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06 Sept 2025

Rossport farmer arrested at jack-knifed lorry

Willie Corduff, one of the ‘Rossport Five’, arrested at the scene of the jack-knifed Shell lorry in north Mayo
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Rossport farmer arrested at jack-knifed lorry



Áine Ryan

ROSSPORT farmer, Willie Corduff (pictured), was arrested this afternoon (Wednesday) at the scene of the jack-knifed Shell lorry at an isolated crossroads in north Mayo.
Mr Corduff is one of five men jailed for 94 days in 2005 for their opposition to the Corrib project.
The lorry, which was carrying a section of the giant tunnel boring machine, named ‘Fionnuala’ after one of The Children of Lír by Shell, has been stuck at the Glenamoy crossroads since early on Tuesday morning.
A spokesman for Mayo County Council said local authority experts and Shell personnel were continuing to examine their options for removing the 170 tonnes lorry and its load from the roadside. However, local observers say, an attempt to tow it last night has further embedded the cab in a boggy ditch and that the axel may now also be damaged.
Sinn Féin county councillor, Rose Conway-Walsh said ‘the health and safety of a whole community was put at risk by the blocking of the junction of the L1203 and R312’. 
“The lack of consultation about the transporting by road of this exceptional heavy convoy is appalling. I can categorically state that neither Shell nor Mayo Council consulted me as a local councillor about the transporting of this 172 tonne tunnel boring machine. Had I been consulted, the first question I would have asked is has the carrying capacity of the route been assessed by Mayo County Council and what health and safety plan has been put in place,” Cllr Conway-Walsh said.
She has called on the council to provide a report on how the route was assessed. A council spokesman told The Mayo News that it had ‘adhered to all the proper procedures’.
Partial access was restored on the roadway yesterday after Mayo County Council carried out emergency works. Shell has apologised to the local community.

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