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    11 Kommentare

    1. ItsTyrrellsAlt on

      >But the ADPI’s proposal would come with a catch for its members: in return for an amnesty, they must promise they will not claim any housing supports or join a housing waiting list in any local authority area.

      >In such a scenario, the group says that if any of the members claim any support from the Irish state then they commit to losing their amnesty and being a candidate for deportation.

      A fascinating way of getting in front of the fact that foreigners aren’t going to be allowed on the housing list soon.

    2. WellieWelli on

      >When questioned on social media as to where members – or the almost 33,000 international protection applicants in State accommodation – could be housed in the case of an amnesty, the group said they will be able to “find houses themselves”.

      Just like that, wow, problem solved. Feel free to stay so

      >Elsewhere, they have hit out at Ireland’s government for having “accepted 100,000 Ukrainians in the country” following Russia’s invasion.

      The gall of these cunts is insane. Ukraine is bordering the EU with an invasion force on the other side, refugees there have nowhere else to go besides Europe.

      The people in this group are from other continents entirely with other options of where to go for asylum. Shitting on Ukrainians in an attempt to gain sympathy is certainly a funny strategy.

      >The group – which was founded in 2018 – claims a membership of 1,500 people, with numbers swelling in recent months as it has embraced more visible campaigning.

      In other words it’s swelled with people who know they don’t meet refugee status and aren’t actually entitled to stay. So strange that they’re being aggressive against actual refugees who are entitled to be here (and I’m happy to keep).

    3. >The group has called the housing crisis a “myth” and has strongly criticised other organisations for supporting the stance that housing is a “human right”.

      Leaving reality. I suppose all those people affected are just pretending.

      >But the ADPI’s proposal would come with a catch for its members: in return for an amnesty, they must promise they will not claim any housing supports or join a housing waiting list in any local authority area.

      >In such a scenario, the group says that if any of the members claim any support from the Irish state then they commit to losing their amnesty and being a candidate for deportation.

      If the amnesty grants then asylum status then wouldn’t that make deportation impossible? They’d have the legal status of someone with a verified claim of danger in their home country. The article says they’d be given stamp 4, which takes almost 2 years to get as a critical skills permit holder, or almost 5 years for a general employment permit holder. Could their fast tracked stamp 4 have the protections afforded to asylum seekers if it’s granted through an asylum amnesty?

    4. EnvironmentalShift25 on

      It’s not unusual for some migrants to want to pull up the drawbridge and fuck over newer arrivals. Hypocritical eejits. 

    5. This crowd have always been weird.

      They supported the anti Direct Provision protests in Oughterard back in 2019, and they would give out about the Movement of Asylum Seekers in Ireland, another asylum-seeker group.
      I also remember them having meetings in a scientology centre at one stage.

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