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British officials have expressed concern that Ireland may be serving as a gateway for Russian intelligence operatives after Dublin issued roughly 14,000 visas to Russian nationals since Russia's 2022 invasion of Ukraine.
Fianna FƔil MEP Barry Andrews has raised the issue publicly and written to Ireland's Minister for Justice, Jim O'Callaghan, urging more rigorous vetting, including social media checks and interviews.
Reporting cites approval rates for Russian applicants of around 90% (one outlet quoted as high as 97%). Critics note Ireland sits outside the Schengen area and remains in the Common Travel Area with the UK, potentially enabling onward travel to Britain.
Andrews warned that Ireland's upcoming EU Council presidency (JulyāDecember 2026) makes the state a more attractive target and pointed to past expulsions of Russian diplomats and alleged covert activity.
He and others have urged the government to review visa procedures and consider measures used by other EU states, including bans on those who fought in Ukraine.
Dublin's relative intelligence and surveillance capacity compared with the UK has been flagged as a vulnerability by commentators and security sources.
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Irish News | Breaking News from Ireland | BreakingNews'Serious concern about Russian infiltration' as 14,000 Irish visas approved







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