After fire at asylum center in Drogheda, online fringe groups seek to rewrite what happened
After fire at asylum center in Drogheda, online fringe groups seek to rewrite what happened
Homepage   /    entertainment   /    After fire at asylum center in Drogheda, online fringe groups seek to rewrite what happened

After fire at asylum center in Drogheda, online fringe groups seek to rewrite what happened

🕒︎ 2025-11-04

Copyright thejournal

After fire at asylum center in Drogheda, online fringe groups seek to rewrite what happened

We need your help now Support from readers like you keeps The Journal open. You are visiting us because we have something you value. Independent, unbiased news that tells the truth. Advertising revenue goes some way to support our mission, but this year it has not been enough. If you've seen value in our reporting, please contribute what you can, so we can continue to produce accurate and meaningful journalism. For everyone who needs it. One-off amount I already contribute Sign in. It’s quick, free and it’s up to you. An account is an optional way to support the work we do. Find out more. Investigates Investigates Money Diaries The Journal TV Climate Crisis Cost of Living Road Safety Newsletters Temperature Check Inside the Newsroom The Journal Investigates Daft.ie Property Allianz Home The 42 Sport TG4 Entertainment The Explainer A deep dive into one big news story Sport meets news, current affairs, society & pop culture have your say Or create a free account to join the discussion Advertisement More Stories After fire at asylum center in Drogheda, online fringe groups seek to rewrite what happened Conspiracy theories alleged the government, or Antifa, were behind the blaze. 12.44pm, 4 Nov 2025 Share options IN THE WAKE of an alleged arson attack at a centre for asylum seekers in Drogheda, anti-immigration activists online have labelled the attack a “false flag” operation or a distraction, while one website instead characterised the attack as “calculated resistance” by “local patriots”. Gardaí are investigating the fire at the Co Louth IPAS centre on Friday as arson. CCTV footage from the building appears to show a man setting the stairs alight. Firefighters rescued five people, including a baby, from the top floor of the building in the town’s George’s Street area. The incident quickly became the focus of anti-immigration activists, who have repeatedly criticised asylum seekers for coming to Ireland, as well as the government for accommodating them in recent years. Attacks on asylum accommodation centres, usually accompanied by online misinformation, have become a recurring pattern. In separate cases to the Drogheda fire, there have been a number of fires at buildings where asylum seekers were to do be housed – or rumoured to be housed – in recent years. There have been more than 20 such attacks on properties since 2018. Some of these have involved suspected cases of arson, and many occurred after misinformation about the buildings spread online. In another attack in late 2024, anti-migrant activists welded shut an emergency exit for an accommodation centre for families in International Protection. Anti-immigration groups were quick to put forward their own version of events on social media following last Friday’s incident. In some wildly speculative cases, they sought to place blame – without proof – on groups as disparate as locals opposed to IPAS centres or asylum seekers to government operatives or gardaí. One website that regularly posts anti-immigration narratives ascribed the fire to locals who view “the blaze as justified self-defence”. “A bold stand unfolded in Drogheda on Friday night, when locals torched an International Protection Accommodation Services Centre on George’s Street, sending a clear message to Dublin’s open-border elite,” an article in TheLiberal.ie reads. “The targeted strike, executed with fireworks around 8.15pm, emptied the building in minutes and left the facility gutted — exactly the outcome Irish patriots demanded after months of ignored protest.” There are some factual errors here — the fire was not caused by fireworks and it did not leave the building gutted. TheLiberal.ie is a website that has been factchecked numerous times by The Journal, often for false claims about migrants. The article describes condemnation of the crime as “sidestepping the real grievance: yet another historic town sacrifices to house unvetted migrants”. “Friday’s fire was not random vandalism,” the article states. “It was calculated resistance”. It ends: “More centres await the same fate unless the government chooses Irish people first.” Many anti-immigration groups took a different view, blaming the fire on different groups, including the residents themselves. “Smells like an inside job to me,” read one message, which also contained anti-semitic language, in an anti-immigration Telegram group. “Wouldn’t be the first time an invader started a fire in their accommodation. (Some fringe anti-immigration groups misleadingly call immigrants “invaders”). Advertisement However, by far the most common theory spread in these groups was that the alleged arson attack was part of a government conspiracy, with multiple comments saying that it was a “false flag” (a crime committed to frame an enemy) or a “psyop” (meaning “psychological operation”, a term popularly used in conspiracy theorist circles to mean an event orchestrated to influence the population). “I’m not saying the Irish state are capable of burning the IPAS to justify restrictions on freedom but…” began a post on X by Derek Blighe, a former leader of an anti-immigration party. Blighe has unsuccessfully ran in general and European elections, and posted a photo of himself in blackface makeup on Halloween, the night of the fire. “This individual in the video is Gardai or Antifa (at the behest) of Gardai or government,” read a comment by another poster which was seen 62,200 times on X. Antifa (short for anti-fascist) refers to a movement that has taken a stand against the far-right. The term appears to have originated in the 1930s as groups took a stand against the rise of Nazism. Many of these claims were accompanied by arguments that the information put out by the media was contradictory, or didn’t make sense. In some cases, they had a point — initial reports, which were also uttered by the Minister for Justice, indicated that the fire was likely started by fireworks, leading some people to think that the blaze was an accident, or a prank gone wrong. Unsubstantiated claims in TheLiberal.ie that the fire was started by an electrical fault muddied the waters further. Initially, its reporting on the fire said Gardaí had ruled out foul play. “Preliminary reports suggest it may have originated from an electrical fault