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Oct 27, 2025

Ireland airlifts seven critically ill Gazan children for treatment in Dublin hospitals

Ireland airlifts seven critically ill Gazan children for treatment in Dublin hospitals
In a complex overnight evacuation coordinated with the World Health Organisation and Jordanian authorities, seven seriously ill children from Gaza arrived in Dublin on Sunday and were transferred to specialist paediatric hospitals. The mission fulfils part of the Coalition’s 2024 pledge to treat up to 30 Gazan children with life-threatening conditions. Twenty-nine relatives accompanied the patients and will be housed by the Irish Red Cross.

This is Ireland’s third such medical-evacuation operation but the first to route through Jordan after security at the Rafah crossing deteriorated. Tánaiste Simon Harris called the transfer “a tangible expression of Ireland’s humanitarian ethos” while Health Minister Jennifer Carroll MacNeill thanked hospital teams for rapidly freeing ICU beds.

Operational impact: All arrivals were granted temporary permission to remain and will be fast-tracked through immigration formalities, illustrating how ad-hoc humanitarian pathways can coexist with the mainstream International Protection process. For global mobility stakeholders, the case underscores Ireland’s flexibility in issuing discretionary entry permissions in emergency situations—an important precedent as conflicts escalate globally.

The Department of Health confirmed the State will “opt in on a case-by-case basis” for further missions, subject to hospital capacity. Employers should note that accompanying adults receive access to basic services but are generally not work-eligible unless they subsequently apply for temporary protection; HR teams may field queries from staff wishing to sponsor or support families.
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