Morning Sun

Rioters ignore pleas for calm as violence flares in Belfast

- By Peter Morrison and Danica Kirka

BELFAST>> Police in Northern Ireland deployed water cannons for the first time in six years Thursday as they tried to disperse protesters who hurled stones, fireworks and gasoline-filled bottles at officers during another night of violence in Belfast.

The violence erupted last week as anger over COVID-19 restrictio­ns and post-brexit trade rules fueled tensions between the Protestant and Catholic communitie­s in Northern Ireland. While the crowds appeared somewhat smaller Thursday, police said a further 19 officers were injured, bringing the total over the past week to 74.

The latest violence came despite appeals from U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson, Irish Premier Micheal Martin and U.S. President Joe Biden to calm tensions.

Northern Ireland’s justice minister, Naomi Long of the centrist Alliance Party, appealed for an end to the “depressing and reckless” scenes.

“My heart goes out to those living in the area who are living with this fear and disturbanc­e,” she wrote on Twitter. “This needs to stop now before lives are lost.”

Earlier Thursday, the Northern Ireland Assembly had unanimousl­y passed a motion calling for an end to the disorder. The region’s power-sharing government, which includes representa­tives from both sides of the sectarian divide, condemned the violence.

“While our political positions are very different on many issues, we are all united in our support for law and order and we collective­ly state our support for policing and for the police officers who have been putting themselves in harm’s way to protect others,” leaders of the five-party government said in a joint statement.

“We, and our department­s, will continue to work together to maximize the support we can give to communitie­s and the (Police Service of Northern Ireland) to prevent further violence and unrest.”

Northern Ireland has seen sporadic outbreaks of street violence since the 1998 Good Friday agreement ended “the Troubles” — decades of bloodshed in which more than 3,000 people died. While the peace accord ended the killing, tensions remain between those who see themselves as British and want to remain part of the United Kingdom, and those who seek reunificat­ion with the Republic of Ireland to the south. The two sides of the debate split largely on religious lines, with Protestant­s generally favoring the status quo and Catholics campaignin­g for reunificat­ion.

 ?? PETER MORRISON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Police use a water cannon at Nationalis­t youths as they block a road near the Peace Wall in West Belfast, Northern Ireland, Thursday.
PETER MORRISON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Police use a water cannon at Nationalis­t youths as they block a road near the Peace Wall in West Belfast, Northern Ireland, Thursday.

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