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Pork Sausages Served on Irish Deportation Flight to Pakistan

Catering on a charter deportation flight from Ireland to Pakistan was revised after pork sausages were included in a breakfast served to deportees, according to a human-rights monitoring report.

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The meal was provided on the first charter flight returning migrants from Ireland to Pakistan on 23 September 2025. The aircraft carried 24 men and was accompanied by a monitoring official, members of An Garda Síochána, a doctor and an interpreter.

The monitor was appointed by Ireland’s Department of Justice (Ireland) to observe the operation, report on the treatment of returnees and the use of restraints, and to highlight any concerns or examples of good practice.

Monitoring reports on several deportation flights were later obtained by The Irish Times after the newspaper successfully appealed an initial refusal by the department to release them under Freedom of Information rules.

Food provision questioned

The report noted that the operation overall was conducted humanely and with respect for the “rights and dignity” of those being deported.

However, concerns were raised about the food served during the Pakistan flight. Garda personnel reported that the meals were of a lower standard than expected and that serving pork sausages as part of a full Irish breakfast was inappropriate given that Pakistan has a majority Muslim population.

The monitor said it had been understood that halal food would be available for passengers, but the catering arrangements had not specified this in the flight briefing.

Following the incident, catering arrangements for deportation flights were changed.

Security measures during flight

The men deported on the Pakistan flight had spent the previous night in three prisons before being transported to the aircraft. Two individuals had been assessed as high risk, one due to previous criminal offending and another because of behaviour in prison. Several garda officers were assigned to accompany each deportee.

During boarding, one of the men raised concerns that he was being filmed by a garda who was holding a mobile phone pointed in the group’s direction. The man eventually boarded the aircraft after discussions with officers, and the report confirmed that recording had been taking place.

After the plane landed in Islamabad, two deportees returned to the aircraft in an agitated state. One said he had not received his mobile phone, while the other reported that his luggage was missing.

Officials explained that the belongings were being handed over to the Garda team by the Irish Prison Service and assured the men that the items would be returned. The report noted that delays in returning personal belongings have been a recurring issue on deportation flights.

Other deportation operations

The documents also detail another charter flight that returned 52 people to Georgia on 3 November 2025. Those on board included 35 men, seven women and three families with children aged between five months and 17 years.

They were accompanied by 113 garda officers and two support staff.

During that operation, one man was restrained on the ground and handcuffed before being carried on to the aircraft by officers. The monitor said they heard sounds of a struggle as the man was escorted from a van.

A “soft mat” was placed on the ground near the vehicle and the man was laid on it face-up while being restrained by several officers before he was lifted and taken onto the plane.

According to the report, the man had been demanding access to his mobile phone, which was stored in the aircraft hold.

Oversight and findings

Despite the incidents noted in the reports, the monitor concluded that deportation operations were generally carried out in a humane manner and with respect for those being removed from the country.

The monitoring system forms part of the oversight arrangements used by the Irish government during charter deportation flights, with reports intended to highlight issues and recommend improvements where necessary.

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Adapted by ASEAN Now. Source 20 May 2026

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JonnyF Star Member

JonnyF

Advanced Member

Tough.

They got a free flight. What more do they want?

Don't like the food don't eat it. Why should airlines have to provide animals that have inhumaney had their throats slit and bled to death?

newbee2022 Star Member

newbee2022

Advanced Member

Those Irish Sausages are so delicious 😋 Try 😄

Caldera Ruby Member

Caldera

Advanced Member

Nothing like a hearty breakfast on a long flight.

BKKBike09 Gold Member

BKKBike09

Advanced Member
5 hours ago, webfact said:

Catering on a charter deportation flight from Ireland to Pakistan was revised after pork sausages were included in a breakfast served to deportees, according to a human-rights monitoring report.

Get today's headlines by email image.png

The meal was provided on the first charter flight returning migrants from Ireland to Pakistan on 23 September 2025. The aircraft carried 24 men and was accompanied by a monitoring official, members of An Garda Síochána, a doctor and an interpreter.

