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Kerry gardaí investigate alleged security breach at Ballymullen Barracks

Kerry gardaí investigate alleged security breach at Ballymullen Barracks

The incident was reported on June 8 at approximately 12 noon. Ballymullen is home to around 50 International Protection Applicants (IPAS) since December 2024.
The Kerryman understands the individual started recording while walking across the main yard of the barracks and through to the living quarters.
Images of a person walking the corridors can be seen while knocking on doors and talking with residents.
A security guard then instructs the person to leave the premises as Ballymullen Barracks is private property.
The incident was reported to the guards who say its investigations are ongoing.
The Department of Integration has since publicly stated it takes the safety of IPAS residents seriously.
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Irish Independent

time10 hours ago

  • Irish Independent

New hotel owners dismiss plans for IPAS centre in Meath

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Irish Examiner

timea day ago

  • Irish Examiner

Letters to the Editor: We cannot allow hate to become the norm

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How former GAA manager Séamus ‘Banty' McEnaney made over €200m from housing refugees and the homeless
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Irish Times

time02-08-2025

  • Irish Times

How former GAA manager Séamus ‘Banty' McEnaney made over €200m from housing refugees and the homeless

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The debt, McEnaney said at the time, related to development land. Shortly before the Covid pandemic, news of the McEnaney family's rapidly growing earnings through IPAS contracts began to spread. Football fans at one preseason Monaghan game shouted abuse from the stands at McEnaney, according to one prominent figure in Ulster GAA, speaking on condition of anonymity. 'It's massively changed how people see him,' says the GAA figure. 'Making money off the back of this would really irk people. There's obviously people who have a gripe about him doing well with this. The family always drive big cars and are in corporate boxes; they're not afraid to splash it – and that creates begrudgery.' The State's almost exclusive reliance on private companies, such as those owned by the McEnaney family, to house international protection applicants, is unusual in a European context. A 2022 report from the European Asylum Support Office found most EU countries use State-owned centralised systems or mixed models – State authorities and civil society or private operators – to house asylum seekers. In the UK, state contracts are a source of great wealth for private operators. In May, Graham King, founder of the migrant-housing company Clearsprings Ready Homes, acquired the unofficial title of Britain's 'asylum billionaire' after he joined the Sunday Times Rich List of new billionaires. Nick Henderson, chief executive of the Irish Refugee Council Relying on private companies to secure housing for asylum seekers is 'significantly eroding public confidence' in our asylum system, says Irish Refugee Council chief executive Nick Henderson. 'We don't need our own asylum billionaire,' he says. 'These people are providing a service and they're making money from it but it's not necessarily their fault. The fault ultimately lies with the State.' 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'That requires very significant political will, to wean the Government off its reliance on emergency accommodation.' Mike Allen, director of advocacy with homeless charity Focus Ireland, says this same reliance on private contractors to secure homeless housing has become a policy of 'repeated short-termism'. Constantly operating in crisis mode, without a long-term strategy, leaves the State in a 'weak bargaining position' where local authorities are 'almost begging private providers to find accommodation', says Allen. 'In some way, homeless people become implicated in this waste of public money,' he adds. Like Henderson, he says his criticisms are not directed at providers such as McEnaney but lie with government for creating a system almost entirely reliant on the private sector. Successive government housing policies have created a situation where many refugees with permission to live and work in the State are unable to find a place to live and must turn to local authorities for support, says Allen. As a result, some of these could end up in State-provided accommodation 'owned by the same landlord but operated by a different arm of the State'. His comments echo those of Dublin Region Housing Executive director Mary Hayes who told an Oireachtas Committee on housing last month that the homeless system had become the 'institutional discharge from one institution to another'. The main factor driving adult-only homelessness is people leaving direct provision, according to the latest DRHE figures. Andrew Geddes, director of the Migration Policy Centre at the European University Institute, says some European international protection systems, including the Irish model, have developed a 'permanent temporariness' in their approach to asylum. 'What you're effectively doing is warehousing people in the absence of a longer-term plan,' he says. Susan Fratzke, a senior policy analyst with the Migration Policy Institute, says an ability by government to 'flex up and flex down' in response to unpredictable changes in migration patterns, driven by war and climate change, is a key element of long-term asylum planning. She argues that while State-owned properties are a key element of a functioning asylum housing system, reliance on private contractors is also important. She says European governments need to plan for fluctuation so when numbers decrease, they can prepare for the next surge. 'This causes political tension because governments don't like to say we're planning for a rise in asylum claims, they prefer to talk about what they're doing to reduce numbers,' she says. 'But they could save money by being more realistic about these numbers. That requires political will.' A Department of Justice spokesman said the Government was working towards 'developing a more stable and sustainable accommodation system in the long term' and was moving away from reliance on the private sector through the purchase of 'more accommodation on State-owned lands'. This includes the recent purchase of Citywest Hotel and campus. The Department of Housing has made a similar commitment for homeless people – a spokesman said efforts are ongoing to reduce reliance on private emergency accommodation and secure supported housing operated by NGOs.

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