In a case that has sent tremors through the Irish capital, a Dublin man has been found guilty of the attempted murder of three children. The conviction, secured after a harrowing trial, has prompted British police to share their anti-terror expertise across the Irish Sea. The exchange, discreet and professional, speaks to a grim reality: terrorism, whether linked to international networks or born of domestic grievance, knows no borders.
For those of us who watch the quiet shifts in society, this collaboration is a telling moment. It was not long ago that the British police were learning from international partners. Today, they are the teachers. The Special Branch officers who fly to Dublin carry with them lessons hard-learned from the days of the Troubles, the London bombings, and more recently, the spate of lone-actor attacks that have tested community resilience.
But what of the human cost? The three children, whose names we do not yet know, are now shadows in a story about police procedure. Their trauma, their slow recovery, is the private agony that underpins public safety. The man convicted, whose motives remain murky, may be another example of radicalisation that slipped through the net. And yet, the public is left with questions: How did he come to target children? What signs were missed?
The cultural shift here is subtle but significant. Once, the Irish Republic was viewed as a safe haven, a place untouched by the violent extremism that plagued other parts of Europe. That innocence has been tarnished. Parents in Dublin will now talk in hushed tones about vigilance. The playground, once a space of unspoken trust, now bears the weight of suspicion.
British expertise, born of bitter experience, is now on loan. It is a mark of the changing times. But as we share our knowledge, we must also share our sorrow. The export of anti-terror tactics cannot replace the import of community healing. The Dublin children, and the families like theirs, deserve a justice that the courts alone cannot provide. They deserve a society that looks again at what it means to be safe.
For now, the machinery of state grinds on. The police liaison continues. But in the quiet moments, we might ask: What kind of world are we building when the experts in childhood terror are the very nations who have seen the most of it? The answer, perhaps, lies in the shared understanding that safety is never truly exported. It is only lent, and must be rebuilt, home by home, heart by heart.









