Northern Ireland

Former Tyrone GAA county board chair Roisin Jordan settles libel action

Roisin Jordan the GAA's first female county board chairperson. Picture by Mal McCann.
Roisin Jordan the GAA's first female county board chairperson. Picture by Mal McCann.

THE first woman to chair a GAA county board has settled a libel action over claims of "penny-pinching" within Tyrone's association.

Roisin Jordan declared herself fully vindicated by the resolution reached today at the High Court in Belfast.

Mrs Jordan made history when she was elected chairperson of Tyrone County Board, a position she held from 2014-2017.

She sued the parent company of Dublin-based radio station Newstalk over an article which appeared on its website two years ago.

Based on an anonymous email claiming to be from a Tyone senior footballer, the piece made a number of criticisms about alleged spending cuts.

The action was listed for a two-day trial before Mr Justice Maguire.

But following out of court negotiations the judge was informed that a settlement had been reached in the case.

As part of those terms a "clarification" statement was read out on behalf of the defendant, News 106 Ltd.

Gerald Simpson QC told the court: "Newstalk.com published an article on February 23, 2017 headed 'Tyrone footballers: County Board penny-pinching hurting morale'.

"We wish to clarify that it was never our intention to imply that Roison Jordan was not discharging her duty as chairperson of the Tyrone County Board, or that she was not acting in the best interests of the Tyrone senior football team, or that she was contributing to a situation where the Tyrone senior football team was being under-resourced for the 2017 Championship season."

The statement continued: "While we published the article in good faith based on information from a number of trusted sources, we do acknowledge that despite our best efforts we have been unable to verify the source of the email which prompted the article."

No further details of the terms of the resolution were disclosed.

Outside court Mrs Jordan said she was "pleased" the case had been settled in her favour.

"I'm pleased that it's now over and the outcome has fully vindicated me," she said.