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Irish police clear fuel protesters from central Dublin after days of gridlock

By Thomson Reuters Apr 12, 2026 | 3:18 AM

DUBLIN, April 12 (Reuters) – Irish police cleared tractors and trucks on Sunday that had been blocking traffic in central Dublin ​for five days in a protest ‌against surging fuel prices as the government moves to limit the economic fallout from a wave of blockades.

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

The protests caused major transport disruption in Dublin and ⁠left about a third of ⁠the petrol stations in the ​country without fuel, creating what Finance Minister Simon ​Harris described as a “very dangerous moment” for the ‌country.

Police on Saturday cleared the blockade nL1N40U04B from the country’s only oil refinery and on Sunday said they had started an operation ⁠to clear a blockade of Galway Port.

The government has refused to negotiate with the protesters, who included ⁠farmers, drivers ‌and contractors. But it is ⁠holding talks with agricultural and transport ​industry ‌groups about measures to alleviate fuel ​cost hikes.

A ⁠poll in the Sunday Independent newspaper showed that 56% of voters surveyed supported the protesters, but that most supporters of the two governing parties opposed them.

(Writing by Conor Humphries; Editing by ​David Holmes)