Mass Migration to Ireland & Europe

Very expensive and very small numbers, but still good news:​

Up to 42 people, including 15 children, deported from Ireland to South Africa on latest flight​


The flight is the fourth such charter deportation operation to take place this year.

7.38am, 19 Jun 2026

UP TO 42 South African people, including 15 children, have been deported from Ireland via the latest government charter flight.
The Garda National Immigration Bureau (GNIB) carried out an operation on Thursday removing them on foot of deportation orders issued by the minister for justice.
This operation resulted in the removal of 18 women, nine men and the 15 juveniles.
The children removed were all part of family groups and were not deported on their own, according to the department of justice.
The costs for the charter flight were €735,000, excluding VAT, for a return flight.
The flight left Dublin on Thursday afternoon and arrived this morning in Johannesburg with each person subjected to the deportation order.
Commenting on the flight this morning, justice minister Jim O’Callaghan said the “vast majority of South African nationals are legally resident in the State and positively contribute to society”, but he warned that Ireland’s immigration system must be rules based.


“The enforcement aspects of our laws, including deportation orders, are an essential requirement for the system to work effectively and to ensure there is public confidence in the application of our legislation in this area,” O’Callaghan said.
Minister of state with responsibility for migration Colm Brophy echoed this, saying that Ireland “welcomes migrants as they play an important role in our economic, social and community life”, but that they must enter through the various legal pathways available as part of abiding by the laws of the State.
Of the 42 people on the flight, the department said, two of them had been “convicted of offences in this jurisdiction” and their removal came as part of ongoing nationwide operations by gardaí.
The returnees were accompanied on the flight by members of An Garda Síochána, medical staff, an interpreter and a human rights observer.

Previous deportation flights

This week’s flight is the fourth deportation charter operation this year. Three previous flights removed 130 people from the State.
It follows six charter operations conducted last year which saw the removal of 205 people from the State.
The flights have come as part of a wider toughening of migration rules, with an increase of 96% in deportation orders for last year compared to 2024. In 2025, 4,700 deportation orders were signed.
According to the minister, there have been 2,108 deportation orders signed this year so far.
 

Very expensive and very small numbers, but still good news:​

Up to 42 people, including 15 children, deported from Ireland to South Africa on latest flight​


The flight is the fourth such charter deportation operation to take place this year.

7.38am, 19 Jun 2026

UP TO 42 South African people, including 15 children, have been deported from Ireland via the latest government charter flight.
The Garda National Immigration Bureau (GNIB) carried out an operation on Thursday removing them on foot of deportation orders issued by the minister for justice.
This operation resulted in the removal of 18 women, nine men and the 15 juveniles.
The children removed were all part of family groups and were not deported on their own, according to the department of justice.
The costs for the charter flight were €735,000, excluding VAT, for a return flight.
The flight left Dublin on Thursday afternoon and arrived this morning in Johannesburg with each person subjected to the deportation order.
Commenting on the flight this morning, justice minister Jim O’Callaghan said the “vast majority of South African nationals are legally resident in the State and positively contribute to society”, but he warned that Ireland’s immigration system must be rules based.


“The enforcement aspects of our laws, including deportation orders, are an essential requirement for the system to work effectively and to ensure there is public confidence in the application of our legislation in this area,” O’Callaghan said.
Minister of state with responsibility for migration Colm Brophy echoed this, saying that Ireland “welcomes migrants as they play an important role in our economic, social and community life”, but that they must enter through the various legal pathways available as part of abiding by the laws of the State.
Of the 42 people on the flight, the department said, two of them had been “convicted of offences in this jurisdiction” and their removal came as part of ongoing nationwide operations by gardaí.
The returnees were accompanied on the flight by members of An Garda Síochána, medical staff, an interpreter and a human rights observer.

