Irish Police Move to Break Blockade of Oil Refinery by Protesters Angry at Fuel Prices

DUBLIN, April 11 (Reuters) – Irish police ⁠took ⁠action to clear ⁠protesters blockading the country’s only oil ​refinery on Saturday after a senior government minister ‌said protests over surging ‌fuel prices had created a “very dangerous ⁠economic moment” ⁠for Ireland.

Protesters angered by a more than 20% ​rise in diesel prices since the outbreak of the U.S.-Israeli war against Iran nL6N40S1FU, have used ​tractors and trucks nL8N40R116 to block the Whitegate refinery, ⁠two ⁠ports, a fuel terminal ⁠and ​a number of roads in the capital Dublin.

Hundreds ​of petrol stations ⁠have been left without fuel, endangering some emergency services, the government has said.

Police on Saturday detained at least one protester, pushed back ⁠others and dispatched equipment designed to move large vehicles ⁠at the Whitegate refinery, footage from state broadcaster RTE showed.

Police issued video on social media showing a number of oil trucks entering the refinery.

The action came after Finance Minister Simon Harris said the protests had caused an extremely dangerous moment for the ⁠economy. Prime Minister Micheal Martin on Friday said nL1N40T0F8 the country was in danger of being forced to turn away oil deliveries ​from the country.

(Writing by Conor Humphries. ​Editing by Jane Merriman)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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