The queue of asylum seekers outside the Light House drop-in centre in Pearse Street on Tuesday night. Photograph: Allen Bobinac/The Light House
Two ferry companies make frequent crossings from Cairnryan to Larne and Belfast. From there travellers can take a bus or train to Dublin, crossing the border near Newry. It’s a long journey that takes the guts of a day, compared to a short flight from Britain into Dublin.Last month, Minister for Justice Helen McEntee claimed that 80 per cent of those applying for asylum in Ireland were coming over the Border from the North.
equates to an average of 45 migrants crossing into the Republic each day. Spread across so many modes of travel, with journeys undertaken individually or in small groups, that movement of people is very difficult to track. Referring to McEntee’s comments, Holder says: “The figures are not based on the detection of people coming over the land border, but on the number of people making in-country, rather than in-airport, claims.Whatever the accuracy of the figures, it is clear that the route is being used. Based on conversations with about 50 asylum seekers in Dublin over two days, most of them recently arrived, it was clear that significant numbers came from the UK.
He has travelled with his friend Abdul Rashid , a law student, who hopes to get status in Ireland that will allow him to go back to university. Both left Afghanistan soon after the Taliban came to power in 2021. Many of the men using the service say they have been on the move across continents for three years or more.
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