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Ireland’s Migrant Crisis Sparks Violence as Tensions Reach Breaking Point

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Ireland is facing an unprecedented wave of unrest as anti-migrant sentiment reaches boiling point, fueled by a staggering near-300% increase in asylum applications over the past five years. Violent clashes, including knife fights, drug-fueled brawls, and destructive riots, have become disturbingly commonplace on the streets of Dublin, where authorities struggle to maintain order.  

 

Irish police have started an investigation after a video went viral of a man beating up a migrant who slammed the roof of his car on a street in Dublin

 

Footage from the Irish capital paints a grim picture, with thugs launching themselves into buses, mass brawls erupting in residential neighborhoods, and police resorting to riot shields and pepper spray to control disorder. In response, groups of men have taken to patrolling the streets, claiming to act as unofficial enforcers to keep the city safe.  

 

When MailOnline visited the area last year the contrast in Dublin was stark. As friends and families soaked up the sunshine along the tranquil Grand Canal on Friday, migrants were being quizzed by police in their tents on the footpath

 

According to the Central Statistics Office (CSO), Ireland saw an influx of 150,000 people in 2023-24, marking the highest migration level in nearly two decades. Of these, only 30,000 were returning Irish citizens, while the rest were new arrivals, many of whom were placed in struggling neighborhoods or small provincial towns. The number of international protection applicants housed in Ireland has surged from 7,244 in 2017 to nearly 33,000 today. In addition to migrants from Africa and the Middle East, around 100,000 refugees arrived following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.  

 

Tents housing asylum seekers near to the International Protection Office, in Dublin

 

The financial strain is mounting, with each asylum seeker costing nearly £70 per day, a 30% increase over two years. The Irish Refugee Council has reported record homelessness among asylum seekers, with 3,001 individuals without proper shelter. The budget for housing Ukrainian refugees has also been slashed from £910 million in 2023 to under £340 million this year, with further reductions expected.  

 

A bus was torched by rioters who scrawled the word 'out' across its rear as it burned

 

Once-quiet towns have been transformed into refugee hubs, while Dublin’s Grand Canal has become a symbol of the crisis, lined with tent encampments. Rising far-right sentiment has pushed Ireland to a precarious state, with even left-wing politicians acknowledging the link between migration and homelessness. Aoife Gallagher of the Institute of Strategic Dialogue, who monitors far-right activity, has noted a sharp rise in hostility toward migrants. “We see consistently, a couple of times every week, horrific attacks on migrants,” she said. “We see people standing outside IPAS centres waiting for asylum seekers in order to confront them and intimidate them. There’s a level of political violence that we haven’t seen before.”  

 

Tensions erupted into full-scale riots last year when anti-immigration protesters torched cars, threw petrol bombs, and set fire to a former paint factory slated to house 550 asylum seekers. The site, located in Coolock, North Dublin, became a battleground as clashes between demonstrators and police unfolded throughout the day. Multiple fires were ignited, with dramatic images showing a digger engulfed in flames. Fifteen people were ultimately charged with public order offenses related to the violence.  

 

Public outrage intensified in November when MMA fighter Conor McGregor amplified anti-migrant rhetoric following unverified online reports that an Algerian migrant had stabbed three children outside a kindergarten. The former UFC champion declared, “Ireland is at war,” further inflaming tensions. The following month, an arson attack reduced a 19th-century Georgian country hotel in Galway to ruins. The Ross Lake House Hotel, which had been unoccupied for years, was scheduled to house 70 asylum seekers before it was set ablaze. The fire, which broke out just hours after protests outside the building, was condemned by government officials, with Dublin West’s Minister for Children, Equality, Disability, Integration, and Youth calling it a “disgraceful act.”  

 

Hostility toward migrants has also taken root in smaller communities across Ireland. In Newtown Mount Kennedy, Co. Wicklow, a former convent converted into a migrant holding center became the site of 24-hour protests that escalated into violent clashes with police. Meanwhile, people from Somalia, Sudan, and Nigeria have been placed in large tents on an estate cordoned off from the local population by a 10-foot-tall fence.  