The monitor was appointed by Ireland’s Department of Justice (Ireland) to observe the operation, report on the treatment of returnees and the use of restraints, and to highlight any concerns or examples of good practice.

Monitoring reports on several deportation flights were later obtained by The Irish Times after the newspaper successfully appealed an initial refusal by the department to release them under Freedom of Information rules.

Food provision questioned

The report noted that the operation overall was conducted humanely and with respect for the “rights and dignity” of those being deported.

However, concerns were raised about the food served during the Pakistan flight. Garda personnel reported that the meals were of a lower standard than expected and that serving pork sausages as part of a full Irish breakfast was inappropriate given that Pakistan has a majority Muslim population.

The monitor said it had been understood that halal food would be available for passengers, but the catering arrangements had not specified this in the flight briefing.

Following the incident, catering arrangements for deportation flights were changed.

Security measures during flight

The men deported on the Pakistan flight had spent the previous night in three prisons before being transported to the aircraft. Two individuals had been assessed as high risk, one due to previous criminal offending and another because of behaviour in prison. Several garda officers were assigned to accompany each deportee.

During boarding, one of the men raised concerns that he was being filmed by a garda who was holding a mobile phone pointed in the group’s direction. The man eventually boarded the aircraft after discussions with officers, and the report confirmed that recording had been taking place.

After the plane landed in Islamabad, two deportees returned to the aircraft in an agitated state. One said he had not received his mobile phone, while the other reported that his luggage was missing.

Officials explained that the belongings were being handed over to the Garda team by the Irish Prison Service and assured the men that the items would be returned. The report noted that delays in returning personal belongings have been a recurring issue on deportation flights.

Other deportation operations

The documents also detail another charter flight that returned 52 people to Georgia on 3 November 2025. Those on board included 35 men, seven women and three families with children aged between five months and 17 years.

They were accompanied by 113 garda officers and two support staff.

During that operation, one man was restrained on the ground and handcuffed before being carried on to the aircraft by officers. The monitor said they heard sounds of a struggle as the man was escorted from a van.

A “soft mat” was placed on the ground near the vehicle and the man was laid on it face-up while being restrained by several officers before he was lifted and taken onto the plane.

According to the report, the man had been demanding access to his mobile phone, which was stored in the aircraft hold.

Oversight and findings

Despite the incidents noted in the reports, the monitor concluded that deportation operations were generally carried out in a humane manner and with respect for those being removed from the country.

The monitoring system forms part of the oversight arrangements used by the Irish government during charter deportation flights, with reports intended to highlight issues and recommend improvements where necessary.

Join the discussion? Create account. orange.png

Already a member? haveyr-say.png


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Adapted by ASEAN Now. Source 20 May 2026


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This tripe reads like Private Eye's classic 'Neasden Police Log'.

All that's missing is detail such as "A local man, Mr Tony Whytepower, was asked to make way by WPC Denise Trolley (formerly PC Brian Beardo), who was respectfully escorting Mr Abdul Al-Wifebasha from a distance of five paces behind. Whytepower accused WPC Trolley of making a 'thinly veiled threat' and was successfully immediately tazered and subdued by 18 members of the accompanying Neasden Armed Response Group before being detained for making a racially charged comment".

Eric Loh Star Member

Eric Loh

Advanced Member
34 minutes ago, JonnyF said:

Tough.

They got a free flight. What more do they want?

Don't like the food don't eat it. Why should airlines have to provide animals that have inhumaney had their throats slit and bled to death?

That's a whole mouthful of disgusting racist rant. Good to know that the Ireland's DOJ had recinded the flight over concern for good practice and for the right and dignity of those deported.

JonnyF Star Member

JonnyF

Advanced Member
1 minute ago, Eric Loh said:

That's a whole mouthful of disgusting racist rant. Good to know that the Ireland's DOJ had recinded the flight over concern for good practice and for the right and dignity of those deported.

Racist? What has pork being served got to do with race? 😄

Presumably you support the inhumane torture of animals under HALAL process? You can tell a lot about people by how they treat animals. Slitting their throats and letting them bleed out. You're so #bekind well done.

