Good, people should be deported when they have served deportation orders, this is normal and lawful.
BenderRodriguez14 on
I get the feeling the headline is trying to rage bait, but while some may agree and others may disagree with the process, having seen some figures bandied about from other countries, a few Euro under €3.6k per passenger sounds like a relative pittance.
jackoirl on
3 grand a head for the flight.
I need to figure out how I can start supplying stuff to the Irish government who are so readily inclined for getting fucked on price.
Edit: When the flight is 100 quid a head on a commercial airline. My point is that there should be some way it doesn’t need to cost us 30 times more to do it.
We live in a union, it shouldn’t be an insurmountable challenge to hand passengers between different policing jurisdictions.
This is in an environment where everything seems to cost the government more. Bike shelters to moving plug sockets in the children’s hospital.
Beginning-Shock1520 on
It’s about time proper action was taken on this, but we need to see a lot more. So that we don’t end up hearing more stories about failed asylum seekers remaining in the country even after their application was rejected and nobody checking to make sure they went.
Willing-Departure115 on
The value of the flights is demonstrating to people who are considering coming here that Ireland is no longer a soft touch destination, with long processing times and no effective deportation mechanism.
The price per seat is reasonably immaterial in that sense.
Alozov on
Good!
And I say this as an immigrant!
JHRFDIY on
Cheaper than sticking them in an IPAS centre tho right?
(seriously… the headlines really should reflect that)
“State saves €Xmillion by deporting Y people to Z country”
heyhitherehowru on
Value for money. 3.5k per person. They would cost the state a hell of a lot more if they were allowed to stay.
CrispsInTabascoSauce on
Deport. Deport. Deport. Faster.
thedifferenceisnt on
Are these 52 people from Georgia? Or what is going on here?
Cork_Airport on
This is a huge win, a (relatively) short one off payment to get them the fuck out of here benefits the state in the long run.
This approach needs to be paired with stopping people before they get here.
Jean_Rasczak on
Typical rage bait shit from the Journal, I am not giving them a click either to read the story
12 commenti
Good, people should be deported when they have served deportation orders, this is normal and lawful.
I get the feeling the headline is trying to rage bait, but while some may agree and others may disagree with the process, having seen some figures bandied about from other countries, a few Euro under €3.6k per passenger sounds like a relative pittance.
3 grand a head for the flight.
I need to figure out how I can start supplying stuff to the Irish government who are so readily inclined for getting fucked on price.
Edit: When the flight is 100 quid a head on a commercial airline. My point is that there should be some way it doesn’t need to cost us 30 times more to do it.
We live in a union, it shouldn’t be an insurmountable challenge to hand passengers between different policing jurisdictions.
This is in an environment where everything seems to cost the government more. Bike shelters to moving plug sockets in the children’s hospital.
It’s about time proper action was taken on this, but we need to see a lot more. So that we don’t end up hearing more stories about failed asylum seekers remaining in the country even after their application was rejected and nobody checking to make sure they went.
The value of the flights is demonstrating to people who are considering coming here that Ireland is no longer a soft touch destination, with long processing times and no effective deportation mechanism.
The price per seat is reasonably immaterial in that sense.
Good!
And I say this as an immigrant!
Cheaper than sticking them in an IPAS centre tho right?
(seriously… the headlines really should reflect that)
“State saves €Xmillion by deporting Y people to Z country”
Value for money. 3.5k per person. They would cost the state a hell of a lot more if they were allowed to stay.
Deport. Deport. Deport. Faster.
Are these 52 people from Georgia? Or what is going on here?
This is a huge win, a (relatively) short one off payment to get them the fuck out of here benefits the state in the long run.
This approach needs to be paired with stopping people before they get here.
Typical rage bait shit from the Journal, I am not giving them a click either to read the story
What a absolute rag of a publication