logo
Irish fury over asylum crisis: How resentment is boiling over nationwide, with thousands attending latest anti-migrant protests following huge surge in refugees and country's pro-Palestine, anti-Israel stance

Irish fury over asylum crisis: How resentment is boiling over nationwide, with thousands attending latest anti-migrant protests following huge surge in refugees and country's pro-Palestine, anti-Israel stance

Daily Mail​11-06-2025
Thousands took to the streets of Cork over the weekend for two very different demonstrations - one a pro-Palestine march and the other described as a 'national protest for Ireland'.
Some 3,000 people joined the latter, an anti-immigration rally organised by Ireland Says No - which attendees said signalled a feeling in the country that 'enough is enough'.
Protesters, describing themselves as Irish patriots and nationalists, said they have two main grievances - 'mass migration' and a belief that they have been forgotten by the government.
Footage of the march shows a sea of tricolour flags raised above the crowds, with chants including 'Ireland for the Irish' and 'Whose streets? Our streets!'.
The rally's lead organiser, ultra-nationalist Dublin councillor Malachy Steenson, said that the size of the crowd would instill confidence in people who were concerned about airing their criticisms.
'We don't care what Brussels says,' he told the crowd, 'we are going to take this country and run it for the benefit of its people.'
Speaking before local elections in November, he stated his view on how he felt this could be achieved: 'We need to close the borders and stop any more migrants coming in.'
Recent figures show that Ireland is housing more than 33,000 applicants for what is known as 'international protection', up from 7,244 in 2017.
According to official statistics, the number of Palestinians who applied in 2024 increased by more than 700 per cent from the previous year - when the conflict in Gaza erupted.
The Irish government has been vocal in its support of the Palestinian people, officially recognising the Palestinian state last year and formally intervening in South Africa's International Court of Justice case alleging genocide by Israel in Gaza.
Both decisions drew condemnation from Israel. The Irish government was asked whether its show of support would strengthen Palestinian asylum claims, but refused to comment.
The protests in Cork passed peacefully on Saturday, with police dividing the two marches with a barrier and organisers of each encouraging marchers to behave responsibly.
Speaker Derek Blighe, the former president of the Ireland First party who failed to get elected to the Dail in November, told crowds that young Irish people felt they had no choice but to leave the country.
He accused the government of putting 'diversity and climate and foreigners first' and said that nationalists wanted to give the Irish diaspora 'a homeland to return to'.
As many as 150,000 people moved to Ireland in 2023-24, Central Statistics Office (CSO) figures revealed, the highest number in 17 years. Around 30,000 of these were returning Irish citizens.
In terms of asylum seekers, alongside arrivals from Africa and the Middle East, 100,000 refugees flocked to the country following Russia's invasion of Ukraine.
Each costs the country nearly £70 a day, according to estimates - a figure that has increased by a third in two years.
Last month, around a thousand people joined a march in County Donegal's Letterkenny, while several hundred organised a counter-protest.
Local independent councillor Seamus Treanor said people living in his ward did not feel safe in their own homes due to heightened levels of anti-social behaviour.
'I want to get one thing straight - the reason we have a housing problem in this county is because our government opened our borders, and invited the whole third world to come in.
'They came in their tens of thousands, and communities like Carrickmacross are suffering the consequences.'
At the end of last year the Irish Refugee Council revealed there were a record 3,001 asylum seekers homeless in Ireland.
Pictures of encampments in Dublin and reports last year that a former paint factory was being turned into accommodation for 550 asylum seekers sparked fury among anti-immigration campaigners.
Gardai clashed with hundreds of people at the former Crown Paints factory in Coolock last July.
A number of fires were started at the site and dramatic photos showed a digger in flames.
The police force charged 15 people in relation to the public order incidents at the north Dublin site.
In November 2023, right wing figures including MMA star Conor McGregor ramped up fury over online misinformation and unsubstantiated rumours that a Algerian migrant had stabbed three children outside a kindergarten in Dublin.
Riots exploded in the city, with a bus and tram torched and property destroyed as around 500 thugs rampaged across the city.
Some of the rioters started a fire on the ground floor of a Holiday Inn Express following rumours that migrants were staying there.
Others reportedly petrol-bombed a nearby refugee centre, with fire crews who responded being 'pelted with projectiles' and beaten with iron rods.
Police officers were also attacked, with around 50 sustaining injuries, while one cab driver was punched and dragged from his taxi.
To date, 85 people have been arrested in connection with the November 2023 riots, with 66 charged.
While anti-immigration protests in Ireland have been peaceful in recent weeks, Dublin saw another wave of violence in February, again seemingly fuelled by anger over migration levels.
Shocking videos showed Dublin descending into chaos - with knife fights on the streets and mass brawls erupting in residential roads.
There were similar scenes of violence in Northern Ireland on Monday night.
Anti-immigration riots erupted in Ballymena after two teenagers of Romanian descent appeared in court accused of attempting to rape a local girl.
Social media footage showed homes in Co Antrim on fire after a masked mob lit curtains after windows and doors of terraced properties in the town were caved in.
Four houses were destroyed after 2,500 people gathered in the Harryville area. Two more properties were also damaged and 15 police officers hospitalised.
Police have said the violence is being investigated as racially-motivated hate attacks.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Phillipson: Teachers cannot insist on gender-neutral Mx title
Phillipson: Teachers cannot insist on gender-neutral Mx title

