
Violence that broke out during a protest outside a hotel used to house asylum seekers in Dublin was planned online, Irish police have said.
Six people were arrested after Gardaí (Irish police) were attacked with bricks, fireworks and glass bottles at the Citywest Hotel, in Saggart, on Tuesday evening.
A female officer received medical attention for a foot injury, while a police helicopter was targeted with lasers and a police vehicle was also set on fire.
Garda Ch Supt Michael McNulty, the scene commander, said the violence had been orchestrated by “disparate groups on social media, who stir up hatred and violence”.
Ch Supt McNulty said: “This was not a peaceful protest. The violence exhibited was thuggery and an attempt to intimidate and injure.”
He said Gardaí had come under “sustained physical attacks”.
About 300 officers were on duty, with about half from the public order unit.
A water cannon was deployed but not used, while officers on horseback and a dog unit also attended.
Irish broadcaster RTÉ is reporting around 2,000 people had attended the protest.
Gardaí said protesters attempted to breach the police cordon by charging the line with horse-drawn sulkies (carts).
‘Thugs intent on violence’

Speaking on RTÉ’s Morning Ireland programme An Garda Síochána’s acting deputy commissioner Paul Cleary said the violence was “unacceptable” and there would be a relentless pursuit of those responsible.
“We know that even though people may have been wearing hoods or masks, we still have the ability to identify them and bring them before the courts, and we will pursue that relentlessly,” he said.
The protest had been attended by peaceful protestors, he said, but there were also youths on horses and scramblers and “violent thugs who were there purely to incite violence and promote fear”.
Officers were able to “contain the violence and restore order” within two and a half hours, he said.
“Gardai will always support and facilitate people right to peaceful protest but what we witnessed last night went beyond that,” he said.
“It was a violent riot driven by thugs intent on violence, and it wasn’t just an attack on Gardai, it was an attack on community safety, and we won’t tolerate that.”
Clean-up underway

Kevin SharkeyBBC News NI Dublin reporter
The area around the international protection centre is cordoned off this morning.
Debris from last night’s violence can be seen strewn on the ground around the entrance.
A small number of Gardai remain on duty at the entrance.
Further down, a burnt out Garda van can be seen in daylight.
As preparations get underway for a clean-up here this morning, bemused local people including children on their way to school are passing along the scene of the violence along this busy road.
‘No justification’ for attacks on police
Garda Commissioner Justin Kelly said on Tuesday night the actions of those behind the violence, can only be “described as thuggery”.
“This was a mob intent on violence against gardaí.
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.”
‘Gardai were more prepared’
RTÉ’s crime correspondent, Paul Reynolds, said on Wednesday that gardai 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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