Previous deportation flights

This week’s flight is the fourth deportation charter operation this year. Three previous flights removed 130 people from the State.
It follows six charter operations conducted last year which saw the removal of 205 people from the State.
The flights have come as part of a wider toughening of migration rules, with an increase of 96% in deportation orders for last year compared to 2024. In 2025, 4,700 deportation orders were signed.
According to the minister, there have been 2,108 deportation orders signed this year so far.
Cool, so, 42 down, 782,000 to go!
 

Very expensive and very small numbers, but still good news:​

Up to 42 people, including 15 children, deported from Ireland to South Africa on latest flight​


The flight is the fourth such charter deportation operation to take place this year.

7.38am, 19 Jun 2026

UP TO 42 South African people, including 15 children, have been deported from Ireland via the latest government charter flight.
The Garda National Immigration Bureau (GNIB) carried out an operation on Thursday removing them on foot of deportation orders issued by the minister for justice.
This operation resulted in the removal of 18 women, nine men and the 15 juveniles.
The children removed were all part of family groups and were not deported on their own, according to the department of justice.
The costs for the charter flight were €735,000, excluding VAT, for a return flight.
The flight left Dublin on Thursday afternoon and arrived this morning in Johannesburg with each person subjected to the deportation order.
Commenting on the flight this morning, justice minister Jim O’Callaghan said the “vast majority of South African nationals are legally resident in the State and positively contribute to society”, but he warned that Ireland’s immigration system must be rules based.


“The enforcement aspects of our laws, including deportation orders, are an essential requirement for the system to work effectively and to ensure there is public confidence in the application of our legislation in this area,” O’Callaghan said.
Minister of state with responsibility for migration Colm Brophy echoed this, saying that Ireland “welcomes migrants as they play an important role in our economic, social and community life”, but that they must enter through the various legal pathways available as part of abiding by the laws of the State.
Of the 42 people on the flight, the department said, two of them had been “convicted of offences in this jurisdiction” and their removal came as part of ongoing nationwide operations by gardaí.
The returnees were accompanied on the flight by members of An Garda Síochána, medical staff, an interpreter and a human rights observer.

Previous deportation flights

This week’s flight is the fourth deportation charter operation this year. Three previous flights removed 130 people from the State.
It follows six charter operations conducted last year which saw the removal of 205 people from the State.
The flights have come as part of a wider toughening of migration rules, with an increase of 96% in deportation orders for last year compared to 2024. In 2025, 4,700 deportation orders were signed.
According to the minister, there have been 2,108 deportation orders signed this year so far.
Of the 42, 40 were probably Nigerians. Good to see anyway, slowly but surely....
 

Very expensive and very small numbers, but still good news:​

Up to 42 people, including 15 children, deported from Ireland to South Africa on latest flight​


The flight is the fourth such charter deportation operation to take place this year.

7.38am, 19 Jun 2026

UP TO 42 South African people, including 15 children, have been deported from Ireland via the latest government charter flight.
The Garda National Immigration Bureau (GNIB) carried out an operation on Thursday removing them on foot of deportation orders issued by the minister for justice.
This operation resulted in the removal of 18 women, nine men and the 15 juveniles.
The children removed were all part of family groups and were not deported on their own, according to the department of justice.
The costs for the charter flight were €735,000, excluding VAT, for a return flight.
The flight left Dublin on Thursday afternoon and arrived this morning in Johannesburg with each person subjected to the deportation order.
Commenting on the flight this morning, justice minister Jim O’Callaghan said the “vast majority of South African nationals are legally resident in the State and positively contribute to society”, but he warned that Ireland’s immigration system must be rules based.


“The enforcement aspects of our laws, including deportation orders, are an essential requirement for the system to work effectively and to ensure there is public confidence in the application of our legislation in this area,” O’Callaghan said.
Minister of state with responsibility for migration Colm Brophy echoed this, saying that Ireland “welcomes migrants as they play an important role in our economic, social and community life”, but that they must enter through the various legal pathways available as part of abiding by the laws of the State.
Of the 42 people on the flight, the department said, two of them had been “convicted of offences in this jurisdiction” and their removal came as part of ongoing nationwide operations by gardaí.
The returnees were accompanied on the flight by members of An Garda Síochána, medical staff, an interpreter and a human rights observer.