 

The scene in Dublin’s Grand Canal offers a stark contrast to everyday life. While families relax along the waterway, police question migrants housed in tents along the footpath. Barriers continue to be erected to prevent further encampments, reinforcing the divide between asylum seekers and locals.  

The Irish Refugee Council has warned that the government is failing in its duty to provide shelter and safety. CEO Nick Henderson criticized the state’s approach, stating, “We can’t continue to normalise homelessness and have the State effectively delegate its duties to volunteers and under-resourced charities. It puts both people seeking protection and those helping them at risk of harm.”  

 

Ireland’s crisis has also sparked international debate. Last year, UK ministers flatly rejected Dublin’s request to take back asylum seekers who had crossed into Northern Ireland. The long-term outlook remains uncertain, with the Project Ireland 2040 initiative estimating that an additional two million people will reside in the country over the next 15 years, requiring £96 billion in infrastructure investment. However, migration numbers have already far outpaced projections, leaving policymakers scrambling to keep up.  

 

A study by the London School of Economics highlighted the role of social media in amplifying far-right rhetoric, blaming government cutbacks to anti-racism initiatives in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis for fostering an environment where hostility toward migrants has flourished. The report concluded, “More needs to be done to ensure already woefully neglected communities receive sufficient state resources to facilitate greater community integration of asylum seekers and migrants, allowing these communities to view immigration as beneficial, hence helping to tackle embedded racism.”  

 

As Ireland grapples with an escalating crisis, the question remains whether the government can balance humanitarian obligations with growing public unrest or if the country will continue down a path of deepening division and violence.

 

Based on a report by Daily Mail  2025-02-24

 

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  • My Ireland was always a safe harbour for asylum seekers or refugees even in WW2.  However, those are arriving nowadays, have nothing in common with us. They do not share our history, culture

  • Confuscious
    Confuscious

    Not only Ireland, but many European countries are fed-up with the illegals. This will not end well ...

  • Welcome to the wonderful world of Ursula von der Leyen, Magnus Brunner and all the signatories of the Treaties of Maastricht, Lisbon and the 2018 Marrakech Migration Pact. Amazingly the Irish ele

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Not only Ireland, but many European countries are fed-up with the illegals.
This will not end well ...

  • Popular Post
2 hours ago, Social Media said:

image.png

 

Ireland is facing an unprecedented wave of unrest as anti-migrant sentiment reaches boiling point, fueled by a staggering near-300% increase in asylum applications over the past five years. Violent clashes, including knife fights, drug-fueled brawls, and destructive riots, have become disturbingly commonplace on the streets of Dublin, where authorities struggle to maintain order.  

 

Irish police have started an investigation after a video went viral of a man beating up a migrant who slammed the roof of his car on a street in Dublin

 

Footage from the Irish capital paints a grim picture, with thugs launching themselves into buses, mass brawls erupting in residential neighborhoods, and police resorting to riot shields and pepper spray to control disorder. In response, groups of men have taken to patrolling the streets, claiming to act as unofficial enforcers to keep the city safe.  

 

When MailOnline visited the area last year the contrast in Dublin was stark. As friends and families soaked up the sunshine along the tranquil Grand Canal on Friday, migrants were being quizzed by police in their tents on the footpath

 

According to the Central Statistics Office (CSO), Ireland saw an influx of 150,000 people in 2023-24, marking the highest migration level in nearly two decades. Of these, only 30,000 were returning Irish citizens, while the rest were new arrivals, many of whom were placed in struggling neighborhoods or small provincial towns. The number of international protection applicants housed in Ireland has surged from 7,244 in 2017 to nearly 33,000 today. In addition to migrants from Africa and the Middle East, around 100,000 refugees arrived following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.  

 

Tents housing asylum seekers near to the International Protection Office, in Dublin

 

The financial strain is mounting, with each asylum seeker costing nearly £70 per day, a 30% increase over two years. The Irish Refugee Council has reported record homelessness among asylum seekers, with 3,001 individuals without proper shelter. The budget for housing Ukrainian refugees has also been slashed from £910 million in 2023 to under £340 million this year, with further reductions expected.  

