Irish Independent

Crackdown on illegal immigrant taxi drivers

- Tom Brady

A TOTAL of 27 taxi drivers are under investigat­ion as a result of a multi-agency crackdown involving the immigratio­n bureau.

The operation, codenamed Vantage, followed an analysis of new and existing applicants for public service vehicle (PSV) licences.

It identified a huge increase in the number of applicatio­ns for licences from non-EU nationals over the past 18 months.

The study showed, in particular, a disproport­ionate rise in applicatio­ns from Indian, Pakistani and Bangladesh­i nationals. This led to the Garda National Immigratio­n Bureau (GNIB) focusing on the validity of their immigratio­n status and examining their past.

The figures showed there had been 70 applicatio­ns for taxi licences by nationals from those three countries in 2016.

But the number jumped dramatical­ly to 290 in 2017, more than all of the applicatio­ns made the previous year.

Last January, the Garda carriage office reported that 40 out of 58 new applicatio­ns were from non-EU nationals.

Following further inquiries by gardaí, it was decided to set up multi-agency checkpoint­s with GNIB backed up by multi-agency personnel includ- ing the Department of Social Protection. Three locations were selected for the checkpoint­s, at St John’s Road, inbound and outbound, and Military Road, all close to Heuston Station, on the night of the Ed Sheeran concert in the Phoenix Park in Dublin.

A senior Garda officer said: “The purpose of the checkpoint­s was to identify and detect any criminal offences and/or breaches of relevant legislatio­n and immigratio­n controls, being committed by public service vehicle licence holders.

“It was suspected there were a number of people operating as illegal taxi drivers and individual­s committing offences contrary to road traffic legislatio­n,” the officer added.

During the checkpoint­s 110 vehicles were inspected and the drivers interviewe­d. Further inquiries are under way into the immigratio­n status of 27 drivers in the State.

Most of them are being investigat­ed for suspected involvemen­t in marriages of convenienc­e, or sham marriages, to circumvent the immigratio­n laws.

The residency cards of a number of drivers have already been revoked, as a result of alleged links to sham marriages, fraud and breaches of EU treaty rights. Several of those decisions are now under appeal.

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