Ciara Ní Mháinnín 🇮🇪

6.1K posts

Ciara Ní Mháinnín 🇮🇪 banner
Ciara Ní Mháinnín 🇮🇪

Ciara Ní Mháinnín 🇮🇪

@__TheIndividual

Nationalist. Gaelgeoir. Ireland belongs to the Irish. Is aoibheann liom mo teanga 🇮🇪 REMIGRATION NOW ✈️✈️➡️➡️

Katılım Mayıs 2011
1.2K Takip Edilen3.8K Takipçiler
Stop Abortion Now
Stop Abortion Now@LifeNewsToo·
Sweet little premature baby girl bonding with her Dad.
English
45
315
2K
16.4K
Ciara Ní Mháinnín 🇮🇪 retweetledi
SnDMedia
SnDMedia@SnDMediaNews·
Parents, Wake Up: Are We Seeing the Beginning of a Grooming Gangs Explosion Here in Ireland? The conviction of Ziaullhaq Safi, a 36-year-old Afghan national working at a takeaway in Sligo, should give every parent serious concerns. On April 23, 2023, Safi approached two teenage girls outside his premises on Wine Street. He lured them into the adjacent alleyway with the promise of a free pizza, locked the gate behind them, trapping them, and sexually assaulted the 16-year-old. He kissed both girls, repeatedly tried to lift one’s top, exposed himself, and was later convicted not only of sexual assault but specifically of offering remuneration, that free pizza, to a child under 18 for sexual exploitation. The jury delivered its verdicts in mid-March 2026 with sentencing is due on March 26 before Judge Maguire at Sligo Circuit Court. This was no random act of street crime. It was deliberate: isolating vulnerable, intoxicated teens with a small bribe, exploiting a clear power imbalance. The tactics echo the grim history of group-based child sexual exploitation in Britain. Here again an Afghan man operated alone, yet it unfolds in a country already grappling with high rates of reported sexual offences and troubling reports of organised predation against girls in state care. Ireland’s sexual offence rate remains well above the European average, even with better reporting. Research has exposed “co-ordinated gangs” preying on vulnerable girls in residential placements, girls who abscond, are collected, gang-raped, or exploited repeatedly in hotels. These are children the state must protect. The Safi case becomes explosive because of the migrant element as Safi is not Irish-born. Ireland has seen swift demographic shifts through large-scale asylum and immigration. Yet official statistics rarely break down offenders by nationality, a transparency shortfall uncommon in similar European nations and one that the newly founded, 'women's coalition on immigration' is strongly advocating for. Authorities maintain there is “no credible evidence” linking immigration to crime. Without data, that may be technically true, but it often feels like avoidance when the evidence is very clear from other European nations. Public trust is eroding fast, protests at asylum centres, viral clips of incidents, and the perception that discussing a perpetrator’s background is off-limits have left a vacuum filled with frustration. When a foreign national is convicted of exploiting Irish teenage girls using familiar grooming methods, people ask: how many similar cases go untracked? Could Ireland be heading toward the institutional blindness that plagued Rotherham and Rochdale? Ireland’s context differs; care-home reports do not highlight ethnic patterns publicly, and crime trends are mixed. Still, the warning signs are clear. Large-scale, rapid immigration without strong vetting, or transparent offender data, is a gamble when children’s safety is at stake. A justice system that convicts men like Safi yet rarely deports non-nationals sends mixed messages. A child-protection framework unable to halt organised exploitation demands urgent overhaul, not denial. We owe Irish girls far more than well-meaning but hollow compassion that leaves them vulnerable in alleyways and hotel rooms. The Safi verdict is not closure; it is a stark reflection. Ireland stands at a choice: embrace transparent, evidence-based policy, deport convicted foreign offenders swiftly, tighten asylum screening, and place women and childrens safety first, or cling to the refrain that “there is no link” until the evidence becomes undeniable. Is this the beginning of something darker still to be proven? All the ingredients are certainly in place: vulnerable targets, cultural incompatibility and failed integration, are already on the table. March 26 will bring Safi’s sentence. The real sentencing Ireland faces is whether it learns quickly before the question ceases to be rhetorical.
SnDMedia tweet media
English
25
146
306
5.5K
GowerStreetLad
GowerStreetLad@GowerCornerBoy·
@__TheIndividual Happening all over the world. All governments who allow them to flood in are complicit in the ruination of many a nation's heritage and culture.
English
1
0
3
28
Ciara Ní Mháinnín 🇮🇪
Ciara Ní Mháinnín 🇮🇪@__TheIndividual·
All taken from the one post. Hazim has a lovely studio apartment to rent out in Dublin to the rest of the world that have invaded Ireland. A bargain too at only €1700 a month! Allegedly. That's my new favourite word 😊
Ciara Ní Mháinnín 🇮🇪 tweet media
English
0
12
26
588
Ciara Ní Mháinnín 🇮🇪
Ciara Ní Mháinnín 🇮🇪@__TheIndividual·
What a w⚓️ .... 🙄 Being Irish is IN us! It's in our blood!! 🇮🇪🇮🇪🇮🇪🇮🇪
Simon Patterson@denkmit

‘Being Irish’ has feck all to do with passports, DNA, and ancestry dot com. It comes from living here, growing up here, integrating into our amazing culture. Being Irish is growing up with Zig and Zag, Dustin the Turkey, Ray D’Arcy and Dara Ó Briain, and the Late Late Toy Show. Being Irish is becoming a GAA fan the one month every generation your county gets to a Sam final, it’s the inevitable heartbreak of rugby World Cup quarter finals, and it’s going wild as we punch way above our weight at the Olympics. Being Irish is growing up with Ted, Dougal and Jack, knowing who keeps their toaster in the cupboard, and who’s got a horse outside. Being Irish is a spice bag after Copper’s, or a chicken fillet roll in the morning, or mammy’s dinner cooked at home. Being Irish is knowing that McGregor is the worst cunt on the planet (but that you can be a good cunt too). Being Irish is knowing you’re probably never going to own a house and the lure of the Australian working tourist visa, the realisation that all your childhood friends now live in Sydney or San Diego. Being Irish is knowing the fear of leaving the immersion on. Most importantly, being Irish is knowing you can go to any city in the world and find a pub filled with your people, because the world truly loves the Irish. Why? Because we’re fucking great craic - and that’s not something you can get from your genetics. ☘️☘️☘️☘️☘️☘️

English
1
2
16
274
Alan H
Alan H@Alan_H_73·
@__TheIndividual They like spicebags Ciara so they're 100% Irish so I'm told 🫡
English
1
0
2
58
Shaykh Dr. Uber Al-Qadri
Shaykh Dr. Uber Al-Qadri@DrUberAl_Qadri·
@__TheIndividual @Jklunden ❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️ Im not embarrassed to say I cried when my amazing wife gave birth to my children. Thank you Irish mammies, you are amazing.
English
1
0
1
23
Ciara Ní Mháinnín 🇮🇪 retweetledi
Real News Éire
Real News Éire@real_eire·
Belfast Nigerian Daniel Omer Ukachukwu, 20, allegedly plied one of the teenagers with vodka at a skatepark and forced her to kiss friends while he took photographs. Ukachukwu faces charges of rape, making and possessing indecent images, sexual activity with a child, and inciting a child into sexual activity.
Real News Éire tweet media
English
15
93
219
9.2K
Real News Éire
Real News Éire@real_eire·
Australia Muslims harass the Australian leader and to the point he has to escape out a side exit. What happens when they outnumber the Australians?
English
20
54
300
5.4K