 

A bus was torched by rioters who scrawled the word 'out' across its rear as it burned

 

Once-quiet towns have been transformed into refugee hubs, while Dublin’s Grand Canal has become a symbol of the crisis, lined with tent encampments. Rising far-right sentiment has pushed Ireland to a precarious state, with even left-wing politicians acknowledging the link between migration and homelessness. Aoife Gallagher of the Institute of Strategic Dialogue, who monitors far-right activity, has noted a sharp rise in hostility toward migrants. “We see consistently, a couple of times every week, horrific attacks on migrants,” she said. “We see people standing outside IPAS centres waiting for asylum seekers in order to confront them and intimidate them. There’s a level of political violence that we haven’t seen before.”  

 

 

Tensions erupted into full-scale riots last year when anti-immigration protesters torched cars, threw petrol bombs, and set fire to a former paint factory slated to house 550 asylum seekers. The site, located in Coolock, North Dublin, became a battleground as clashes between demonstrators and police unfolded throughout the day. Multiple fires were ignited, with dramatic images showing a digger engulfed in flames. Fifteen people were ultimately charged with public order offenses related to the violence.  

 

Public outrage intensified in November when MMA fighter Conor McGregor amplified anti-migrant rhetoric following unverified online reports that an Algerian migrant had stabbed three children outside a kindergarten. The former UFC champion declared, “Ireland is at war,” further inflaming tensions. The following month, an arson attack reduced a 19th-century Georgian country hotel in Galway to ruins. The Ross Lake House Hotel, which had been unoccupied for years, was scheduled to house 70 asylum seekers before it was set ablaze. The fire, which broke out just hours after protests outside the building, was condemned by government officials, with Dublin West’s Minister for Children, Equality, Disability, Integration, and Youth calling it a “disgraceful act.”  

 

Hostility toward migrants has also taken root in smaller communities across Ireland. In Newtown Mount Kennedy, Co. Wicklow, a former convent converted into a migrant holding center became the site of 24-hour protests that escalated into violent clashes with police. Meanwhile, people from Somalia, Sudan, and Nigeria have been placed in large tents on an estate cordoned off from the local population by a 10-foot-tall fence.  

 

The scene in Dublin’s Grand Canal offers a stark contrast to everyday life. While families relax along the waterway, police question migrants housed in tents along the footpath. Barriers continue to be erected to prevent further encampments, reinforcing the divide between asylum seekers and locals.  

The Irish Refugee Council has warned that the government is failing in its duty to provide shelter and safety. CEO Nick Henderson criticized the state’s approach, stating, “We can’t continue to normalise homelessness and have the State effectively delegate its duties to volunteers and under-resourced charities. It puts both people seeking protection and those helping them at risk of harm.”  

 

Ireland’s crisis has also sparked international debate. Last year, UK ministers flatly rejected Dublin’s request to take back asylum seekers who had crossed into Northern Ireland. The long-term outlook remains uncertain, with the Project Ireland 2040 initiative estimating that an additional two million people will reside in the country over the next 15 years, requiring £96 billion in infrastructure investment. However, migration numbers have already far outpaced projections, leaving policymakers scrambling to keep up.  

 

A study by the London School of Economics highlighted the role of social media in amplifying far-right rhetoric, blaming government cutbacks to anti-racism initiatives in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis for fostering an environment where hostility toward migrants has flourished. The report concluded, “More needs to be done to ensure already woefully neglected communities receive sufficient state resources to facilitate greater community integration of asylum seekers and migrants, allowing these communities to view immigration as beneficial, hence helping to tackle embedded racism.”  

 

As Ireland grapples with an escalating crisis, the question remains whether the government can balance humanitarian obligations with growing public unrest or if the country will continue down a path of deepening division and violence.

 

Based on a report by Daily Mail  2025-02-24

 

news-logo-btm.jpg

 

image.png

My Ireland was always a safe harbour for asylum seekers or refugees even in WW2. 

However, those are arriving nowadays, have nothing in common with us.

They do not share our history, culture, rules, democratic way of life, virtues, respect.

There is no place for them on the Green Island.

