海角大神

In long-welcoming Ireland, racist violence rears its head

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Dominique Soguel
Laxman Das, a hotel chef in Dublin, shows a photo of himself after he had been robbed and beaten. He suspects he was the victim of a race crime.

The sky was still dark in Dublin when Laxman Das, an award-winning chef from India and an Indian national, set out on his e-bike for work at a luxury hotel. Before he could reach the kitchen, three men jumped him, punching him in the head until his helmet cracked.

By the time he staggered to safety, Mr. Das had been robbed of two phones, his wallet, and his passport. More painfully, he lost the strong sense of security he had felt after living and working in Ireland for 20 years.

鈥淚鈥檓 very scared now,鈥 he says. He cannot be certain the crime was racially motivated, but the repeated blows to his face after he had already surrendered his belongings make him believe it was. 鈥淭here鈥檚 been so many racist attacks here.鈥

Why We Wrote This

Ireland has long been barren soil for anti-immigrant, far-right politics. But that might be changing, to judge by a spike in attacks on Indians and increased agitation by nationalist firebrands.

His case is one of a string of recent assaults against Indians that have besmirched Ireland鈥檚 reputation as a welcoming nation. The Indian Embassy now warns its citizens to avoid deserted areas after dark, while families and office workers are quietly changing their routines.

This is all new for the Republic of Ireland. For years, anti-immigration sentiment, let alone violence, was rare and unorganized. No far-right political parties have found a footing in Ireland 鈥 the center-right is as conservative as viable Irish politics go. But analysts say that is changing, driven by the rise of a small far-right movement encouraged by social media influencers and counterparts in Britain and the United States.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a chronicle of a story foretold,鈥 says Eugenia Siapera, co-director of the University College Dublin Centre for Digital Policy. 鈥淚t鈥檚 the culmination of a variety of things, including an intensification of the circulation of hate speech, of scapegoating migrants.鈥

Grooming the Irish far right

For centuries, Irish people have left their island, spreading out as emigrants all over the world. That, coupled with the country鈥檚 troubled history as a colony of the British Empire, led it to develop a more tolerant tradition when it came to immigration to its own shores, compared with the rest of Europe. It fed the notion, says Lamia Tadjine, an organizer in Ireland鈥檚 antiracism movement, that 鈥測ou don鈥檛 get to be Irish and racist, because ... we have been the victims of racist violence and colonial violence.鈥

Dominique Soguel
Members of the Indian community in Ireland and antiracism activists protest to demand full implementation of the European Union's antiracism action plan.

But over the past few decades, the traditional flow of people out of Ireland has reversed, and the country has become a destination. Since the turn of the millennium, it has 鈥 now over 5 million. More than 81% of those newcomers have Irish citizenship. Of those who don鈥檛, 聽include British, Polish, Romanian, Indian, and Ukrainian.

That is why the rise in assaults against聽Indians, including in wealthier areas, has been so jarring. India and Ireland share a common history of struggle against British rule. Indians are deeply woven into Irish life, working in IT and health care, or studying at Irish universities. They are typically seen as a 鈥済ood鈥 migrant community.

But in just one month this year聽鈥 between July 19 and Aug. 19聽鈥 there were 11 attacks against people of Indian origin in Ireland, according to the Ireland India Council, an independent institution focused on promoting cooperation between the two countries. The incidents included physical attacks in public spaces, a battery on a taxi driver with a bottle, and assaults on children as young as 6 years old. Several victims required hospital treatment.

鈥淭he violence itself is not new,鈥 says Dr. Siapera, noting that minority taxi drivers and migrants sleeping rough have long been victims of assault. But the targeting of Indians in wealthier areas is novel. She says that violence most commonly breaks out in working-class neighborhoods, which are hardest hit by housing shortages and poverty. It is there that far-right narratives take root and twist social grievances into racist hostility.

Those narratives are fed by far-right activists such as Britain鈥檚 Stephen Yaxley-Lennon, aka Tommy Robinson, who has actively rallied his supporters in Ireland. Irish professional mixed martial arts fighter and political firebrand Conor McGregor has also fueled anti-migrant rhetoric, his swagger resonating with restive followers. And social media platforms such as TikTok and Telegram amplify anti-migrant messages.

鈥淎 lot of the funding that is coming from the far right is coming from the U.S.,鈥 says Ebun Joseph, a Nigeria-born academic and founder of the Institute of Antiracism and Black Studies in Dublin. 鈥淭hey are grooming the Irish far right.鈥

When Dr. Joseph, who has been one of Ireland鈥檚 most prominent voices on race for nearly two decades, arrived in Ireland in 2002, racism was evident, but not menacing, she says. Back then, people鈥檚 curiosity felt genuine. 鈥淭hey were not asking, 鈥楬ow are you here?鈥 They were asking, 鈥榃ho are you?鈥欌

Now, she receives death threats. Curiosity about her background has curdled into suspicion, she says: 鈥淎re you an asylum seeker? Are you a sponger鈥 living off the state?

Ms. Tadjine, the antiracism organizer, believes that the surge in far-right activity has been years in the making. 鈥淚rish people denied racist tendencies for so long that it festered,鈥 she says. 鈥淣ow, people feel emboldened to attack migrants and march against immigration.鈥

Fighting hate crimes

Among the Indian community, there are calls for stronger hate crime laws and for parents to be held accountable for their children鈥檚 actions. 鈥淎t least penalize the parents,鈥 says campaigner Nivedita Shukla, whose husband was assaulted by teenage boys in a Dublin suburb in 2023. No one was held responsible.

She argues that perpetrators are often minors and, therefore, get treated lightly. But her attempts to review official data on juvenile crime through freedom of information requests have been rejected.

Gardai figures show that reported hate crimes . In 2024, 676 hate crimes and hate-related incidents were recorded 鈥 up 4% from the previous year. The gardai聽鈥撀營reland's law enforcement body 鈥 insist they are responding robustly, pointing to nearly 600 diversity officers working nationwide. 鈥淲e would like to reassure any person who has immigrated to Ireland that we are here to keep you safe,鈥 the force said in a statement.

That does not convince Rahul, an Indian tech designer who asked that a pseudonym be used to hide his identity. For him, racist violence has changed everything.

Last October, he was attacked outside a mall by teenagers. One grabbed his cap, another punched him in the face and threatened to kill him while shouting, 鈥淕o back.鈥 Bruised and shaken, he was stunned that no passers-by intervened.

Once so eager to settle that they bought a house here, Rahul and his partner no longer see Ireland as a place to raise children. 鈥淲e don鈥檛 want to be scared for our lives or the lives of our kids,鈥 he says. 鈥淎fter all we鈥檝e seen, it鈥檚 definitely not going to be a place where we settle down.鈥

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