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Gardai pictured in Coole, Co Westmeath, in May as an exhumation of Mr McGrath's body took place.

MINISTER FOR Energy Eamon Ryan has called for a "strategic retreat" from our dependence on fossil fuels through heavy investment in newer forms of cleaner energy.
VICTIMS OF workplace bullying are often blamed by colleagues for bringing it upon themselves, new research has found.
A GROUP opposed to the building of an incinerator at Rathcoole in west Dublin is to seek to have its costs paid by the company proposing the development, Energy Answers International.
GROUPS WORKING with vulnerable children have welcomed plans by the Ombudsman for Children to investigate the implementation of national guidelines on child protection.
THERE IS little reason to be optimistic that alcohol abuse will be tackled "at any stage in the near future" because of the power of the drinks industry, the Irish Association of Suicidology conference heard yesterday.
THE HEALTH Service Executive is planning to cut bed numbers, restrict some wards to five-day rather than seven-day operation and carry out more work on a day care basis next year.
RADIO STATIONS Today FM and Newstalk, which are both owned by Denis O'Brien's company Communicorp, are to combine their newsroom resources.
THE REPUBLIC'S mobile phone users spend more time talking and texting than their counterparts in 15 other countries, according to a new report.
PRESIDENT MARY McAleese officially opened Cricklewood Homeless Concern's new centre yesterday on the second day of her two-day visit to London.
FINE GAEL is expecting about 1,200 party activists to attend its national conference which opens this evening in Wexford.
MINISTER FOR Agriculture Brendan Smith has said Ireland could not have got a better deal on the Common Agricultural Policy than the one reached by EU ministers in the early hours of Thursday morning.
FARMING ORGANISATIONS reacted negatively to the new farm deal agreed in Brussels yesterday. The Irish Creamery Milk Suppliers' Association was furious over the decision to increase milk quotas in the deal.
A NEW political party championing the interests of older people plans to field candidates in the local elections next June, its founder has said.
STUDENT UNION leaders are to meet Minister for Education Batt O'Keeffe to outline their opposition to the reintroduction of third-level fees.
A round-up of today's other stories in brief...

LEGISLATION TO implement a health insurance levy and related tax relief measures will be passed by the Oireachtas before Christmas, although a decision by the European Commission on its acceptability is unlikely until the new year.
TÁNAISTE MARY Coughlan has described as "scurrilous" a question from Fine Gael enterprise spokesman Leo Varadkar about whether she had been lobbied in the appointment process for the selection of the chairman of Enterprise Ireland.
MINISTER OF State for European Affairs Dick Roche criticised RTÉ for the amount of coverage given recently to Libertas chairman Declan Ganley.
NURSING HOME legislation to help fund long-term care is "wrong and unfair" because it "involves a redistribution of wealth from the less well-off to the better-off," the Dáil has heard.
DÁIL SKETCH: Fine Gael TD John Perry spoke at authoritative length about EU directives and documents as he addressed the Government benches, where Minister of State for European Affairs Dick Roche was presiding.
SEANAD REPORT: RONAN MULLEN (Ind) received the consent of the House to place on its agenda his Bill which seeks to prohibit the creation of human embryos for research and to ban research involving or deriving from the destruction of such embryos.
A HIGH Court jury has awarded €140,000 damages to a Co Donegal woman after finding she was sexually assaulted as a young child over a two-year period in her own home by a man who gave her piano lessons.
A 25-YEAR-OLD father of two was mistaken for his brother when he was shot dead in Dublin last year, a jury at the Central Criminal Court has heard.
COMMUNICATIONS consultant Monica Leech has secured damages understood to be about €125,000 plus costs and an apology in settlement of her High Court libel action over two newspaper articles.
A MAN who stole a cash box containing €40,000 was arrested after gardaí followed a trail of ink and smoke from the box's security devices to his home, Dublin Circuit Criminal Court has heard.
THE JURY in the trial of a man accused of murdering a Google employee by stabbing him following an altercation in the street is due to begin its deliberations this morning.
A SECURITY supervisor has claimed former world boxing champion Steve Collins was "like a caged animal" shouting obscenities at an Albanian bouncer moments after he allegedly punched him in the face.
A round-up of today's other stories in brief...

REFUSING TO declare the Lisbon Treaty dead was an "act of treason the likes of which has not been seen since the Act of Union", an Oireachtas subcommittee on Europe was told yesterday.
Three sharp performers enlivened an Oireachtas committee on the Lisbon Treaty yesterday, writes
MIRIAM LORD
BUSINESSMAN BILL Cullen has offered to join the campaign for a Yes vote in the event of a new referendum on the Lisbon Treaty.
THE INQUEST into the death of 14-year-old schoolboy Brian Rossiter yesterday heard from a witness who said she saw gardaí using force when they arrested Brian and another youth on the night before he was found unconscious in Clonmel Garda station.
A WEXFORD family have claimed before the High Court they had to leave their home because of smells comparable to sewage and rotten eggs coming from a compost manufacturing plant adjoining their property.
GARDAÍ HAVE arrested three men following an armed robbery at Arklow post office, Co Wicklow, in which a substantial sum of money was taken.
A POSTMORTEM on the body of Sophie Toscan du Plantier by pathologists in France, as part of an inquiry there into her killing, has failed to discover anything new, her family revealed yesterday.
A LICENSED arms dealer has been banned from owning a handgun legally held by hundreds of Irish marksmen but which has been described in court as an "extremely dangerous" weapon.
AN 18-YEAR-OLD Killarney man has been handed a four-year sentence for a "horrific" attack on a Cork man who lost his way in a Killarney laneway after a Christmas party.
A round-up of today's other stories in brief...
I'm all right nowAngelina Jolie's journey from wild child to movie mom
Drop that mortgage monkeyHere are five effective ways in which to reduce the responsibility of having to come up with a hefty mortgage sum every month, writes Fiona Reddan
The late, late showingsBeethoven and Shakespeare conceived their late works either side of 50. These days, however, the likes of Leonard Cohen, Neil Diamond and PD James are producing what can only be described as 'very late works'
Buying into the franchise businessThere are 310 franchised businesses here, with an estimated combined turnover of more than €2.5 billion employing 27,000 staff, writes Frank Dillon
MyTunes: from 45s to MP3sListen carefully, and you'll hear the sound of a revolution. In just five years, many of us have radically changed the way we obtain and listen to music.