The Fall of Europe: Somali Migrant Stabs Twin Teenage Girls in Dublin Street Attack

Gardaí Knew He Was Dangerous But Let Him Stay

THE FALL

4/7/20262 min read

Another day, another horror in Ireland.

On Saturday night in Dublin’s busy Dame Street, two 18-year-old twin sisters were subjected to unwanted sexual advances by a Somali national named Shando Alfa. When they firmly rejected him and told him to leave them alone, he exploded in rage. He grabbed a broken glass bottle and launched a frenzied stabbing attack, slashing one sister in the head and hand and striking the other in the head. A brave male passer-by who tried to intervene was also stabbed in the head.

All three victims were hospitalized. One sister required staples in deep head wounds and faces further surgery. Shards of glass were pulled from their injuries. The attacker was arrested nearby, still holding the broken bottle.

Gardaí have admitted they have been aware of Shando Alfa since last year. He has a documented history of violence, public order offences, and unlawful possession of weapons. Just weeks earlier he was given a seven-month suspended sentence for similar behaviour. Yet he was still in Ireland, still free to roam the streets, and still able to carry out this vicious assault on two young Irish girls.

How does a known violent migrant remain in the country after repeated brushes with the law? The Gardaí themselves say they “can’t explain” how he got in or why he is still here.

This is the reality of Ireland’s open-border experiment. The authorities know the risks. They know the individuals. They simply choose not to act.

The Broader Pattern: Leniency, Denial, and Native Victims

Shando Alfa is not an outlier. He is the predictable result of years of mass migration combined with a justice system that treats native safety as secondary to political correctness and “diversity.” Ireland has seen a surge in violent attacks by foreign nationals, particularly against women and girls, while politicians and media continue to downplay or deny the connection.

The girls were not in a dark alley at 3 a.m. They were on one of Dublin’s busiest streets in the early hours of a Saturday night. They were doing nothing more than existing as young Irish women. For that, they were punished with a broken bottle to the head and hand by a man the state had already flagged as dangerous.

This is the Fall of Europe in its most personal and brutal form: native daughters attacked in their own capital, while the system that imported the threat refuses to protect them or remove the danger.

The Irish government, like so many across the continent, has prioritised the feelings and “rights” of migrants over the safety of its own people. When the inevitable violence occurs, the response is either silence, deflection, or mild hand-wringing about “integration challenges.”

Meanwhile, Irish families are left picking up the pieces and literally stitching up their daughters’ wounds while the perpetrator sits in custody knowing he will likely face another soft sentence or suspended term.

We will continue to document these stories in the “The Fall” series because the pattern is now undeniable. Mass migration without assimilation is not enrichment. It is replacement, and the human cost is being paid by European women and girls every single week.

The authorities knew about Shando Alfa. They chose not to act.

How many more Irish girls have to be stabbed, raped, or murdered before the Irish people demand their country back?

Sources: Tommy Robinson New Era X thread, Irish media reports, Garda statements, and April 2026 coverage.