„Irland war nicht freundlich zu mir“ – eine Ukrainerin kehrt in ihr vom Krieg zerrüttetes Land zurück, nachdem ihr irischer Traum zum Albtraum geworden war

https://m.independent.ie/irish-news/ireland-has-not-been-kind-to-me-ukrainian-woman-returning-home-to-war-torn-country-after-her-irish-dream-became-a-nightmare/a1575732617.html

Von Holiday_Toe5779

19 Comments

  1. PaddySmallBalls on

    It is understandable she feels that way. I don’t see how it is viable for Ukrainians to come to Ireland anymore since the supports have been stripped away. The rescue ladder was pulled up a while ago, anyone who didn’t climb it before then has been left to their own devices.

  2. TonyWalnuts17 on

    We must do more, we must allow this person any job they like and we must pay them the wage they would like. Otherwise they are threatening to go back to a war torn country that must be very bad if one is willing to go back. Sorry we as a nation are so selfish.

  3. Rather go back to a town that is bombed by the Russians on a daily basis than stay in Ireland…

  4. So many commentators that clearly didn’t read the article.
    She came to ireland to understandable get away from the war on the east of Ukraine, was willing to work as has 2 degree.

    Downright shameful to be saying stuff like women looking for refugee should be fine with being stalked and sharing personal photos and sharing a room with strange men

  5. theoldkitbag on

    It’s not about selfishness on our part, or ingratitude on hers. It’s about having avenues there for people to better their situation, to set down roots, and to contribute to our society. Everybody wants that. We *should* have those avenues – we’ve being saying the same thing ourselves for years now about Direct Provision. I could easily see how someone who is looking at being locked into exclusionary hardship for years would say to themselves, ‘well, if I’m going to be suffering hardships, I may as well have my family around me’.

    Being hardnosed about it, and honest, our system is set up to be difficult and unwelcoming. While we treated Ukranians differently, they’re still within the same overall system. It’s not a good system as it rewards despertion more than anything else, and people with skills we could definitely use end up leaving. We should want to be the kind of country that people would aspire to being a part of.

    I hope things work out for her, and she manages to build some kind of life for herself.

  6. Suspicious-Ad8576 on

    There’s a lot in this. But… our ruling classes have been pretty delusional about how much the working class could absorb. I’ve just no idea what really set off the delusion in Europe at the average career politician dinner party that we were going to built this rainbow multiculturalism across the west.

    Hello has anyone even read five minutes of European history?

  7. Ok_Magazine_3383 on

    > While in refugee accommodation in Ireland, Ms Musiienko was stalked by another refugee, she said.

    > She said the staff she alerted to the threat told her it was nothing to do with them.

    > Ms Musiienko also said there was an incident when she was instructed to turn on her laptop for inspection at a reception centre. Upon doing this, she said a male official copied photographs of her in a bikini taken when she was a teenager on holiday with her family.

    > “I was only 16 or 17 years old in the photos,” she said.

    > Another official rummaged through her suitcase, she claimed, and rifled through her underwear.

    > On one occasion, Ms Musiienko said, she was told she would have to share a room with a man she did not know.

    > She said she refused this and was given inferior accommodation to what was first promised.

    > At that centre, she emerged from the shower one day to discover a man sitting on her bed who offered her alcohol.

    > The man, who she said was around 40, began to stalk her when she refused to drink with him and would regularly bang on her bedroom door at night.

    > In another centre, she said she was given a second-hand sleeping bag and told she would have to sleep on the floor with 20 other Ukrainians and international protection applicants.

    > When she queried if there was better accommodation available, she said she was informed her other option was to sleep rough on the street.

    > Ms Musiienko asked whether there were shower facilities she could use and was told she would have to knock on the bedroom door of other refugees and ask permission to use their bathroom.

    Hardly surprising she felt unsafe. She _was_ unsafe.

  8. dreamwithinadream007 on

    Why did she pass by 2 safe European countries to come here ???

  9. Fries-Ericsson on

    How can a country that prides ourselves of being welcoming and having our own history of experiencing displacement treat people in such an inhumane way?

    And the people in these comments saying she should have been greatful is just shocking.

  10. Commercial_Mode1469 on

    If the system wasn’t overrun by chancers we’d probably be able to offer better services to genuine refugees. No excuses for those scum mentioned that work at the place though.

  11. Alpha-Nozzle on

    This is the reality that do gooder pricks like O’gorman choose to ignore. We should be helping the right people and giving a firm slap on the arse out the door to any that behave like this. 

  12. Indo really playing the headline game hard here.

    “Ukrainian woman returning home to war-torn country after exposing unsafe conditions of refugee centres”

    Fixed it.

  13. tishimself1107 on

    Sounds worse than homeless accommodation if thats to be believed.

  14. One of the problems with properly caring for refugees is that voters often have unrealistic understandings of what is required.

    There was a report on here the other day receiving negative coverage of a proposal to put people in tents near Athlone. Ironically, that sort of resistance, based upon the idea that people deserve better, is often the opposite.

    Had these people been provided accommodation in a large, State-run centre with proper security provisions, all of the above story could have been avoided. By forcing the problem into the private sector, the nature of the accommodation provided becomes fundamentally unsuitable.

Leave A Reply