Ireland to the Irish

  • Popular Post
3 hours ago, Social Media said:

even left-wing politicians acknowledging the link between migration and homelessness.

Even blind Freddy can see that.

Can't the powers that be see what's happened to England ?

1 hour ago, newbee2022 said:

My Ireland was always a safe harbour for asylum seekers or refugees even in WW2. 

However, those are arriving nowadays, have nothing in common with us.

They do not share our history, culture, rules, democratic way of life, virtues, respect.

There is no place for them on the Green Island.

Ireland to the Irish

Actually it should be Ireland to those who respect it and follow the rules, and also make a contribution to it's society, just as those who enter the US and any other country should do.

  • Popular Post

That was some proper beating.

 

Keep it up 

  • Popular Post
1 hour ago, newbee2022 said:

My Ireland was always a safe harbour for asylum seekers or refugees even in WW2. 

However, those are arriving nowadays, have nothing in common with us.

They do not share our history, culture, rules, democratic way of life, virtues, respect.

There is no place for them on the Green Island.

Ireland to the Irish

 

Does agreeing with you make me a racist?  Because if it does, I am.


It's not about skin color or accent.  It's about shared culture.

 

  • Popular Post

Welcome to the wonderful world of Ursula von der Leyen, Magnus Brunner and all the signatories of the Treaties of Maastricht, Lisbon and the 2018 Marrakech Migration Pact.

Amazingly the Irish electorate voted against the Treaty of Lisbon (53%) and the French against the Treaty of Maastricht in 2005 but their governments did not follow the people wishes and went ahead with the adoption of the European constitution.

This is what JD Vance meant when he made his speech at the Munich Security Conference: “the biggest security threat facing Europe was not Russia or China but the threat from within”.

  • Popular Post

This will happen more and more right across Europe as all the governments ignore the voice of the people 

  • Popular Post
4 hours ago, impulse said:

 

Does agreeing with you make me a racist?  Because if it does, I am.


It's not about skin color or accent.  It's about shared culture.

 

Speaking of shared culture 

image.png.9f9943f139146144720d4ab1eff6524d.png

  • Popular Post
32 minutes ago, wombat said:

Speaking of shared culture 

image.png.9f9943f139146144720d4ab1eff6524d.png

 

No wonder they often defy the laws of the land they newly settle.

To them, their religion is the only correct way of life(justice) in the world.

And Anything and Everything is deemed wrong(therefore needs "Correction" in their term).

 

  • Popular Post
1 hour ago, Nid_Noi said:

 “the biggest security threat facing Europe was not Russia or China but the threat from within”.

 

With the active support by the "Enemy Within".

  • Popular Post

Diversity is our strength...I can get a ruby at 1am... literally millions of unvetted males aged 18-35 roaming the streets of Europe with no jobs and nothing to do except, rape, murder and cause havoc. What a failed experiment 

  • Popular Post
7 hours ago, newbee2022 said:

My Ireland was always a safe harbour for asylum seekers or refugees even in WW2. 

However, those are arriving nowadays, have nothing in common with us.

They do not share our history, culture, rules, democratic way of life, virtues, respect.

There is no place for them on the Green Island.

Ireland to the Irish

 

The biggest problem is, the recent refugees show  little willingness  to live peacefully with others who are already there.

Theya are said to refuse integration programs kindly offered  by the host nations:

Language learning, children's education, job  training for adults etc.

Often showing only the greed for monetary handout.

 

 

  • Popular Post
16 minutes ago, baansgr said:

Diversity is our strength...I can get a ruby at 1am... literally millions of unvetted males aged 18-35 roaming the streets of Europe with no jobs and nothing to do except, rape, murder and cause havoc. What a failed experiment 

 

Diversity works positively only when the new comers are willing to integrate into their new home.

 

If they accepts migrants from outside, power of Assimilation(forceful encouragement to establish common minimum basis of understanding) is essential.

 

Without it, "Diversity " only creates  ever growing cracks and divisions among the people in any countries.

 

  • Popular Post
2 hours ago, black tabby12345 said:

 

The biggest problem is, the recent refugees show  little willingness  to live peacefully with others who are already there.