The Independent

time29 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Phillipson: Teachers cannot insist on gender-neutral Mx title

Teachers can ask to be addressed as Mx instead of Mr or Mrs but they cannot insist on people using the gender-neutral title, the Education Secretary has said. Bridget Phillipson said schools have a responsibility to make sure teachers are treated with respect, but also that people 'with a range of viewpoints' on transgender issues are also treated with respect. Ms Phillipson was pressed further on Thursday on comments she made earlier this week about the right of teachers to make such a request. The Telegraph reported recently that a primary school in the south-east of England had listed a new teacher, who the newspaper said was male according to their biological sex, as Mx in a list of staff members. Mx is described as a gender-neutral title for those who do not identify as being of a particular gender or do not wish to be identified by gender. Speaking on Times Radio, Ms Phillipson said: 'A teacher can, of course, make that request, but you can't insist that it's followed.' Asked whether she would call someone Mx, Ms Phillipson said: 'I think that's a hypothetical situation. I've never been asked to do that. 'As a matter of principle, on a wider point, I would usually seek to respond to someone in a way that they would prefer, but there is no obligation for people to do that.' Asked by Nick Ferrari on LBC whether the issue will cause confusion, she said: ' Schools, as employers, have responsibilities for managing this, in that they have a responsibility to ensure that staff are treated with respect, but also that people with a range of viewpoints are also able to express their views and are treated with respect as well.' Ms Phillipson also said she 'can't put a timescale' on when long-awaited guidance for schools on gender-questioning children will be published. The Government has previously said it will not be hurried into publishing guidance for schools, amid calls which came after the Supreme Court ruling on the legal definition of a woman in April. Draft guidance for schools and colleges on how best to support pupils has been on hold since Labour entered Government. It was published by the Conservative government in December 2023, and a consultation ended in March last year. On Thursday Ms Phillipson, who has previously said guidance would be issued later this year, said the priority is getting the guidance right. She told LBC: 'I think it's more important that we get it right than we rush it, because these are serious and quite sensitive issues about children and young people and their wellbeing. 'I do know that schools are asking for guidance. 'We want to make sure they've got that guidance, but what matters most is that the guidance they get is workable and they find it practical and helpful in responding to what can be quite challenging issues for schools, when they're supporting young people who might be experiencing questions around distress or their wellbeing.'

