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Oct 29, 2025

87% of asylum seekers enter Republic via Northern Ireland, O’Callaghan tells Oireachtas

87% of asylum seekers enter Republic via Northern Ireland, O’Callaghan tells Oireachtas
Addressing the Oireachtas Justice & Migration Committee on 29 October, Minister Jim O’Callaghan revealed that almost 88 per cent of new International Protection applicants first arrive in Northern Ireland before travelling south to lodge their claims. He branded the practice an “unlawful exploitation” of the Common Travel Area (CTA) and said Dublin is in talks with London on joint solutions.

The disclosure intensifies debate over the porous land border, which lacks routine immigration checks under the CTA. Business groups worry that any new controls could delay freight and commuter traffic; however, the Minister said “proportionate” measures—such as intelligence-led spot checks and data-sharing—are being explored rather than fixed checkpoints.

For global-mobility teams, the prospect of CTA reforms raises uncertainty around staff who regularly shuttle between Belfast and Dublin offices. Companies may need to document work-related travel more carefully and brief employees on potential spot-check procedures.

Legal advisers expect the statistics to bolster Government arguments for fast-tracking the International Protection Bill and for extending carrier liability to cross-border bus and rail operators. Any such move would bring new compliance obligations for corporate shuttles and staff-transport providers.
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