Okay. And are they deported immediately once rejected ? Because if not the whole thing is pointless
slevinonion on
Last year 16k applications were rejected. 430 people were deported.
The application process was never the issue.
GalwayBogger on
Is that up or down in contrast to the *slow track* process? I’ve never looked into the numbers but I can imagine there would be a lot of illegitimate claims from a legal stand point.
sureyouknowurself on
Need to drastically ramp up deportations to match the number of rejections.
Rabid_Lederhosen on
> It applies to cases where the asylum seeker is from a country deemed “safe” or where they made an earlier asylum request in another EU country.
They’re not rejecting 90% of all applications, just ones from safe countries. Which makes sense.
Pure-Ice5527 on
Ok great, now let’s report on the number of expected deportations vs what actually happening as that’s the real issue
miju-irl on
So 568 deportation orders issued to those from safe countries and only 84 actual deportations or left voluntarily. The system is still not working, there is no reason why those 484 people should still be in the State.
From the article
>The new statistics are drawn from 2,272 claims for international protection. In a quarter of cases, justice officials had issued deportation orders to unsuccessful asylum applicants, and so far 84 people have been deported or voluntarily left the State, a department spokesman said.
wrghf on
I wonder how many people received status in Ireland despite having bullshit claims over the years. We just don’t deport people at all so if they arrive in the country, then no matter how bullshit their claim, they have an exceedingly high chance of ultimately being able to stay here.
I used to work in that space between 2017-2020 or so, and some of the cases that I saw get granted status were just such utter and complete bullshit that even a university student would be able to tell you at face value their claim had no merit.
Leave A Reply
Du musst angemeldet sein, um einen Kommentar abzugeben.
8 Kommentare
Okay. And are they deported immediately once rejected ? Because if not the whole thing is pointless
Last year 16k applications were rejected. 430 people were deported.
The application process was never the issue.
Is that up or down in contrast to the *slow track* process? I’ve never looked into the numbers but I can imagine there would be a lot of illegitimate claims from a legal stand point.
Need to drastically ramp up deportations to match the number of rejections.
> It applies to cases where the asylum seeker is from a country deemed “safe” or where they made an earlier asylum request in another EU country.
They’re not rejecting 90% of all applications, just ones from safe countries. Which makes sense.
Ok great, now let’s report on the number of expected deportations vs what actually happening as that’s the real issue
So 568 deportation orders issued to those from safe countries and only 84 actual deportations or left voluntarily. The system is still not working, there is no reason why those 484 people should still be in the State.
From the article
>The new statistics are drawn from 2,272 claims for international protection. In a quarter of cases, justice officials had issued deportation orders to unsuccessful asylum applicants, and so far 84 people have been deported or voluntarily left the State, a department spokesman said.
I wonder how many people received status in Ireland despite having bullshit claims over the years. We just don’t deport people at all so if they arrive in the country, then no matter how bullshit their claim, they have an exceedingly high chance of ultimately being able to stay here.
I used to work in that space between 2017-2020 or so, and some of the cases that I saw get granted status were just such utter and complete bullshit that even a university student would be able to tell you at face value their claim had no merit.