The dangerous driver behind Britain's growth
The dangerous driver behind Britain's growth

Telegraph

time30 minutes ago

  • Telegraph

The dangerous driver behind Britain's growth

Britain has become dangerously reliant on public spending to fuel the economy. Growth slowed in the three months to June, with the economy expanding by 0.3pc compared with 0.7pc in the first quarter of 2025. However, it is still better than the 0.1pc expected by analysts and a figure that will be welcomed by Rachel Reeves, with GDP per person – a proxy for living standards – also seeing growth in the first half of this year. However, scratch below the surface and it's clear that the factors behind this growth are unsustainable. The Office for National Statistics (ONS) said the expansion over the past quarter was driven by 'government consumption'. This includes health and defence, as Labour pours billions of pounds into the NHS and ramps up its pledge to spend more on the military. Statisticians added that public sector administration costs had also climbed in the three months to June. By contrast, business investment declined and household spending barely grew. At the same time, private sector businesses saw a massive increase in costs – with the Chancellor's record National Insurance raid on employers coming alongside a big jump in the minimum wage at the start of April. Reeves's decision to boost public spending for the rest of the parliament while taxing private sector businesses will only cement these trends. The Chancellor hailed the 'strong start to the year', adding: 'I know that the British economy has the key ingredients for success but has felt stuck for too long.' However, Anna Leach, chief economist at the Institute of Directors, said: 'It is good to see a stronger growth outturn than many feared. 'But it is striking that momentum is coming from the public sector, with consumer spending slowing and business investment contracting. Private sector growth is being held back by both global and domestic policy uncertainty, with speculation over forthcoming tax increases adding to the headwinds.' With this speculation of further tax rises likely to create more uncertainty and hold back vital investment, the Chancellor faces becoming even more reliant on the public sector to fuel growth. The trend didn't just start under Labour. The Bank of England has previously highlighted that public sector output has been driving growth for almost two years now while private sector growth has lagged behind. This is dangerous for two reasons. Public sector productivity is barely above levels seen in 1997, meaning that despite all the technological advances over the past few decades, for every £1 spent on schools, hospitals and teachers, it still gets about the same amount out. By contrast, output per hour in the private sector is about 32pc higher than its 1997 level, which is still not much to celebrate. Productivity tells us how much the economy can grow without generating too much inflation. When productivity grows, so do company profits and staff wages. This leads to stronger growth, a bigger economy, rising tax revenues and smaller borrowing bills. As Andrew Bailey, the Governor of the Bank of England, put it earlier this year: 'It is fair to say we have seen an increase in public sector employment. We haven't seen a commensurate increase in measured public sector output.' Measurement issues play a role. After all, it is difficult to quantify what an hour of teaching is worth. Britain's older and sicker population also suggests the state will only get bigger, relying on ever higher taxes on the private sector to pay for it all. Analysis by the Resolution Foundation, a think tank, shows that Reeves has put health spending on course to gobble up half of all the money spent on day-to-day services by the end of the decade. This is up from a third in 2010 and roughly a quarter in 1999. With public sector employment on the rise and demands for ever higher pay getting louder, there is a risk that the trend of dire public sector productivity continues. For this reason, Reeves's allies say she will focus on driving up productivity in the Budget. She needs to if Labour is to achieve a pledge of raising living standards across the country. ONS data showed real GDP per head grew by 0.2pc in the three months to July, following growth of 0.6pc in the first quarter. The UK is also holding its own on the international stage, with overall growth of 0.3pc compared to a contraction of 0.1pc in Germany and Italy, two of Europe's biggest economies. However, separate analysis by the World Bank showed Britain's living standards fell behind those in Italy for the first time since 2001 in another sign that the UK's status as a rich country is being eroded. It's not all gloomy, with net trade confounding all expectations by contributing positively to growth. The UK has emerged relatively unscathed from Donald Trump's trade war, with exports actually rising in the second quarter by 1.6pc. Pharmaceutical manufacturing also ramped up over the quarter, with the sector still fearful of being hit by higher tariffs. Sanjay Raja at Deutsche Bank said the strong momentum at the end of the quarter suggested annual growth could be revised up in 'a welcome sign for the Chancellor and the Office for Budget Responsibility'. However, he also cautioned that a strong private sector was the key to sustainable growth. 'To be sure, the economy is growing,' Raja said. 'Positive momentum is brewing. But animal spirits remain tepid. While the Chancellor is poised to focus her Budget on improving productivity – a very welcome focus for the UK – Number 11 should also prioritise lifting household and business confidence to sustain the UK's outperformance.'

