VISITING Migration Minister of Ireland Colm Brophy has assured that the Irish government will not tolerate “small and rare instances” of violence against Indians in Ireland and will do everything to tackle them.

In an exclusive interview to Shubhajit Roy, Brophy, who’s in India on an official visit, spoke about Ireland’s position on migration, US President Donald Trump’s decisions, wars in Ukraine and Gaza and the Indian government’s push to shed “colonial mindset”.

We had a very positive discussion. The relationship between Ireland and India is very strong… The Indian community is now one of the largest communities in Ireland, and there’s a very positive experience… So we are excited how we can deepen and strengthen the ties, both in terms of trade, and the wonderful contribution Indian people are making to Irish life…

As a EU member state, we will be introducing a new regulation. It originally comes from the European Union Migration Act and will be introduced into Irish law as well under a separate legislation. This will harmonise the process by which we will handle migration in some areas, in terms of international protection. More people are coming from India to Ireland to work… to study. So we will launch later this year, a new policy on migration and integration… It will be about managing the overall numbers, how people when they come into Ireland are given opportunities to work, and giving people — who’ve been here a long time — the opportunity to attain our citizenship.

Well, the US President has taken a particular viewpoint as to how he wants to handle inward migration in his country. It’s not a viewpoint, I think, that’s shared by us in Ireland, and it’s not a viewpoint that’s shared, I believe, by many other European states.

Ireland has a very large Indian community — people who are friends of mine, people who I work with, people who are members of my political party… Unfortunately, last summer, a very small minority of extremists… chose to carry out a series of a small number but…very nasty attacks on members of the Indian community… Myself and the Deputy Prime Minister…we immediately met the Indian community leaders in Ireland.  We would work together… The Irish government will not tolerate these small, rare instances… violent attacks on people who are in our country, contributing, working, raising their families and wanting to just live their life in a peaceful way is totally unacceptable to us…

The broader trajectory of the political relationship comes down to strengthening the contacts — I am one of the first of probably at least three ministerial visits by Irish ministers to India in the first half of this year. We also want to schedule a visit at the Prime Minister’s level between our two countries. But I think one of the key…aspects to the growth in the relationship will be the possibility, which we want to see very firmly and advocate for, an EU-India Free Trade Agreement (FTA).

Currently, between goods and services, we have a multi-billion pound trade with India, but the potential for growth in that area is exponential.

There is also a lot of connection between the people of Ireland and an understanding of the plight of the Palestinian people…what was a horrendous terror attack which…left many Israeli citizens dead, that should never…be acceptable to any state. But the response to that action by a State must be proportionate, and it should seek to target what was the terrorist attack, and not collectively punish a nation of people.

We collectively support the European position on this, that Greenland is part of Denmark. It’s part of an EU member state, It’s part of NATO. Any decision around Greenland is a matter for the people of Greenland and the people of Denmark, and it is not a matter for any one State to decide arbitrarily.

The Indian government’s position over the last number of years, that I would think is the most important thing that they’ve done is to drive economic prosperity. And what we have learned from our experience in Ireland is that the best way which a country can take its place in the world is through economic transformation… When that is achieved, that develops the way and the mind and the way in which a country views itself.

Editorial Context & Insight

Original analysis and synthesis with multi-source verification

Verified by Editorial Board

Methodology

This article includes original analysis and synthesis from our editorial team, cross-referenced with multiple primary sources to ensure depth, accuracy, and balanced perspective. All claims are fact-checked and verified before publication.

Editorial Team

Senior Editor

Aisha Patel

Specializes in India coverage

Quality Assurance

Associate Editor

Fact-checking and editorial standards compliance

Multi-source verification
Fact-checked
Expert analysis