Tomás Ó Flatharta

Looking at Things from the Left

Archive for the ‘Congo’ Category

Still Hurt by Bertie Ahern singling out Congolese people, loss of a community member opened a fresh wound, they say

leave a comment »

The Life and Death of Yves Sakila

Shamim Malekmian reports for the Dublin Inquirer.

People at the vigil for Yves Sakila on Henry Street. Photo by Shamim Malekmian.

Link :
Still Hurt by Bertie Ahern singling out Congolese people, loss of a community member opened a fresh wound, they say

“It’s literally George Floyd on the streets of Dublin. I can’t believe that scene and that guy with his knee on his neck,” he said, in a Zoom meeting on Monday night.

The emergency meeting was organised by the Africa Centre for Black people across the country to come together and process their feelings about what had happened on Friday – and strategise on how to respond. 

More than 100 people had joined.

On Friday, Yves Sakila was pinned to the ground on Henry Street by a few men, a video circulated on social media showed. 

At one point, one of them, an older man in a black suit, throws himself onto his neck and pushes down with his right knee.

A few seconds later, he removes his knee, but keeps pressing on his neck with his hands. Someone else is pinning his head to the ground. Other men press on his body.

You can hear Sakila grunting and moaning amidst the chatter of the passersby.

By the end of it, he seemed unconscious. He was later pronounced dead. 

Read the rest of this entry »

Yves Sakila – A death on Henry Street, Dublin 1 – Reject and Crush Racism – All Refugees Welcome

with one comment

On May 19 2026 Ebun A Joseph posted this important message on her facebook page

Yves Sakila is dead. A man lost his life on the streets of Dublin over an alleged case of shoplifting. Let that sink in.

What makes this even more disturbing is that, had the 4:44 minutes footage not emerged, many people would likely have accepted a simplified version of events without questioning what actually happened. The video raises deeply troubling questions: multiple men restraining one individual, excessive force being used, knees pressed onto his body, hands pulled back. It is impossible to watch without feeling shock and real distress.

No one should die over an unproven allegation of shoplifting. What were they thinking? Are people losing their humanity? 🤐

A life has been lost over something allegedly taken from a shop — something replaceable. Yves Sakila is not replaceable. He was a human being.

There is also a wider and painful reality that many Black people recognise too well: the disproportionate suspicion, surveillance, and criminalisation of Black bodies in public spaces, including shopping centres and retail environments. These experiences cannot be separated from the public concern and grief surrounding this case.

This cannot become another social media moment that fades away without accountability or answers. There must be a thorough, transparent, and independent investigation into all the circumstances surrounding Yves Sakila’s death.

A man is dead. His family deserves answers. The public deserves accountability. And communities deserve reassurance that justice applies equally to everyone.

Protests are mushrooming :

Read the rest of this entry »