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Oct 22, 2025

Violent protest outside Dublin asylum-seekers’ hotel leaves garda van burned and six arrested

Violent protest outside Dublin asylum-seekers’ hotel leaves garda van burned and six arrested
A mob of more than 1,000 protesters converged on the Citywest Hotel in Saggart, Co Dublin on the night of 22 October after online rumours spread that a 10-year-old local girl had been sexually assaulted by an asylum-seeker living in the State-run International Protection Accommodation Service (IPAS) centre on the hotel grounds.

What began as a rally quickly escalated when masked men attacked gardaí with fireworks, bottles and bricks, set a garda public-order van alight and attempted to breach the police cordon. Garda Commissioner Justin Kelly later described the scenes as “organised thuggery masquerading as protest”. Officers deployed pepper spray and eventually dispersed the crowd, arresting six individuals on charges that include violent disorder, arson and assault on police. One garda suffered a broken ankle, and tram services on the nearby Luas line were suspended after damage to the Saggart stop.

The violence comes amid a sharp rise in anti-immigration demonstrations across Ireland in 2024-25, fuelled by social-media disinformation and anger over housing shortages. Business-travel security consultants warn that spontaneous road blocks and clashes near migrant accommodation can disrupt airport transfers on the N7 corridor linking Citywest to Dublin Airport and the M50 orbital. Employers moving staff or visitors through the capital are advised to monitor Garda Twitter feeds and build extra transfer time into itineraries this week.

From a legal standpoint, the arrests invoke Ireland’s Criminal Justice (Public Order) Act 1994, which carries penalties of up to ten years for riot and violent disorder. The Department of Justice confirmed that all six detainees are Irish nationals; none were linked to Citywest residents.

For mobility managers, Citywest remains a key overflow facility for relocation arrivals awaiting immigration permissions. Although no evacuation is planned, the incident underscores the need for robust duty-of-care briefings for inbound assignees housed in mixed-use hotels and for up-to-date security assessments when selecting temporary accommodation.
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