Friday, February 13 2026 - At least 300 people have protested at the Department of Justice over the deportation of a Nigerian family from their community in south Dublin, Ireland to South Africa.
Titilayo Oluwakemi Oyekanmi and her three sons, Samuel,
Joseph and Genesis, arrived in Ireland in 2023 from South Africa and last year
received a deportation order after their asylum application was rejected.
The planned deportation which was supposed to take place on
Thursday, February 12, 2026 has been delayed for four weeks after the
protest.
Ms Oyekanmi said her family face xenophobic threats and
fears for the safety of her three sons if they are forced to return to South
Africa.
Letters seeking to overturn a decision to deport the
Oyekanmi family to South Africa later this week were handed in to the
department on February 10, 2026.
Supporters say the family, which includes three children aged between five and 18 have integrated into schools and sports clubs in the community.
The Department of Justice has said that if a person's
application for international protection is refused and they are ordered to
leave the State they must do so.
Among the organisers of the protest was Cara McGuinness, the
mother of Charlie who is a school friend of 14-year-old Joseph Oyekanmi who
attends Gonzaga College.
“Charlie came home to me full of stories about this
incredible sportsperson and he was just in awe of this wonderful boy who is
kind and heartfelt and who is brilliant in the class.”
Ms McGuinness expressed hope that the Minister for Justice
would reconsider the decision to deport the family on Thursday.
"We want to make sure that Joseph, his mum, his
brothers, that they feel our support and we want to make sure that the Minister
for Justice knows that this is a family that is an addition to Ireland.
"These
are good people and they've been here for three years. They've put down roots
in our community and they have added so much to our community and we want them
to stay.”
The family arrived in Ireland in 2023 from South Africa which is regarded as a safe country by the Irish State.
Their
asylum application and appeal were rejected. Partner and Head of Immigration
Law in KOD Lions solicitors Stephen Kirwan who has been representing the family
for the last eight to 10 months believes the minister should overturn the
decision.
Speaking
after the protest, Mr Kirwan said there were matters that were not considered,
including the families' integration into society.
"I
believe if the minister does consider the representations that have been made
by hundreds of students, hundreds of concerned parents, but also people who
know the family, I think it's a slightly different view to when the initial
decision was made. We're simply saying we understand there's a deportation
order but we also understand that there are exceptional circumstances and
either consider them and reject their case if that's what you're going to do,
or actually listen to what the people are saying here today," he said.
Many of
Joseph's school friends at Gonzaga College were unaware of his predicament.
They knew him as a hugely talented 14-year-old athlete and rugby player who got
great grades.
His Gonzaga
classmates including Charlie Donovan were amongst those who handed in letters
to the department appealing for the family to remain in Ireland.
"Joseph's
a great friend and has great friends in school and is a really good student and
a really good athlete as well," he said.
Another
classmate Luca Conan said Joseph had been "one of the best people" he
had met in school.
“He's really smart and he really brings up a standard in our class. He's very kind and caring and it'd be a shame to lose him."
Sam Kennedy
knew Joseph through athletics before they attended Gonzaga.
"I'm
in his athletics club. And the moment I came to Gonzaga he introduced me to all
the people in my class and made me feel really loved and welcomed.
“Whether
it's on the rugby pitch or athletics, he always gives 100% and works for the
team. And he never has a big ego, regardless of how bright he is at his
sports.”
Jasper
Gilmartin said he and his classmates were shocked when they heard about
Joseph's situation because he always attended a school smiling.
“He always
comes into school with a smile on his face. He's an amazing athlete and it
would be horrible to lose him.”
A
spokesperson for the Department of Justice said that while it could not comment
on individual cases, the department takes "all necessary steps" to
manage the international protection process efficiently and effectively, while
"ensuring the integrity of those processes is maintained at all
times".
It said
people can apply for international protection in Ireland if they have come to
escape persecution in their own country or if they cannot return to their
country because they have a well-founded fear for their safety.
It noted
that both the International Protection Office (IPO) and the International
Protection Appeals Tribunal (IPAT) are fully independent in deciding whether or
not to grant international protection.
Each
application is examined individually on its own merits, in line with national
and international asylum law.
"People
who have been refused international protection and have exhausted the appeals
avenues through the IPAT are entitled to submit a request to review their
permission to remain where their circumstances have changed since their initial
application.
"If
successful, they will be granted permission to remain in Ireland. If the
permission to remain review is refused the persons will have the option of
voluntary return, which if not accepted will in the normal course lead to the
making of a deportation order," it said.
It
concluded that before a deportation order is made, the person is offered
assistance to return home voluntarily.
"This
is the preferred option and the department runs a voluntary return programme to
assist people to return prior to a deportation order issuing," it
said.
Ms Oyekanmi, who has completed her QQI Level 5 in healthcare, had planned to work as a care assistant in Ireland.
“I want my
children to be happy, because we had to run away from threats to our lives in
South Africa. We escaped kidnapping. That same boy that escaped that
kidnapping, now they want to send him back to that same country. The xenophobic
attacks are still going on in South Africa,” she said.
“I was born
in Nigeria, gave birth to all my children in South Africa. South Africa is not
supporting me, my life, my children’s lives, and my children have already
settled in Ireland. They are doing very well sports-wise and
education-wise.”
Ms Oyekanmi
said she mainly wants to stay in Ireland for the health and safety of her three
sons, who have settled well into their community in south Dublin, performing
well in the classroom and in the sporting arena.
She pleaded
to the Justice Minister Jim O’Callaghan to allow her family to remain in
Ireland.
“I ‘m not
here for any benefit from the country. I ’m a hard-working lady. I can work for
myself and my children. I want to focus on their future. Their future means so
much to me and I don't want to jeopardize that.”
Julie
Clements, who runs the Gathering Grounds Café in Kiltiernan, where Oyekanmi
volunteers, said: “Titilayo has documentation as a shop owner in South Africa
that, as she put it, thugs came in at gunpoint and told her to leave the
community or they would k!ll her. “She said they then tracked her down again,
and it's because Nigerians in South Africa are discriminated against by both
blacks and whites.”





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