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Creed
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Creed
@Creed741
Ireland is full 🇮🇪 Free Speech is a God given right! Christ is King 🤴 Gael ethno nationalist ☘️
South Dublin, Ireland Katılım Haziran 2019
3.8K Takip Edilen1K Takipçiler
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@Creed741 @cuprwarszawa And the 120,000 Ukrainians here, more per capita than any EU State, the equivalent of 1m in France, Britain or Germany.
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Insane stuff - from Niall McConnell:
"Syrian man in Ballaghadereen gets €500 a week welfare after arriving 9 months ago — says Ireland is his “Treasure Island” and he’s never going home. [Thoughts on floods more coming as he says]?"
📷 Shop Link: irishpatriotstore.com
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@MrsChipd9563 @cuprwarszawa Ireland 🇮🇪 so far has given over €290 million. Grok it and yes it’s outrageous
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@cmisbackagain So where’s the arrests? Where’s the investigations? Where’s the national outrage? Typical liberal propaganda of silence and it’s disgusting 🤢
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@edlynch86 All that wasted money pays the NGOs and the elites and corrupt politicians. Next……..
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Ireland is getting worse, So a convicted drug dealer from Nigeria who fled Italy before his court case and ended up in Ireland in 2016 has fought a extradition warrant from Italy all the way to the Supreme court.
This beggars a few questions how was Christian Sunday Asaiki alowed to stay in Ireland since 2016, where did he stay, did he claim asylum and why only now was he found in Ireland. But more importantly how is a person convicted in a EU member state funding a Supreme Court case to stop him being put to prison in Italy for a crime he has been convicted of?
Or is the magic free legal aid / NGO machine funding this.
Simple solution deport him to Italy as that was the last country he was in.
The Story
The Supreme Court has said it will review the extradition from Ireland of people who have been tried abroad ‘in absentia’.
It has agreed to hear an appeal brought by a man who was given an eight-year sentence on drug charges in Italy, while he was not present.
Chief Justice Donal O’Donnell, together with judges Gerard Hogan and Aileen Donnelly, said in a written determination: ‘The extent to which our courts should decline to order surrender under the European Arrest Warrant regime in respect of in absentia convictions has often proved problematic in the past, and we consider that it would be in the public interest that the matter should be settled by an authoritative judgment of this court.’
Italian newspaper reports have said Asaiki, originally from Nigeria but living in Longarone in northeast Italy, was accused of drug dealing. A car in which Asaiki and another Nigerian were allegedly travelling had been stopped by police in August 2014. The investigators found 4.6kg of marijuana in the spare wheel compartment.
The Supreme Court said that Asaiki had been sentenced to eight years in jail in April 2018. It noted that he had previously spent six months in pre-trial custody and his surrender was now sought to serve the balance of the sentence.
The court said he had been released from pre-trial detention in March 2015 following the appointment of his own lawyer and the nomination of an Italian domicile and address for service. The court papers were delivered to that address, but they were not collected.
The papers were then served on his lawyer. In February 2016, the judge responsible for the preliminary investigation ordered that the trial should proceed in Asaiki’s absence. The Supreme Court said the warrant for Asaki’s extradition from Ireland to Italy stated that if he was surrendered, he would have the right to seek a retrial or to appeal the conviction within 30 days.
Further inquiries revealed, however, that the Italian conviction could be set aside only where the failure to attend or to lodge an appeal was not the fault of the accused. The Supreme Court said Asaiki had appealed his warrant for extradition to the High Court in Dublin. He claimed he had a right to demand a retrial in circumstances where he was not informed in advance of the consequences of not attending.
However, he was found by the High Court to have knowingly absconded and absented himself from the trial, and his appeal was rejected by Judge Tony Hunt.
The Supreme Court said the ‘issues raised meet the constitutional requirements’, and ‘accordingly, this application for leave to appeal is granted’. It said Asaiki was currently in custody, and that it would give an early hearing date for the appeal.

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In the hospital today I never seen how bad things really are!
I felt like a visitor inside my own nation, every single person inside the waiting room for appointments needed a translator.
Most were from Africa. I never thought I would see the day that my people would feel like the outsiders!!
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@fellawrites This family story is the epitome of Nepotism on steroids and it’s outrageous and disgusting especially when Irish society as a whole is suffering both economically and socially from a lack of leadership and empathy from our so called “elected officials” who ignore us 🥲
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The combined annual remuneration of Adam Harris and Simon Harris is around €340,000.
Neither with even a degree in anything.
Neither with any significant private sector experience in anything.
Outrageous really.
nwl@nwl88444048
Sick of all this begrudgery towards Adam Harris! Having left secondary school in 2013, he started a charity. A tiny charity in the area of autism. In 2016, it had income of €126,000. BUT THEN.....
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Peadar once again speaking up for workers & motorists.
Businesses are about to go bust not because high fuel prices but because of high taxes.
If diesel goes up another 20% everything stops.
This is an economic emergency.
Peadar Tóibín TD@Toibin1
The price and petrol and distance are nearly as high now as when the government cut excise. Builders, contractors, farmers, truck drivers cannot take it anymore. Cut Carbon tax now.
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