Previous deportation flights

This week’s flight is the fourth deportation charter operation this year. Three previous flights removed 130 people from the State.
It follows six charter operations conducted last year which saw the removal of 205 people from the State.
The flights have come as part of a wider toughening of migration rules, with an increase of 96% in deportation orders for last year compared to 2024. In 2025, 4,700 deportation orders were signed.
According to the minister, there have been 2,108 deportation orders signed this year so far.
As long as we have open and unchecked borders this is a totally pointless exercise that just costs us taxpayers a fortune.
 
As long as we have open and unchecked borders this is a totally pointless exercise that just costs us taxpayers a fortune.
Well, not quite totally pointless, but a drop in the ocean.

The Andy Burnham "honest election" proves that our UK neighbours are enthusiastic for open borders and darkie rape gangs. We should just chain them together, march them to the border in South Armagh and warn them never to come back. We're paying 8,000 Army boys anyway, so it literally would not cost us anything. The Prods will no doubt welcome them with open arms :)

I wonder about the identity of the "human rights observer" they sent on the plane
 
As long as we have open and unchecked borders this is a totally pointless exercise that just costs us taxpayers a fortune.
That's true, however it sends a message, we don't want you to come here, will deter others if they know they could be Deported. As for costing us a fortune, far cheaper to pay and deport, than a lifetime on social welfare. But you are correct, we need to be far tougher. Great to see also, the EU voting in favour of deportation hubs, the right wing European parties are going to save us Irish from our own corrupt, gombeen far left politicians.
 
I think this forum bears a certain responsibility if it signs up members like @Just Think above who so badly struggle intellectually.

The fellow goes around acting like a spastic, one of his favourite acts as we see above being to seize on isolated data points to construct neat, post-facto causal stories that fit his preexisting biases.

This is lord of the flies stuff. Some of you others must see that?
 
I think this forum bears a certain responsibility if it signs up members like @Just Think above who so badly struggle intellectually.

The fellow goes around acting like a spastic, one of his favourite acts as we see above being to seize on isolated data points to construct neat, post-facto causal stories that fit his preexisting biases.

This is lord of the flies stuff. Some of you others must see that?
Isolated?
 
More enrichment.

That's an average of one critical incident every single week. Then there are thousands of other incidents - 2,568 incidents to date this year which is 428/month or 98/week. And that's just incidents at the IPAS centres, and doesn't include external incidents caused by IPAS centre residents.

These immigrants can't even get along with each other, but we're told they can integrate with us.

Minister O’Callaghan said current resident numbers are approximately 33,000 across 305 IPAS centres while resident numbers at the end of 2021 were just over 7,000.
Maybe it's time to send them all back, Minister.
 
I think this forum bears a certain responsibility if it signs up members like @Just Think above who so badly struggle intellectually.

The fellow goes around acting like a spastic, one of his favourite acts as we see above being to seize on isolated data points to construct neat, post-facto causal stories that fit his preexisting biases.

This is lord of the flies stuff. Some of you others must see that?
Be thankful for this forum, haven.
It allows you to have two accounts so you can keep talking to yourself.
 
Isolated?
Yes, isolated. You cannot understand what such a single event means, even if you took with it all similar incidents that have occurred throughout the time 140,000 international protection applicants have passed through the system, such as that particular data point is in reality, and without integrating it with other data points like overcrowding, isolation of women, poor centre management, language barriers and all those other data factors. Or indeed data points like how the whole country’s sexual offence rate to take just one other relevant data point is 43% above EU average (obviously if all EU countries suffer from similar immigration levels we therefore need to look at other causal factors like legacy of church institutional attitudes etc.). So yes, that clown has taken an isolated data point insufficient to prove his racist hypotheses that he continually emphasises alongside these isolated data points. Mind he’s such a sub-imbecile he’s completely unaware of any of this.
 