Theya are said to refuse integration programs kindly offered  by the host nations:

Language learning, children's education, job  training for adults etc.

Often showing only the greed for monetary handout.

 

 

 

The biggest problem are refugees/illigal immigrants of the second generation and succeeding immigrants.
Many of these illegal immigrants have found a girlfriend/wife in these countries and made children.
These children are brought up with the same disrespect to the country and follow the Islam religion.
But they can not be forced to leave the country because they are residents by nationality.
In most European countries, children born in the country are automaticaly residents.

Also, in the countries I am familiar with, the biggest error was to let the legal immigrants  create "Ghettos" by allowing them to group in one city.
They should have been forced to spread to avoid creating Ghettos.

13 hours ago, impulse said:

It's not about skin color or accent.  It's about shared culture.

Codswallop.

 

Dark skinned fellas would be attacked before I would be, even if they lived their entire life in Ireland.

 

But the so called shared culture is my ticket to tolerance because I look more Irish than the coloureds.

On 2/25/2025 at 3:32 AM, Social Media said:

Irish police have started an investigation after a video went viral of a man beating up a migrant who slammed the roof of his car on a street in Dublin

 

Good. This type of behaviour simply cannot be tolerated. 

 

I really hope the police can find the migrant quickly. Charge him with criminal damage and then deport him back to whatever dump he came from.

 

I hope the car wasn't too badly damaged. 

Why the uproar? It's the government that people voted for that is doing this.

White people have a death wish with Africans. I don't know what it is because they will not leave them alone and continue to intervene in African and take as many African immigrants as possible. All we get in return is crime poverty and a population explosion in Africa producing even more problems in the future.

1 hour ago, NorthernRyland said:

All we get in return is crime poverty and a population explosion in Africa producing even more problems in the future.

 

But we do get to celebrate black history month now.

 

 

2 hours ago, NorthernRyland said:

White people have a death wish with Africans. I don't know what it is because they will not leave them alone and continue to intervene in African and take as many African immigrants as possible. All we get in return is crime poverty and a population explosion in Africa producing even more problems in the future.

 

It's virtue signaling white women who are always the most fanatical about it. 

Irish.jpg

16 minutes ago, John Drake said:

 

It's virtue signaling white women who are always the most fanatical about it. 

Irish.jpg

 

And they are always called something like Isabella or Penelope. 😄

3 hours ago, John Drake said:

It's virtue signaling white women who are always the most fanatical about it. 

 

Amazing how women all over the western world have campaigned to be invaded by savages from broken countries they wouldn't dare even visit once. Pakistan, Somalia, Guatemala etc... Are you kidding me? Then they complain they don't feel safe in their cities and move to Korea or Iceland where there's no diversity.

On 2/25/2025 at 4:42 PM, Confuscious said:

 

Also, in the countries I am familiar with, the biggest error was to let the legal immigrants  create "Ghettos" by allowing them to group in one city.
They should have been forced to spread to avoid creating Ghettos.

 

Force them to spread to avoid creating Ghettos ?   The problem with doing this is, is that lots of the local people don't want coloureds living next door to them. 😆

3 hours ago, John Drake said:

 

It's virtue signaling white women who are always the most fanatical about it. 

Irish.jpg

 

Oh, so it's white women who are allowing these foreign men in ?  Black men ?   Yes, in London, there seems to be lots of black men walking around the place,with white women 

  • Popular Post
38 minutes ago, tonbridgebrit said:

 

Force them to spread to avoid creating Ghettos ?   The problem with doing this is, is that lots of the local people don't want coloureds living next door to them. 😆

More like people don't want stabby uneducated foreign barbarians living next to them.

  • Popular Post
6 hours ago, John Drake said:

Why the uproar? It's the government that people voted for that is doing this.

All the western governments of all major parties want this, it's not as if voters are given any choice in the matter.

37 minutes ago, tonbridgebrit said:

 

Oh, so it's white women who are allowing these foreign men in ?  Black men ?   Yes, in London, there seems to be lots of black men walking around the place,with white women 

Ugh

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