Irish Daily Star

Asylum crisis is getting even more in tents...

CLEAR-OUT VOW AS CAMPS BACK AGAIN AT CANAL

- ■■Louise BURNE Political Correspond­ent

‘We will be in a position to bring additional accommodat­ion on over the next week’

TAOISEACH Simon Harris has vowed to oversee another operation to clear tents from the streets of Dublin, as a new asylum seeker encampment was set up along the Grand Canal yesterday.

It comes as Mr Harris admitted that future accommodat­ion coming on stream will likely be tents.

Up to 163 people who had been sleeping in tents on the Grand Canal were moved to tented accommodat­ion in Dundrum and Crooksling on Thursday morning.

However, just hours after the “operation”, another 30 tents were set up further down the canal overnight. It was also reported that tents were set up in East Wall and Ringsend.

The latest figures from the Department of Integratio­n show there are

1,715 internatio­nal protection applicants unaccommod­ated.

Speaking at the launch of a new housing developmen­t in Hollystown, west Dublin, Housing Minister Darragh O’Brien and Immigratio­n Minister Roderic O’Gorman indicated that the asylum seekers and their tents will be moved.

“We’ve been very clear that that’s not where we want to see people. W e don’t want to see asylum seekers in tents,” Minister O’Brien said.

“An operation will be put in place, agreed between our department­s, to move those tents on, to move people into safe and secure accommodat­ion. That’s what we intend to do.”

Minister O’Gorman said that he was aware of the tents at Grand Canal but argued the Government has accommodat­ed 450 people in the last week following the operations at Mount Street and Grand Canal.

Supply

“We’ve always said the key issue for us is the availabili­ty of supply,” he said. “We have been able to bring significan­t additional supply of accommodat­ion on over the last two weeks. That’s been because of intensive work across government across different department­s, different State agencies supporting my department’s work in terms of providing accommodat­ion.

“We will be in a position to bring additional accommodat­ion on over the next week and in the weeks to come.

“We will use that to deal with the needs of those who are sleeping rough now and indeed, those who will arrive in the coming days.”

We reported last week that the Government will now turn its attention to derelict and disused buildings in a bid to solve the accommodat­ion shortages.

Asked by

The Star if vacant buildings could not have been used to alleviate the homeless crisis long before now, Mr O’Brien said that there has been an increased focus on their use and vacant commercial properties are being repurposed for “resident-Irish” people in emergency accommodat­ion.

He also stated that 10,000 bed spaces for Ukrainian refugees have been establishe­d through both the “Offer a Home” scheme and the refurbishm­ent programme.

Safe

Speaking in Cork, meanwhile, Taoiseach Simon Harris said that the situation at Mount Street had been allowed to “fester for many weeks and months” and a similar situation will not be allowed to happen again.

He said: “I am satisfied that there will be more accommodat­ion solutions coming on stream.

“We need to be honest about a lot of that may look like tents with sanitation on public sites, but a more safe environmen­t from both the public health point of view and from a legal point of view.”

Mr Harris stated that he has asked ministers to come forward with proposals to tackle migration and there will be “more news on that in the days ahead”.

OUT & ABOUT: With Minister O’Brien

The scheme was talked about on several episodes of the show as participan­ts were urged to avail of the subsidy.

New

The architect was with the minister at Wilkinsons Brook, a new developmen­t at Hollystown in Dublin 15 yesterday.

Bannon “consulted” with Glenveagh Properties on the “layout and design of the home”.

When asked if his company received any subvention for discussing the grants, the architect said it did not.

The minister said the grants are “working really well”.

In January, RTE told the that Bannon and quantity surveyor Claire Irwin met with the Department of Housing’s vacant housing unit “in order to gain an understand­ing of the mechanism by which derelict property grants are available”.

 ?? ?? LAUNCH: O’Gorman and (right) with Bannon and O’Brien
LAUNCH: O’Gorman and (right) with Bannon and O’Brien
 ?? ?? ISSUE: Tents on banks of Grand Canal
ISSUE: Tents on banks of Grand Canal
 ?? ??

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