Eric Loh Star Member

Eric Loh

Advanced Member
11 minutes ago, JonnyF said:

Racist? What has pork being served got to do with race? 😄

Presumably you support the inhumane torture of animals under HALAL process? You can tell a lot about people by how they treat animals. Slitting their throats and letting them bleed out. You're so #bekind well done.

You were targeting the Pakistani deportees in your foul language. That's racisit.

The Halal process allow aninal to be stunned before killing and the killing has religious requirements performed by senior Muslim adults.

emptypockets Platinum Member

emptypockets

Advanced Member
57 minutes ago, Eric Loh said:

That's a whole mouthful of disgusting racist rant. Good to know that the Ireland's DOJ had recinded the flight over concern for good practice and for the right and dignity of those deported.

The have rights and dignity??

They have none. They are being deported.

Shame the UK don't follow suit.

emptypockets Platinum Member

emptypockets

Advanced Member
38 minutes ago, Eric Loh said:

You were targeting the Pakistani deportees in your foul language. That's racisit.

The Halal process allow aninal to be stunned before killing and the killing has religious requirements performed by senior Muslim adults.

I didn't see any foul language.

If you think he was racist, so be it.

I'm over that crap and tell things how I see them.

Eric Loh Star Member

Eric Loh

Advanced Member
10 minutes ago, emptypockets said:

The have rights and dignity??

They have none. They are being deported.

Shame the UK don't follow suit.

Ireland Authority have the good sense to carry out this deportation humanely and with respect to rights and dignity much to the chagrin of bigots.

JonnyF Star Member

JonnyF

Advanced Member
59 minutes ago, Eric Loh said:

You were targeting the Pakistani deportees in your foul language. That's racisit.

Not only can you not spell it but you clearly do not understand the meaning of the word racist either.

You need a new line of attack. The old one expired. 😄

59 minutes ago, Eric Loh said:

The Halal process allow aninal to be stunned before killing and the killing has religious requirements performed by senior Muslim adults.

Non stun slaughter is legally permitted in the UK and Ireland due to exemptions for Muslim and Jewish communities.

Its disgusting and so is anyone who supports it. Cruel and revolting. Repulsive. You keep apologising for and denying it though while calling anyone who disagrees a racist #bekind #yousupportanimaltorture

Blueman1 Silver Member

Blueman1

Advanced Member
2 hours ago, JonnyF said:

Tough.

They got a free flight. What more do they want?

Don't like the food don't eat it. Why should airlines have to provide animals that have inhumaney had their throats slit and bled to death?

2 hours ago, JonnyF said:

Tough.

They got a free flight. What more do they want?

Don't like the food don't eat it. Why should airlines have to provide animals that have inhumaney had their throats slit and bled to death?

2 hours ago, JonnyF said:

Tough.

They got a free flight. What more do they want?

Don't like the food don't eat it. Why should airlines have to provide animals that have inhumaney had their throats slit and bled to death?


They got a free flight. What more do they want?.....

Eric Loh Star Member

Eric Loh

Advanced Member
8 minutes ago, JonnyF said:

Not only can you not spell it but you clearly do not understand the meaning of the word racist either.

You need a new line of attack. The old one expired. 😄

Non stun slaughter is legally permitted in the UK and Ireland due to exemptions for Muslim and Jewish communities.

Its disgusting and so is anyone who supports it. Cruel and revolting. Repulsive. You keep apologising for and denying it though while calling anyone who disagrees a racist #bekind #yousupportanimaltorture

You can deny for all it's worth, its was racist language you are spewing.

I don't see you using the same language on the Jewish Koscher practice of slitting the throats of animals.

metisdead Legendary Member

A low value post has been removed:

  1. Low-Value Posts - Posts that add no written contribution are not allowed.

    This includes emoji-only replies, very short comments, memes, GIFs, screenshots, or embedded social media posts without explanation or opinion.

