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Jamey Carney's murder is a stark reminder that violence against women is rooted in misogyny that still runs deep in society. Eight women have been killed in Ireland this year alone, and Women's Aid data shows 87% of resolved femicide cases involved men known to the victims. Framing this as anything other than a systemic failure to protect women from male violence misses the real crisis.
Irish authorities deliberately withheld the suspect's name, photo and nationality during an active manhunt to hide the fact that another migrant committed murder. The International Protection Act effectively shields criminal suspects from public scrutiny, a policy that has become notorious amid rising migrant crime. Blaming misogyny while hiding the suspect's identity is a political move, not justice.
Neither explanation fits because both sides are using the same tragedy to advance pre-existing political agendas. One camp reframes a case involving an asylum seeker into a universal story about male violence, while the other treats a single murder as definitive proof of immigration failure. The result is less scrutiny of the specific institutional and policing failures that may have enabled this crime, replaced by another round of ideological point-scoring.