Friday, April 10, 2026

Ireland deploys army to clear fuel protests

Demonstrators say they’ll choke the Irish economy until the government slashes fuel taxes.

The Irish government has announced that it will use the military to clear trucks and tractors blocking “critical infrastructure.” Protests launched over soaring fuel prices have brought Dublin to a standstill in recent days.

In a statement on Thursday, Irish Justice Minister Jim O’Callaghan said that “the blocking of critical national infrastructure will not be permitted to continue and the assistance of the Defense Forces has been requested.” Protesters who fail to disperse will have their vehicles moved by force, and “should not complain later about any damage caused to those vehicles,” O’Callaghan added.

Protesters in trucks, tractors, and other large vehicles have blockaded Dublin city center since Tuesday and formed slow-moving convoys on key motorways throughout the country. The demonstrators have also blocked ports in Galway and Limerick, and the country’s only refinery at Whitegate, near Cork, which processes imported oil to meet 40% of Ireland’s fuel demand.



The blockades have already triggered fuel shortages across Ireland, with 100 petrol stations predicted to run dry by Thursday night, an industry spokesperson told the Irish Independent.

Fuel prices have spiked in Ireland as a result of the US-Israeli war on Iran, with petrol rising by 15% and diesel currently costing nearly 30% more than in mid-February. Home heating oil, meanwhile, has surged in price by almost 70%. Taxes make up almost 60% of fuel costs in Ireland, and the protesters argue that the government should slash these levies to ease pressure on farmers, haulers, and commuters.

A minor cut in fuel taxes last month – 15 cents per liter on gasoline and 20 cents on diesel – was criticized by Ireland’s opposition Sinn Fein party as “a pathetic token gesture that doesn’t even come close to what is needed.”

The Irish government has refused to negotiate with the protesters. “It is an act of national sabotage to blockade this refinery and it will directly impact the people of Ireland,” Prime Minister Micheal Martin said on Wednesday, referring to the Whitegate demonstration. “A gun can’t be put to the head of government.”

Martin was filmed on Thursday walking away from angry demonstrators in Cork, who accused him of “walking away from the Irish people.”

In keeping with EU policy, the government has also ruled out a return to Russian fuel imports. Despite a spiraling energy crisis, Deputy Prime Minister Simon Harris said last month that “any move by the European Union to start buying Russian oil again… would be utterly despicable.”

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Source:RT News

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5 COMMENTS

  1. Irish blockades on 30% Diesel increases.
    NZ suffers 100% Diesel increase since January 2026, and not so much as a whisper of discontent.
    Placid population are kiwis.
    Ripe for the picking.

  2. Ireland is right on track with globalists in power still working towards open borders and a one world government. The real saboteurs of Ireland are in the government and the Catholic church.

  3. Ireland is held together by foreign investment and commensurate low corporate taxation. Its GDP is measured differently to most nations in the world, as a consequence. Most Irish are struggling, over 70% of youth surveyed want to leave because of a lack of opportunity. Its a shit show, a managed decline held together mostly by pro US globalist stooges. This kind of out of touch, heavy handed bullshit comes as no surprise coming from these indifferent technocrats but don’t forget your pronouns Irish populace or you’ll be stripped of your personal wealth and sent to jail.

    A revolution or a civil war would not surprise me.

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