Thingamabob Diamond Member

Thingamabob

Advanced Member

Shame on the airline. They should have offered bacon as an alternative.

boloaf Senior Member

boloaf

Member
2 hours ago, Eric Loh said:

That's a whole mouthful of disgusting racist rant. Good to know that the Ireland's DOJ had recinded the flight over concern for good practice and for the right and dignity of those deported.

It was an Irish aircraft with some Irish people on board who had the right to eat bacon with their breakfast. The Pakistanis were illegals being repatriated free of charge. There was halal food available. I suppose these entitled beggars wanted a pork free aircraft. You can't accuse them of being short on neck.

Luuk Chaai Platinum Member

Luuk Chaai

Advanced Member
1 hour ago, Blueman1 said:


They got a free flight. What more do they want?.....

Most airlines offer a choice ...

they should havebeen offered ..yesterdays cold rice... or burnt toast and a rotten egg .. Period !

treetops Ruby Member

treetops

Advanced Member
2 hours ago, Eric Loh said:

You were targeting the Pakistani deportees in your foul language. That's racisit.

Pakistani is a nationality, not a race.

JonnyF Star Member

JonnyF

Advanced Member
1 hour ago, Eric Loh said:

You can deny for all it's worth, its was racist language you are spewing.

I don't see you using the same language on the Jewish Koscher practice of slitting the throats of animals.

This article is about Muslims. They use halal practice not kosher.

Objecting to cruel halal slaughter is an animal rights issue and nothing to do with race.

Besides Islam is a religion not a race. You have absolutely no clue what you are talking about. Race has never been mentioned except by you.

Is Buddhism a race?

You guys 😄

Totally clueless 😄

Brettoj Senior Member

Brettoj

Member

Let’s totally remove religion from law and order. They’re being deported, they have a choice to eat it or not. Superstitions should not be catered for!

rocketboy2 Gold Member

rocketboy2

Advanced Member

Excellent.

A good news thread. thumbsup

twizzian Silver Member

twizzian

Advanced Member

A good tactic saying don’t come back or we’ll force you to eat some more sausages

Srikcir Ruby Member

Srikcir

Advanced Member
5 hours ago, JonnyF said:

race?

It is called "religion."

Bannoi Silver Member

Bannoi

Advanced Member

I wonder if they refused to drink the alcohol as well.

JonnyF Star Member

JonnyF

Advanced Member
12 minutes ago, Bannoi said:

I wonder if they refused to drink the alcohol as well.

Surely even having alcohol on the plane was Racist? 😄😄

I do hope we are providing counselling for them if someone left a can of shandy in the cupboard.

josephbloggs Diamond Member

josephbloggs

Advanced Member
3 hours ago, treetops said:

Pakistani is a nationality, not a race.


Ah, the old "get out of jail free" card you all love so much.

JonnyF Star Member

JonnyF

Advanced Member
25 minutes ago, Srikcir said:

It is called "religion."

Indeed.

Which means questioning the brutal slaughter of animals in the name of it is not racist. Just as it is not sexist or ageist or ableist.

It's a religion. The only reason people try to redefine it is because we do not have blasphemy laws. Yet...

Eric Loh Star Member

Eric Loh

Advanced Member
28 minutes ago, Srikcir said:

It is called "religion."

When someone has a limited understanding of racism, they will not understand the significance of your post.

JonnyF Star Member

JonnyF

Advanced Member
Just now, josephbloggs said:


Ah, the old "get out of jail free" card you all love so much.

Also known as factually correct by non race baiters.

josephbloggs Diamond Member

josephbloggs

Advanced Member
3 hours ago, boloaf said:

It was an Irish aircraft with some Irish people on board who had the right to eat bacon with their breakfast. The Pakistanis were illegals being repatriated free of charge. There was halal food available. I suppose these entitled beggars wanted a pork free aircraft. You can't accuse them of being short on neck.


"Entitled beggars wanted a pork free aircraft"??

Is it too hard to just read the article? It was a government appointed monitor who highlighted the food as part of a report. Nothing to do with the deportees complaining.

But go ahead and get irate of something you just made up - far be it for me to deny your head fun.

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