Public health inspectors visiting the Mount Street encampment of asylum seekers in Dublin heard that rats had been running around in daylight, saw street drains blocked with soiled toilet paper, and warned of a substantial risk of infectious disease spread.
The HSE health protection team said that asylum applicants living there had no choice but to use the streets as toilets during the night while seagulls and other birds rummaged through food waste at the site.
The HSE staff could not even tell how many people were living there, at first believing there were 200 but later discovering there were 273 when the encampment was dismantled.
When the inspection took place in late April, the public health staff saw “open defecation, faeces, including diarrhoea … and urination”.
Drains were found to be blocked with soiled toilet paper and garbage was evident all around the encampment.
The public health report, which was released under Freedom of Information laws, said: “[Department of Justice] staff had witnessed rodents at the site, even during the day. Rodents (and birds), as vectors of disease, further add to risk.”
It said trying to clean the site with power hoses was challenging because of the tightly packed tents and the risk of spreading contamination further.
Concerns were also raised that there could be drug waste on the site – including dirty needles – that had the potential to spread “blood-borne viruses”.
The report said even the most basic public health standards, which included access to fresh water, sanitation services, and proper waste collection were not in place.
It added: “The physical, psychosocial and emotional pressures caused by a lack of security and poor shelter compound the stresses experienced by these people, significantly undermining their health and well-being, and ability to recover.”