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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
World
Henry McDonald Ireland correspondent

Irish Mail on Sunday apologises for Buncrana pier tragedy 'interview'

Family portrait
Louise James holds Rionaghac-Ann, the sole survivor of the accident that killed her partner Sean, left, and sons Mark, right, and Evan. Photograph: PA

The Mail on Sunday’s Irish edition has issued an apology over a fake interview with a woman who lost five family members in the Donegal pier tragedy a fortnight ago.

Louise James, whose partner, two young sons, mother and sister died in the accident in Buncrana, had complained to the paper that she never consented to an interview. Her family perished when the Audi jeep they were in slipped along the pier and into Lough Swilly two weeks ago.

Last weekend the Irish Mail on Sunday claimed it had secured an exclusive interview with James just days after she buried her loved ones following a joint religious service in their native Derry.

But in an article on page two of Sunday’s Irish edition, the Mail on Sunday says: “Last Sunday we published an article quoting from Louise James, who had lost her partner, mother, sister and two sons in the Buncrana tragedy. We wish to make it clear that Louise understood that she was speaking to our reporter in a purely private capacity and had not consented to being interviewed. She did not wish to give interviews to any media outlets. We are happy to make this clear and apologise to Louise and her family for the upset caused.”

James and her family had asked for privacy in the wake of the accident. She was at a hen party in Liverpool when her partner Sean, sons Mark, 12, and Evan, eight, her 59-year-old mother, Ruth Daniels, and her teenage sister, Jodie Lee Daniels, drowned.

Irish police are investigating claims that the driver lost control of the vehicle after it slipped on a thick buildup of algae towards the end of the pier. There was only one survivor. James’s infant daughter Rionaghac-Ann who was rescued from Lough Swilly by Davitt Walsh, a former Irish footballer now hailed a national hero for saving the baby.

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