Gardai have appealed for witnesses to all the collisions to come forward.
Four people were killed and multiple others injured following a weekend of carnage on roads in the Republic.
On Saturday, a woman in her 20s was struck by a car on the N11, Loughlinstown, South Dublin at around 11:50pm. She was pronounced dead at the scene.
Earlier in the day, two men were killed in a horrific two-car collision in Birchhill, Co Donegal. The victims, who were aged in their 20s and 30s, were travelling in the same vehicle.
Meanwhile, a woman and a man in their 20s, who were also in the car, were rushed to Letterkenny University for non-life-threatening injuries.
A man and woman, who are in their 40s and travelling in the other vehicle, were also taken to the hospital with non-life-threatening injuries.
In a separate crash also in Donegal on Saturday, a man in his 20s, was rushed to hospital following a collision on the R238 at Ardmore in Muff, but later passed in hospital. Gardai have appealed for witnesses to all the collisions to come forward.
It comes as the funeral of talented GAA player Laura Kennedy, who died after a two-car collision on the Nenagh to Dromineer Road R495 last Tuesday night, heard of her love for music, travel and camogie.
The young woman’s funeral took place in Ballywilliam Church in Tipperary on Sunday.
The 20-year-old’s coffin was draped in a Burgess-Duharra flag – the club she played for at levels. Her teammates also formed a guard of honour while her twin sister Ashling and dad John delivered heartbreaking eulogies.
Devastated Ashling began by telling fellow mourners: “Anybody who knew Laura knew that she was kind, smart, funny, talented and amazing at everything she did.
“She was the most stylish person going, always buying more and more clothes on Vinted – the postman never got a break.
“She was also so smart and she knew it … I’d be stressing over an exam and she would try calm me down and just go ‘Ashling, it’s not worth it. It’s just some exam.’
“And she would go back to her room and study for a day and come back with a better result than me.
“She had one more exam left to finish before finishing her second year in college. Laura to me was not just my sister – she was my best friend. Anything one of us did – the other one did.”
Speaking about the unbreakable bond the pair had, Ashling added: “We couldn’t get away from each other.
“Secretly, I loved it because I knew she was always with me and I was never lonely. There was no chance to be lonely.
“If it was going to college, work, training, the cinema or going to town for our weekly trip to Tesco – I’d look at her and realise how lucky I was to have her.
“Her smile did something to me and I think it done something to all of us. You couldn’t help but smile back at her.
“I’m so glad I have the most amazing family and friends to get through this because I don’t think I’d be able to without them. We will stay strong for Laura and get the strength from her because she was the strongest person I knew.”
Her distraught dad John then spoke about the impact both Ashling and Laura had on his and his wife Annette’s lives once they were born.
He said: “On the 10th of the 10th, 2005. Two angels appeared to myself and my good wife Annette and our life changed forever.
“You think you have a life up until that, and you’re happy, and you’ll get on with it, but all anybody wants is for somebody to turn a house into a home.
“We had a beautiful house or bricks and mortar, but two beautiful children came along and made that complete.
“They lit a fire in our hearts. Unfortunately, now one of them has been extinguished
“But there’s so much power and light in the other one that it is more than double the flame. I know that you’ll keep lighting and Laura will shine her light through Ashling, and that joy that they brought us up to last Tuesday night – we will never forget.
“Laura had so many passions in her life. She loved her music as I said. She loved her Camogie. It’s fair to say that she loved to travel – she wouldn’t be home from one trip before she’d be on the internet planning something else.”
Breaking down, he said: “From short trips to long ones and I’m glad in her short 20 years that we fitted in so much.
“You were 20 years old, Laura and I would give anything for 20 more seconds just to hold you in my arms and tell you how much I love you.
“I told you every night going to bed that I loved you, and I only missed it when you were gone away. I’m so glad that I did that, but just in case you ever doubted that, from the bottom of my broken heart and from my wife and from your sister Ash … we love you so much and thank you for 20 beautiful, glorious years.”
Tokens to remember Laura’s life included an accordion, her Burgess-Duharra jersey, her favourite coat, her hurl, a bag to symbolise her love for travel and a lab coat to represent her degree.
She was later buried in Monsea Graveyard.
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