What was Peter Ivan Dunne afraid would kill him in the Irish prison system?
A convicted man has pleaded to be kept out of an Irish prison over fears that he will be killed by onions. Peter Ivan Dunne, who has a severe allergy to red onions, says he could die from the onions in Irish prison food. And, he claimed that his human rights would be breached if he was extradited to Ireland where he feared being killed “by the ingestion of red onions” there. Dunne, 45, told two judges at the High Court in London that dietary needs are “routinely ignored” at Irish prisons. The criminal feels that a failure to be served “a red onion-free Kosher diet” (Dunne is a convert to Judaism) would violate his Article 2 “right to life” as well as his Article 3 rights not to suffer inhuman or degrading punishment under the European Convention on Human Rights. Sources: http://www.irishcentral.com/news/Man-fears-Irish-prison-will-kill-him-with-onions-50479562.
A convicted sex offender has pleaded to be kept out of an Irish prison over fears that he will be killed by onions. Peter Ivan Dunne, who has a severe allergy to red onions, says he could die from the onions in Irish prison food. And, he claimed that his human rights would be breached if he was extradited to Ireland where he feared being killed “by the ingestion of red onions” there. Dunne, 45, told two judges at the High Court in London that dietary needs are “routinely ignored” at Irish prisons. The criminal feels that a failure to be served “a red onion-free Kosher diet” (Dunne is a convert to Judaism) would violate his Article 2 “right to life” as well as his Article 3 rights not to suffer inhuman or degrading punishment under the European Convention on Human Rights. Dunne also alleged that prison officers had insulted his Jewish religion, made “religiously offensive jokes” and forced him to eat pork. Justice Rafferty, sitting with Lord Justice Leveson, rejected Dunne’s appeal. Jus
A sex attacker who claims he could be killed by red onions in the Irish prison diet if extradited from the UK to serve his sentence in Dublin has been sent packing by top judges. Peter Ivan Dunne — also known as Ivan Gan — claimed his past experiences of Irish prison food showed that his dietary needs were “routinely ignored”, exposing him to a potentially fatal allergic reaction from eating red onions. Dunne, originally from Coventry, and a convert to Judaism, alleged staff had also sidelined the strict dietary requirements of his faith, denying him onion-free and kosher meals. His lawyers urged judges at London’s High Court to halt his extradition to Ireland on grounds that it would violate his rights to life, and freedom from inhuman or degrading treatment — safeguarded by Articles Two and Three of the European Convention on Human Rights. However, Mrs Justice Rafferty, sitting with Lord Justice Leveson, threw out his complaints, saying: “The absence of evidence that prison staff in