| Arrests after violent protest outside Dublin migrant hotel 
 5 days ago
 
 Adam Mandeville and
 Catherine Moore,BBC News NI
 
 
   
 Watch: Police van set alight during protest outside Dublin migrant hotel
 
 Six  people have been arrested after Irish police were attacked with bricks,  fireworks and glass bottles at a protest outside a hotel used to house  asylum seekers in Dublin.
 
 A police  vehicle was also set on fire at the Citywest Hotel, in Saggart, on  Tuesday evening. A line of riot police prevented the protesters getting  to the hotel.
 
 Gardaí (Irish police)  said protesters attempted to breach the police cordon by charging the  line with horse-drawn sulkies (carts). Some carried garden forks and  tools, while others damaged walls to get missiles.
 
 The police helicopter was targeted with lasers, and one female officer received medical attention for a foot injury.
 
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 Garda  Commissioner Justin Kelly said: "The actions can only be described as  thuggery. This was a mob intent on violence against gardaí.
 
 "I utterly condemn the attacks on gardaí who did their jobs professionally and with great courage to keep people safe."
 
 He  said about 300 officers were on duty, with about half from the public  order unit. A water cannon was deployed, as well as officers on  horseback and a dog unit.
 
 Broadcaster RTÉ reported that several thousand people had gathered near the hotel.
 
 
   
 Riot police kept protesters away from the migrant hotel
 
 Taoiseach (Irish Prime Minister) Micheál Martin said there could be no justification for attacks on police.
 
 "There  can be no justification for the vile abuse against them, or the  attempted assaults and attacks on members of the force that will shock  all right-thinking people," he said.
 
 "I pay tribute to the frontline gardaí (Irish police) who acted courageously and quickly to restore order."
 
 Tánaiste  (Deputy Prime Minister) Simon Harris said "there is no excuse for this  type of violence and thuggery against the men and women who serve to  protect us and victims of crime every day".
 
 
  
 PA Media
 
 The violence in Dublin has been condemned by various politicians
 
 Ireland's  Justice Minister Jim O'Callaghan said the violent scenes were  "unacceptable and will result in a forceful response from the gardaí".
 
 "Those involved will be brought to justice," he said.
 
 "It  is clear to me from talking to colleagues that this violence does not  reflect the people of Saggart. They are not the people participating in  this criminality, but rather the people sitting at home in fear of it."
 
 Speaking during the final Irish presidential debate on Tuesday, Heather Humphreys described the violence as "absolutely awful".
 
 "This is not what we are as a country," she said.
 
 The other presidential candidate, Catherine Connolly, said the scenes in Saggart were "very upsetting".
 
 She added that "we need to be careful in this country" about the divisions emerging.
 
 'Gardai were more prepared'
 
 RTÉ's  crime correspondent, Paul Reynolds, said on Wednesday that gardaí  believe the violence "was pre-planned, but they were also more prepared"  than they had been  during trouble in the city in 2023.
 
 He  added that officers had better and more effective equipment, and had  stronger incapacitant spray, as well as water cannon "which they didn't  have to fire up".
 
 "The threat of it  was enough to disperse the crowd last night and also the violence was  more self-contained, because there was a particular area and location  outside the hotel where these demonstrators, protesters and violent  agitators had gathered," he told  BBC Radio Ulster's Good Morning Ulster.
 
 "So  it was concentrated in one area, unlike the Dublin riots of two years  ago, where sporadic violence broke out in so many different parts of the  city and it took far longer to contain that.
 
 "Last night the gardai clearly had a plan."
 
 He  says detectives have already started gathering "very good quality" CCTV  footage and also have bodycam footage which "will be used to identify  further violent demonstrators".
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