Halal food, muslim chefs and bigger rooms demanded by residents of Louth’s newest Plantation centre.
Irish Freedom Party president Hermann Kelly speaks to staff and residents of Ireland’s newest Plantation centre in Triple House Hotel, Termonfeckin, Co Louth.
The guy in the video is from Afghanistan.
Rally against uncontrolled unvetted immigration.
St Peter’s, West Street Drogheda on Saturday 7th January 2023 at 1pm. Various speakers.
Make a stand for your country. Let the politicians know that Ireland is full and we were never asked or gave our consent to our country being changed beyond recognition.
The demand on Public services is now excessive and the health service is stretched beyond capacity.
Irish Freedom Party
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Halal food, muslim chefs and bigger rooms demanded by residents of Louth’s newest Plantation centre.
Irish Freedom Party president Hermann Kelly speaks to staff and residents of Ireland’s newest Plantation centre in Triple House Hotel, Termonfeckin, Co Louth.
The guy in the video is from Afghanistan.
Rally against uncontrolled unvetted immigration.
St Peter’s, West Street Drogheda on Saturday 7th January 2023 at 1pm. Various speakers.
Make a stand for your country. Let the politicians know that Ireland is full and we were never asked or gave our consent to our country being changed beyond recognition.
The demand on Public services is now excessive and the health service is stretched beyond capacity.
We simply can’t house the world while many Irish people cannot afford a simple home.
Immigration increases demand for housing making it difficult for many Irish people to get on the housing ladder.
Be there at St Peter’s, West Street Drogheda on Saturday 7th January 2023 at 1pm.
Bring your friends and family.
Mary McAleese in 2019 declared that “today, 17 per cent of our population comes from somewhere else. The last time that happened was probably the Plantation [of Ulster].”
Some recent figures on issue:
200,000 new PPS numbers given out from Jan – October 2022, only one quarter went to those born in Ireland.
In the months January to June 2022, 7,760 non-Ukrainian people applied for asylum in Ireland (an annual rate of more than 10,000); the number of undocumented applicants at the airport was 40 per cent of that figure.
Almost 20 per cent of asylum-seekers at Dublin Airport came from Georgia, a country with visa-free access to the EU but with no direct flights. Other main countries of origin are Somalia and Algeria.