Yes, isolated. You cannot understand what such a single event means,
A "single event" defines itself

even if you took with it all similar incidents that have occurred throughout the time 140,000 international protection applicants have passed through the system, such as that data point is in reality, and without integrating it with other data points like overcrowding, isolation of women, poor centre management, language barriers and all those other data factors. Or indeed data points like how the whole country’s sexual offence rate to take just one other relevant data point is 43% above EU average (obviously if all EU countries suffer from similar immigration levels we then need to look at think like legacy of church institutional attitudes). So yes, that clown has taken an isolated data point insufficient to prove his racist hypotheses that he continually emphasises alongside these isolated data points. Mind he’s such a sub-imbecile he’s completely unaware of any of this.
 
Do you see how sick a world we live in that scum like rocHaven will call every single crime against a white person - "isolated" and also ignore statistics as - "generalising", or offer the argument - "Yeah but, white people commit crime too".
 
Do you see how sick a world we live in that scum like rocHaven will call every single crime against a white person - "isolated" and also ignore statistics as - "generalising", or offer the argument - "Yeah but, white people commit crime too".
It's called whataboutery
 
Why do roc/Haven want this kind of horrific crime to happen to Irish women and girls over and over again, forever?
Do you understand that 30% of all reported sexual crime victims report incidents that occurred more than 10 years after the fact. And that the majority of historic reports processed by the Gardaí and Irish courts involve offences committed against children during the 1970s and 1980s? So addressing this legacy Catholic element does not preclude addressing the new growing Muslim element, and as we see doing this properly means we may bring over our own hard learned lessons to bear on the problem in its entirety. So how is this not the most effective route to tackling these problems in this country?
 
'Racism' is a moot point at this stage. Yes there are racists out there but in reality it's the sheer, unrelenting numbers of immigrants.. from all parts of the globe.
Racism is an issue when there's a few black/brown people in the country and they're being excluded or abused or whatever.
The paradigm has shifted completely, the data is clear, our system is in the process of a complete, total and rapid demographic transformation of our (and other) nations without the consent of the people.
Framing opposition to this process as 'racism' is an almost quaint throwback to the liberal worldview of the 1960s- 1990s
That world is long gone and the ideological framing of that period is simply not capable of analysing or dealing with the new reality in any kind of practical way. It's archaic at this stage.
Even something practical such as developing infrastructure, screaming "racism" doesn't solve any issues does it. But that's what they do, any practical concerns are met with accusations of racism and nothing else, no problems are solved.
In fact, you could argue that being 'anti-racist' in the year 2026 is to be essentially irrational. Or to put it another way being anti-racist prevents you from analysing issues in any kind of rational or logical way.
 
Personally I have zero issue with anyone communicating about how they’re unhappy about the number of coloured people coming to the country and explaining how it bears on their interests, and on their political concerns. But the discussion on this forum is on a completely different level, and certainly I would characterise it as racist and thereby self defeating.
 
Personally I have zero issue with anyone communicating about how they’re unhappy about the number of coloured people coming to the country and explaining how it bears on their interests, and on their political concerns. But the discussion on this forum is on a completely different level, and certainly I would characterise it as racist and thereby self defeating.
Can, Black People / Brown People / Yellow People, be Racist against White People ?
 
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Do you understand that 30% of all reported sexual crime victims report incidents that occurred more than 10 years after the fact. And that the majority of historic reports processed by the Gardaí and Irish courts involve offences committed against children during the 1970s and 1980s? So addressing this legacy Catholic element does not preclude addressing the new growing Muslim element, and as we see doing this properly means we may bring over our own hard learned lessons to bear on the problem in its entirety. So how is this not the most effective route to tackling these problems in this country?
@Roc. is a huge fan of revisionist history, there isn't a Cheddar Man type hoax that he can't get enough of..

