
Number of Palestinians claiming asylum shows sharp decline
Palestine
to Ireland to claim asylum this year.
Last year, there were 957 international protection applications by Palestinian people.
At around 80 applications a month, it marked a sharp increase in the numbers of Palestinians seeking asylum in Ireland in the first year since
Israel's war on
Gaza
began in October 2023.
But in the first six months of this year, the number of applications from Palestinians has reached only 65 – or an average of almost 11 applications a month.
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The figures are included in new
immigration
statistics which
Minister for Justice Jim O'Callaghan
will present to a Cabinet committee on immigration on Monday.
Mr O'Callaghan will tell colleagues that there has been a 43 per cent drop in the number of international protection applications in the first six months of 2025 compared to the first six months of 2024.
Of the 10 nationalities making up the highest number of international protection applicants in 2025, four were from countries designated as safe countries of origin.
Since November 2022, applications from those coming from so-called 'safe countries' have been accelerated. 'Safe' countries in the top 10 included Nigeria, Jordan, Georgia and Algeria.
There have been 926 applications from Nigeria so far in 2025, the highest number from any one country.
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Mr O'Callaghan will tell colleagues that a 'significant increase' in investment into the
IPAS
, digitisation and process re-engineering has 'facilitated a major increase in processing capacity.'
Deportations have also increased so far this year. In 2024, there were a total of 156 deportations. This included 22 people who were confirmed to have left the state without needing to be escorted by the
Garda National Immigration Bureau
(GNIB) and 134 'forced' deportations.
So far in 2025 there have been 198 deportations. This includes 28 cases of people leaving without a GNIB escort, 64 forced deportations and an additional 106 deportations by charter flight.
As of last Monday, there were 33,822 pending IPAS applications at various points of the process.
About 72 per cent of all International Protection applicants appeal their first instance refusal decision.
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The IPAS tribunal system, which considers appeals, has the capacity to consider 4,750 such appeals this year. But this is far below the 17,000 appeals that the
Department of Justice
expects to receive in 2025. The number of appeals completed in the first six months of this year stands at 2,455.
According to the Department of Justice, an ongoing recruitment campaign is under way to increase the number of tribunal staff and the number of cases they can consider each year. It is planning to increase its full-time tribunal staff members from six to 30 and its part-time staff from 118 to 160, as well as trying to hire more legal support staff.
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RTÉ News
an hour ago
- RTÉ News
Minister for Justice to tell of 43% drop in people claiming asylum
The Minister for Justice is expected to tell a Cabinet sub-committee that his Department is beginning to see the number of applications for International Protection noticeably reduce. RTÉ News understands there has been a 43% reduction in applications in the first six months of this year compared to the same period in 2024. Department of Justice figures show the number of IPAS cases had been rising over the last number of years and reached 18,500 last year. But there has also been a speeding up of the processing of applications and this has been attributed to a significant increase in investment into the international protection system which, combined with digitisation and process reengineering, has facilitated a major increase in processing capacity Figures show that the International Protection Office last year delivered over 14,000 first decisions compared to over 8,500 in 2023, while the International Protection Appeals Tribunal (IPAT) closed around 3,100 appeals in 2024 compared to over 1,700 in 2023. Further growth in decisions will be delivered in 2025. The introduction of accelerated processing from November 2022 for those from designated safe countries of origin, applicants who have received protection elsewhere in Europe and those from a country with a particularly high number of applications. It is said to have resulted in significant reductions in the number of applicants from those countries. In 2023 there were 2,082 applications from people with Nigerian nationality and that rose to 4,035 in 2024 before dropping to 926 in the first six months of this year. There was also a substantial reduction in the number of applications from Algerian nationals with 1,462 in 2023, 281 in 2024 and 64 in the first six months of this year. The first half of 2025 has also seen a drop in the number of IPAS applications from Palestinians. There were 118 in 2023, 957 in 2024 and 65 in the first six months of this year.


Irish Times
3 hours ago
- Irish Times
EU/US trade deal is still possible says Paschal Donohoe
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Irish Times
4 hours ago
- Irish Times
Religious organisations cannot ‘play the poor mouth' to avoid redress
Religious organisations with significant resources cannot 'play the poor mouth' to dodge paying for redress, Tánaiste Simon Harris has said. Mr Harris said organisations that want to 'show their Christianity' must step up to the plate and bankroll what is likely to be the largest and most expensive redress scheme in the history of the State. There are serious concerns within the Government about the costs of and demand for a redress scheme for survivors of sexual abuse in schools. Asked if the State could afford such a scheme, Mr Harris said the Government will return to the issue of redress 'at a future point'. But, he said, 'should we arrive at a point of a redress scheme', the people who should be paying for it 'are the people who allowed the abuse to be carried out'. READ MORE 'The religious institutions that stood idly by as children were sexually abused in schools, including special schools, utterly despicable acts that happened over a sustained period of time with the knowledge of many,' he said. Mr Harris said he was 'with the survivors,' who 'rightly want to see the perpetrators pay'. 'I'll endeavour to be diplomatic, but I think it's highly questionable some of these organisations who play the poor mouth when many of these are very, very well resourced organisations. Very well resourced,' Mr Harris. The Tánaiste declined to say if he felt such religious organisations should have to contribute even if it made them insolvent, saying: 'I don't want to get into that language.' 'But I think they have to make a very significant, a very, very significant contribution. In fact, to be honest, I think the word 'contribution' is wrong. The buck stops with them,' he said. 'I think if people accept accountability, if people want to show their Christianity, I think they have to really step up to the plate here.' Analysis by officials from the departments of Education, Justice, Children, an Taoiseach and Public Expenditure and Reform found that a redress scheme for survivors of sexual abuse in schools would be at a 'far greater scale' than any other scheme in the history of the State, and could have 'far-reaching implications.' Setting up such a redress scheme was a recommendation of a Scoping Inquiry into historic abuse in schools. The same inquiry also recommended setting up a Commission of Investigation. While the Government last week agreed to set up such a commission , it has not yet committed to a redress scheme. It is understood that more information about how many people would be likely to apply for such a scheme and how much it would ultimately cost is needed. The Government is also understood to be examining international examples of redress schemes where liable third parties were responsible for payments. This includes a scheme in Australia which succeeded in getting religious organisations to pay for redress by threatening to withdraw charitable status or state funding.