The Love and Darkness of Seán “Doctor” Millar
The five-decade music career of the Liberties musician never quite reached the commercial heights that he, and others, had aimed for in his twenties. But is that important, really?
The tragedy left already isolated residents more worried about how hard their centre is to get to and from.
They now have to show their papers to enter – despite a judge ruling that a similar measure was overly intrusive a decade ago.
The centre’s managers want, instead, to give residents vouchers for outside shops – but the nearest one’s a 30-minute walk.
The number of deportation orders has shot up since 2022. But that doesn’t mean they’re all sound and will stand up to scrutiny.
Joseph Sesay says he can’t go back to Sierra Leone to apply for a work permit from there. It doesn’t feel safe, he says.
Reducing the qualifications is meant to make it easier to recruit more International Protection Appeals Tribunal members, to process more appeals, faster.
“Amandla,” hollered Lucky Khambule when he reached the stage. “Ngawethu,” shouted the audience in reply.
Yet anti-immigrant protestors often film asylum seekers outside their accommodation, just going about their business.
He faces arrest if he doesn’t turn up to sign his papers, to prove he hasn’t gone off grid while he appeals a deportation order. But he also can’t work to pay for a train ticket.
Even when applicants have never had run-ins with the law in Ireland or elsewhere, and have submitted piles of paperwork.
Fast-trackers are rushed through in a bit less than three months, while other people are left in suspense for 18 months.
An Garda Síochána hasn’t responded to queries sent on 4 September asking about any plans to try to protect residents.