So it's no wonder that he doesn't understand that Ireland was homogeneously White not so long ago (therefore only White people committed crime here).
 
Can, Black People / Brown People / Yellow People, be Racist against White People ?
I'm not sure that makes sense unless the world is embarking on a completely new chapter.

Remember the whole issue of racism revolves around the historical status of being considered "white" at the top of a race-based social hierarchy (particularly in America).
.
That involved land and labour being stolen from non-whites and rationalised by eighteenth-century Christian evangelism and Enlightenment political philosophy etc.

Then you had the history of various movements pushing back against that, including us Irish, who used not to be considered "white" at all. So we also were discriminated against by this hierarchy, once upon a time.

So civil rights and other movements pushed back against this system.

And white racist movements today basically exist to restore the status quo of this system that was in this history.

So, sure, prejudice against "whites" may arise among non-whites. But I'm not sure it's helpful to also give it a label of "racism"?

In addition acknowledging that propaganda efforts are trying to frame new language around "anti white racism" etc. Well for now that remains just jargon, and its attempts to deliberately vanish all the kind of historical contexts I just touched on are fairly blatant, even to the most foolish.

So I think your question emanates from that effort, in truth.
 
I'm not sure that makes sense unless the world is embarking on a completely new chapter.

Remember the whole issue of racism revolves around the historical status of being considered "white" at the top of a race-based social hierarchy (particularly in America).
.
That involved land and labour being stolen from non-whites and rationalised by eighteenth-century Christian evangelism and Enlightenment political philosophy etc.

Then you had the history of various movements pushing back against that, including us Irish, who used not to be considered "white" at all. So we also were discriminated against by this hierarchy, once upon a time.

So civil rights and other movements pushed back against this system.

And white racist movements today basically exist to restore the status quo of this system that was in this history.

So, sure, prejudice against "whites" may arise among non-whites. But I'm not sure it's helpful to also give it a label of "racism"?

In addition acknowledging that propaganda efforts are trying to frame new language around "anti white racism" etc. Well for now that remains just jargon, and its attempts to deliberately vanish all the kind of historical contexts I just touched on are fairly blatant, even to the most foolish.

So I think your question emanates from that effort, in truth.
If a, Black / Brown / Yellow. person murders a White Person because they hate White-People = = Is that Racist, and a Racist Killing ? ?

Pretty straight forward really.

Don't have to think to deep about that !
 
What you seem to be saying is that if your emotions are raised high enough you may use whatever language you feel?
Well yes, we see that those behind the propaganda effort I referenced are well aware of that feeling.
I.e. Evocation of emotions help to not think too much, or in your case, at all.
 
If a White Person murdered a, Black / Brown / Yellow, Person because they Hate, Black / Brown / Yellow, People = = Is that a Racist Murder ? !

Surely it cannot be said that some People are " Too Good " to be Racist = = Because that would obviously be Racist against the People that are Not " Too Good "
 
Yes, isolated. You cannot understand what such a single event means, even if you took with it all similar incidents that have occurred throughout the time 140,000 international protection applicants have passed through the system, such as that particular data point is in reality, and without integrating it with other data points like overcrowding, isolation of women, poor centre management, language barriers and all those other data factors. Or indeed data points like how the whole country’s sexual offence rate to take just one other relevant data point is 43% above EU average (obviously if all EU countries suffer from similar immigration levels we therefore need to look at other causal factors like legacy of church institutional attitudes etc.). So yes, that clown has taken an isolated data point insufficient to prove his racist hypotheses that he continually emphasises alongside these isolated data points. Mind he’s such a sub-imbecile he’s completely unaware of any of this.
Haha!

I dare you to camp out up in Citywest for a few nights. They'd make a 'single data' point of you in no time.

Outer Banks Running GIF by NETFLIX
 

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