort”.

    Otherwise best effort would just mean whatever the company wants it to mean based on their business priorities.

    In any case, any legal arguments are probably beside the point, because it’ll end up being settled by politics, not law.

    42
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    Mute Mickety Dee
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    Jan 29th 2021, 1:19 PM

    @Gerard: it’s clear AZ have signed contracts to deliver more than they can. The timing of the contract signing is irrelevant. There must be penalties built in for breach of contract which I assume is driving AZ’s decision on who to cut back on

    44
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    Mute Eugene Norman
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    Jan 29th 2021, 1:22 PM

    @Gerard: of course you are right. If I ask a factory for 300 widgets by Q1, and there is a best effort clause it’s only a get out clause of they have manufacturing problems. Other clients are not my issue. Who signed first isn’t part of contract law either.

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    Mute Joan Murray
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    Jan 29th 2021, 1:57 PM

    @Eugene Norman: well actually, earlier agreements do impact the enforcement of a contract. The UK contract could have priority, but it hasn’t been published

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    Mute Gerard
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    Jan 29th 2021, 2:04 PM

    @Joan Murray: that would be a liability to the UK only.

    It doesn’t impact other contracts without explicit reference because a party can’t agree to terms it doesn’t know about.

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    Mute Mike Kelly
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    Jan 29th 2021, 2:11 PM

    @Joan Murray: incorrect .. they would have had to reveal that .. also clause in contract saying no other agreements with third parties can supersede this contract

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    Mute Eugene Norman
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    Jan 29th 2021, 2:29 PM

    @Joan Murray: no they don’t John – not unless specified in the contract.

    No matter what you are reading in the Tory press that just isn’t true and it couldn’t be true. If it were true then contracts would be worthless pieces of paper if you signed any provider with existing customers. Capitalism would collapse.

    “So this contract we just signed guarantees 99.99% uptime”.

    “Sure. Although of course our existing clients come first and you might get 50% or so since they get first dibs”.

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    Mute Vincent Bickerstaffe
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    Jan 29th 2021, 12:27 PM

    What a mess us humans are in..

    49
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    Mute Deborah Blacoe
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    Jan 29th 2021, 12:30 PM

    He said, she said, they said. If it wasn’t so serious, it would sound like petulant children having an argument.

    37
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    Mute Mickety Dee
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    Jan 29th 2021, 1:14 PM

    @Deborah Blacoe: Eh, they’ve just published the contract to stop the hearsay

    45
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    Mute Ally Mc Culladgh
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    Jan 29th 2021, 2:31 PM

    Ah I see our qualified journal.ie posters have not only qualifications in epidemiology, but now, EU contract law, remarkable.

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    Mute Eugene Norman
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    Jan 29th 2021, 2:51 PM

    @Ally Mc Culladgh: it’s hard to tell which side you are attacking here but contract law is pretty simple on the matter of when contracts are signed. It doesn’t matter unless it’s specified in the contract itself.

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    Mute Tony Rogers
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    Jan 30th 2021, 8:56 PM

    @Eugene Norman: please explain how contract law is simple. It is infact extremely complex. Also different countries have different laws. This one comes under Belgium law. So please enlighten us all on the simplicity of contract laws in Belgium

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    Mute Joan Murray
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    Jan 29th 2021, 1:50 PM

    No-one has seen the contract signed with the UK…. maybe they have a cast iron contract to guarantee delivery, which pre dates the EU contract and therefore has precedence. Ireland and any other EU country could have opted not to wait while the EU bureaucrats dithered over signing a contract in the first place Hungary has gone this route, despite being tut-tutted at – though I am not sure I would want to rely on the Russian vaccine. we could be well on our way to having all the most vulnerable vaccinated by now. And, the EU still hasn’t approved the Oxford vaccine, and looks like it won’t be approved for over 65s in any event. This is what happens with decision making in a bureaucracy.

    26
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    Mute Gerard
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    Jan 29th 2021, 2:05 PM

    @Joan Murray: you (EU) can’t have been considered to have accepted a provision in a contract (the UK one) that you haven’t seen.

    Either it says “we have other priorities” in the EU contract, and lists what those are and what their terms are, or they are irrelevant

    18
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    Mute Gerard
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    Jan 29th 2021, 2:10 PM

    @Joan Murray: that’s like saying, “I agreed to pay my mortgage, but I promised I’d repay money I borrowed from a friend as a priority.”

    Your friend has every right to expect you to pay them first, since you promised them that. But the bank doesn’t need to care — they didn’t agree you could pay your friend first.

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    Mute Eugene Norman
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    Jan 29th 2021, 2:46 PM

    @Gerard: good analogy.

    8
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    Mute Mary Ward
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    Jan 29th 2021, 1:08 PM

    An article in Spectator Magazine headed EU does not understand contract law publishes clause in contract between Commission and Curevac (german suppliers) by which curevac undertakes to use its best reasonable endeavours to make available by end of April vacines for member states having regard to it commitment under other order (to germany direct) No doubt contract with Pfeizer contains same clause .

    the contract between the commission and curevac is dependent on the agreement between member states and commission to purchase thru block scheme with a freedom to opt out.

