Monday, February 17, 2025 - A m8rder investigation is underway after a
34-year-old Nigerian man identified as Quam Babatunde, was stabbed to d3ath in
Dublin, Ireland.
The incident happened in Dublin city centre on South Anne Street around
3am on Saturday, February 15, 2025.
Minister for Justice, Jim O’Callaghan, who confirmed the nationality of
the victim, said that violence on the streets of Dublin is “not acceptable”.
Speaking on This Week with Justin McCarthy on RTÉ, O’Callaghan said that
he didn’t want to go into detail on the man as he has not been publicly
identified.
"I’m sure efforts are being made to try to inform his family of the
catastrophic consequences that happened to him in the early hours of Saturday
morning,” he said.
The victim, said to be an asylum seeker, is understood to have been
socialising earlier at a concert before the incident.
Gardaí were called to the incident in South Anne Street / Duke Lane
Upper just after 3am on Saturday morning. A man was found there with serious
injuries and unresponsive.
He was treated at the scene by emergency services personnel and
transferred to hospital where he was pronounced deceased a short time
later.
The stabbing was in the midst of a large scale public order incident
that is understood to have taken place between two groups of people who had
been out socialising at a venue before violence spilled out onto the
street.
Gardaí are examining CCTV footage and social media videos.A second man
is currently in the hospital being treated for non-life threatening
injuries.
Purported footage of the incident has been widespread on social media.
One video, which has been shared widely, shows a large group of people present
on the street. One man is visibly armed with a knife.
When asked if he had seen the video in question, O’Callaghan confirmed
that he had.
"It is shocking footage, and the individual carrying the knife and
the other individuals there with him, involved in the violence, need to know
that An Garda Síochána are making very good progress in terms of identifying
them,” the Justice Minister said.
“I also want to put out a message that carrying knives and acts of
violence on the street are not acceptable in Ireland, and nor will they ever be
acceptable.”
He also added that gardaí need better technology, including facial
recognition, to be able to carry out their work more effectively.
“You will know from the videos that we see in respect of the instant
yesterday that the gardaí will have to track these individuals down based on
CCTV.
“Facial recognition technology would be of great assistance to the
gardaí and would speed up the process of investigation, and that’s why I’m
hoping the opposition parties will support that legislation when I bring it
into the Dáil."

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