or unattended appliance,” its piece read, likely adding to the confusion cited by some online commentators. This was later updated to include the minister’s comments on fireworks. In other cases, social media accounts interrogated spurious and/or easily explainable details as if they pointed toward the whole incident being fabricated. Many accounts noted differences between CCTV footage that was released and a photo of the aftermath of the fire that was published in newspapers. There was a watercooler in the photo, but not the video, they claimed. And there is a doorway in the video, but not the photo. However, explanations for these discrepancies are simple: the doorway was out of shot of the photograph, and the watercooler is in the CCTV footage, partly obscured by the stairwell — it was likely moved into a corner where it wasn’t blocking the path after the fire started. Other spurious claims included that there wasn’t enough CCTV released, that the building hadn’t been entirely burnt out, that the front door wasn’t damaged enough to have been kicked in, or that “they never showed any of the alleged families that got caught up in the fire”. “How did the clipboard move from one wall to the other?” a post on the verified X account of Patrice Johnson, secretary of the Irish Freedom Party, asked, seemingly finding another discrepancy between the CCTV video and the photo of the scene. (The clipboard did not move. The CCTV footage shows that there are two of them.) Johnson also made multiple posts indicating that the alleged arson attack was a “distraction”. “Just like that…the Irish government have their story to cover up the horrendous attack on a 10 year old Irish girl”, she posted in response to the story. This narrative spread widely across anti-immigration social media accounts where it found its target in a Drogheda woman who was interviewed about the fire by RTÉ, who said that, “No one deserves to be treated like that. Everyone deserves a safe home.” “Has anyone seen the woman crying on RTÉ about the firework in the IPAS centre in Drogheda?” read a post on X that included the clip. “I have never seen bigger virtue signalling in my life.” “More propaganda from RTE,” one comment viewed more than 50,400 times on X read. “This is so fake,” said another, seen more than 59,000 times “Pure propaganda here from RTE,” said a description on a video posted to Instagram by TheLiberal.ie featuring the clip. “Drogheda woman says it’s so cruel what happened IPAS centre in Drogheda last night. What is cruel when a migrant raped a 10 year old Irish girl in Citywest?” (Grammatical mistakes have been left as they are, as the intended meaning is unclear. There is no known connection between the suspected arson in Drogheda and an alleged sexual assault of a young girl in Citywest two weeks earlier, for which a suspect has been arrested). Want to be your own fact-checker? Visit our brand-new FactCheck Knowledge Bank for guides and toolkits The Journal’s FactCheck is a signatory to the International Fact-Checking Network’s Code of Principles. You can read it here. For information on how FactCheck works, what the verdicts mean, and how you can take part, check out our Reader’s Guide here. You can read about the team of editors and reporters who work on the factchecks here. Readers like you are keeping these stories free for everyone... It is vital that we surface facts from noise.Articles like this one brings you clarity, transparency and balance so you can make well-informed decisions. We set up FactCheck in 2016 to proactively expose false or misleading information, but to continue to deliver on this mission we need your support. Over 5,000 readers like you support us. If you can, please consider setting up a monthly payment or making a once-off donation to keep news free to everyone. Support The Journal The Journal's monthly FactCheck newsletter keeps you in the loop about what misinformation trends Ireland is experiencing - and how we're fighting back. Sign up here You are now signed up Shane Raymond Send Tip or Correction Embed this post To embed this post, copy the code below on your site Email “After fire at asylum center in Drogheda, online fringe groups seek to rewrite what happened”. Recipient's Email Feedback on “After fire at asylum center in Drogheda, online fringe groups seek to rewrite what happened”. Your Feedback Your Email (optional) Report a Comment Please select the reason for reporting this comment. Please give full details of the problem with the comment... Asylum Seekers Conspiracy Theorists Derek Blighe Social Media News in 60 seconds Dick Cheney - former US vice president and a chief backer of Iraq invasion - has died aged 84 proceeds of crime Last year the Criminal Assets Bureau seized property and cash totalling €17.052m 30 mins ago The largest ever survey about the religious ethos of primary schools goes live today Irishman charged with murder of American nurse in Hungary Annual Report TU Dublin under-reported losses last year by €3.85m amidst 'deteriorating' financial position Harris annoyed FG got heat over 'smear the bejaysus' when it was FF who hired Yates The Daily Poll Have you ever been interrailing? Former hurler DJ Carey sentenced to over five years after faking cancer to con money out of people Free Travel Eighteen-year-olds have ten days to get a free interrail pass Sister Stanislaus Kennedy remembered as a tireless advocate with 'a spine of tempered steel' rainy south east Six counties to come under 12-hour Status Yellow rain warning from midnight more from us Investigates Money Diaries The Journal TV Journal Media Advertise With Us About FactCheck Our Network FactCheck Knowledge Bank Terms & Legal Notices Terms of Use Cookies & Privacy Advertising Competition more from us TV Listings GAA Fixtures The Video Review Journal Media Advertise With Us Our Network The Journal FactCheck Knowledge Bank Terms & Legal Notices Terms of Use Cookies & Privacy Advertising Competition © 2025 Journal Media Ltd Terms of Use Cookies & Privacy Advertising Competition Switch to Desktop Switch to Mobile The Journal supports the work of the Press Council of Ireland and the Office of the Press Ombudsman, and our staff operate within the Code of Practice. You can obtain a copy of the Code, or contact the Council, at https://www.presscouncil.ie, PH: (01) 6489130, Lo-Call 1800 208 080 or email: mailto:info@presscouncil.ie Report an error, omission or problem: Your Email (optional) Create Email Alert Create an email alert based on the current article Email Address One email every morning As soon as new articles come online

Guess You Like

One Wonderful Night Exclusive Clip Features Fight Over Fiyero
One Wonderful Night Exclusive Clip Features Fight Over Fiyero
EXCLUSIVE: Jonathan Bailey mig...
2025-11-04