He was defended on multiple occasions by Senator
Eoghan Harris, who said that, although he didn't "necessarily approve of people going to Nepal for sex with young men," that the "age of consent [in Nepal] is 16. So far O Searcaigh has not been accused of any criminal offence." Harris claimed that Nepal is a
homophobic society, and that many of Ó Searcaigh's Nepalese accusers may have their own agendas. Prominent gay rights campaigner and Senator
David Norris defended Ó Searcaigh in Seanad Éireann: "An attempt has been made to create such a firestorm of hostile publicity that justice may never retrospectively be done." The poet has also been defended by
Máire Mhac an tSaoi, who has accused Ní Chianáin of unethical behaviour. She questions whether the film-maker ever informed Ó Searcaigh of the fact that she was no longer filming as a friend but as an antagonist (or at least as an investigative reporter). Defenders of Ní Chianáin, on the other hand, have noted that she brought her concerns to the attention of the Irish police and social services upon her return from Nepal in 2006, and in the two-year period before the film was released, she set up a trust fund and secured counselling and support services in Nepal for boys who had encountered Ó Searcaigh. A year after the film was broadcast, Cathal Ó Searcaigh finally made a detailed defence of all the charges against him in an extensive interview in
Hot Press. Bushe alleges that
Fairytale of Kathmandu misrepresented the views of boys interviewed by Ní Chianáin. Narang Pant, whose testimony was central to the original documentary, states he was instructed to give rehearsed answers, and that he subsequently had asked her not to use the interview she had taken with him. Ní Chianáin denied that there had been any misrepresentation of the views of those interviewed, stating that social services were happy with the account presented in the film and unedited footage and transcripts. She also argued that many of the boys were still contacted by Ó Searcaigh and were receiving money from him, including the boy who asked her not to use his interview. She said this boy was under pressure from Ó Searcaigh and that the hotel managers' decision to reveal his concerns supported her account of events. ==References==