    No wonder govt cant be sure when there will be easing of restrictions if this is contract for supply of vacine govt is relying on A contract that allows suppliers fulfill commitment to other orders. TD have not mentioned any of this either .

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    Mute Gerard
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    Jan 29th 2021, 1:12 PM

    @Mary Ward: The Spectator is heavily partisan (Tory).

    Which doesn’t make it false, but where something is in dispute, it’s always going to be the pro-UK pro-Tory slant.

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    Mute Eugene Norman
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    Jan 29th 2021, 1:26 PM

    @Mary Ward: that’s not this contract which doesn’t mention prior commitment

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    J
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    Mute J
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    Jan 29th 2021, 4:07 PM

    @Mary Ward: the spectator is virulently anti EU so no surprise there.

    4
    Jim
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    Mute Jim
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    Jan 29th 2021, 2:17 PM

    All animals are equal
    But some animals are
    More equal than others!

    The cracks are widening as I see it with national divisions widening at an EU level…

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    Mute Eugene Norman
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    Jan 29th 2021, 2:35 PM

    @Jim: I see no divisions. Except with the U.K.

    17
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    Mute Brendan Greene
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    Jan 29th 2021, 2:36 PM

    @Jim: the only cracks I see are in AZ’s position. I heard L.O’Neill on a weiner last night wonder out loud why Oxford has chosen AZ as partner. They have no track record in vaccines which involves a complex process whereas companies like Pfizer and J andJ do.

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    Mute Brendan Greene
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    Jan 29th 2021, 2:46 PM

    @Brendan Greene: webinar

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    Mute David Morse
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    Jan 29th 2021, 9:34 PM

    @Brendan Greene: “why AZ?” Simple, Oxford Uni we’re going to work with Merck in Germany, but the UK Gov said no, we’ll fund it but you have to have the manufacturing in The UK, so they changed to AZ.

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    Mute Eddie Michael
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    Jan 29th 2021, 1:37 PM

    If the Eu are so bothered about the contract then they should publish it un redacted….

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    Mute Mike Kelly
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    Jan 29th 2021, 1:43 PM

    @Eddie Michael: Astra published it after the European threatened to so . Interestingly the page showing the definition of cost was completely redacted by Astra

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    Mute Pádraic Ó Braonáin
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    Jan 29th 2021, 2:34 PM

    Does AZ not realise the EU could chew them pieces over this. Any contract they had with the UK, if not mentioned and agreed to in the EU contract, means absolutely nothing.

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    Mute Hugh Fogerty
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    Jan 29th 2021, 5:21 PM

    @Pádraic Ó Braonáin: that is probably the most s… tupid statement I have read …. we are the EU, do as we say.

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    Mute Zmeevo Libe
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    Jan 29th 2021, 10:40 PM

    @Hugh Fogerty: No Hugh, do as you said you will do in the contract.

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    Mute Eugene Norman
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    Jan 29th 2021, 2:38 PM

    Remarkable how much anti EU and pro Brexit sentiment on this board. It’s clearly not reflective of reality. I suppose if you spend a lot of time online as an English speaker the British produce a lot of output.

    Also the misunderstanding of contract law is comical.

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    Mute Carlin Ite
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    Jan 29th 2021, 2:43 PM

    Holy schit how bad has all of this been handled. If the anti eu crowd needed a spark here it is.

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    Mute Tom Mullally
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    Jan 29th 2021, 4:40 PM

    The EU have just authorized its use so it seems reasonable to deliver to countries that authorized it first.
    As it only works for 60% of cases, the EU should try to use better alternatives if possible.

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    Mute Tony Rogers
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    Jan 30th 2021, 6:13 PM

    @Tom Mullally: but keeps nearly 100% out of hospital as after getting the 2nd dose as they only get mild symptoms

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    Mute Ger O'Reilly
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    Jan 29th 2021, 2:56 PM

    What’s the point in publishing it if it’s heavily redacted.

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    Mute David Morse
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    Jan 29th 2021, 9:30 PM

    The article is incorrect in its stipulation of the position of The UK at the time the contract was signed: The UK left The EU on the 31st Jan 2020. When this contract was signed The UK had already left The EU!

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    Mute Tony Rogers
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    Jan 30th 2021, 5:43 PM

    You do realise astrazeneca is Swedish and UK business with its main offices in Sweden 5000 employees . So are they going to punish Sweden. The EU showed its true colours by trying to bring in article 16 but backed down. They could try to go through the courts which will take years and the EU would probably lose. They should try diplomacy instead of bullying tactics like they have used on Ireland and Greece

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    Jan 30th 2021, 9:41 AM

    Actually you are incorrect the contract was signed on the 27th of August 2020

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