Keir Starmer meets with Volodymyr Zelensky in Downing Street amid claims US and Russia are planning 'West Bank-like occupation' of Ukraine ahead of Trump-Putin talks
Keir Starmer meets with Volodymyr Zelensky in Downing Street amid claims US and Russia are planning 'West Bank-like occupation' of Ukraine ahead of Trump-Putin talks

Daily Mail​

time30 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Keir Starmer meets with Volodymyr Zelensky in Downing Street amid claims US and Russia are planning 'West Bank-like occupation' of Ukraine ahead of Trump-Putin talks

Sir Keir Starmer welcomed Ukraine's Volodymyr Zelensky to Downing Street this morning ahead of US President Donald Trump 's crunch summit with Vladimir Putin. The Prime Minister and Mr Zelensky met in No10 as both leaders brace themselves for the outcome of the US President's talks with the Russian leader. There are concerns in Kyiv, London and other European capitals that Mr Trump might attempt to cede Ukrainian territory to Russia as part of a ceasefire deal. Those fears were compounded by reports that Russia and the US have discussed a model for ending the war in Ukraine that mirrors Israel 's occupation of the West Bank. Mr Trump has suggested a peace deal could include 'land-swapping', although he also vowed to 'try to get back' some of Ukraine's 'oceanfront property' from Russia. Sir Keir and Mr Zelensky's talks on Thursday followed an emergency virtual summit between European leaders and the US President yesterday. As well as Sir Keir, Mr Trump and Mr Zelensky, Wednesday's call also included the leaders of France, Germany, Italy, Poland, Finland, and EU and NATO officials. Speaking afterwards, Sir Keir praised the US President for his work to bring forward a 'viable' chance of an end to the war. But the PM also warned that 'borders must not be changed by force' as he pledged his 'unwavering' support for Ukraine. Both Sir Keir and Mr Trump threatened further sanctions on Russia ahead of Mr Putin's visit to Alaska. The PM said the UK is ready 'to increase pressure on Russia', while the US President said Mr Putin would face 'severe consequences' if he fails to agree to peace. Mr Trump, speaking on Wednesday, added he is hopeful that his talks with the Russian leader could lead to a second trilateral summit involving Mr Zelensky. But he cautioned: 'There may be no second meeting. 'Because if I feel that it's not appropriate to have it because I didn't get the answers that we have to have, then we are not going to have a second meeting.' According to The Times, Russia and the US have discussed a West Bank-style settlement for ending the war in Ukraine in recent talks. The idea was raised weeks ago in discussions between Steve Witkoff, Mr Trump's peace envoy, and his Russian counterparts, the newspaper reported. Such a plan would see Russia have military and economic control of occupied Ukraine under its own governing body, imitating Israel's de facto rule of Palestinian territory seized from Jordan in 1967. Mr Trump has previously suggested a truce could involve some 'swapping' of land. It is believed one of Mr Putin's demands is for Ukraine to cede parts of the Donbas region which it still controls. But Mr Zelensky has already rejected any proposal that would compromise Ukraine's territorial integrity, something that is forbidden by the country's constitution. A joint statement from Ukrainian allies - known as the 'coalition of the willing' and co-chaired by Sir Keir, France's Emmanuel Macron and Germany's Friedrich Merz - said 'international borders must not be changed by force'. It added: 'Sanctions and wider economic measures to put pressure on Russia's war economy should be strengthened if Russia does not agree to a ceasefire in Alaska.' The coalition of the willing is a European-led effort to send a peacekeeping force to Ukraine in the event of truce. Mr Trump was reported to have used Wednesday's call to tell European leaders that he is willing to contribute security guarantees for Ukraine with some conditions. The US President is said to have warned he would only make such a commitment if the effort is not part of NATO. In his own comments following Wednesday's call, Mr Zelensky revealed how he told Mr Trump that Mr Putin is 'bluffing' about his desire to end the war. 'I told the US President and all our European colleagues that Putin is bluffing,' the Ukrainian President said. 'He is trying to apply pressure before the meeting in Alaska along all parts of the Ukrainian front. Russia is trying to show that it can occupy all of Ukraine.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store