The Guardian (USA)

UK minister travels to Belfast for talks as Northern Ireland crisis grows

- Rory Carroll and Lisa O'Carroll

The Northern Ireland secretary, Brandon Lewis, has flown to Belfast for emergency talks to calm tensions as police revealed that around 600 people were involved in disturbanc­es on Wednesday, in what they described as a scale of violence not seen for decades.

With parts of Belfast scarred and amid a growing political crisis, the Northern Ireland assembly united in its condemnati­on of a seventh night of rioting – including the petrol-bombing of a bus – and agreed a motion calling for an end to the violence and support for the rule of law.

Lewis was due to hold virtual meetings with leaders of all five parties in the Northern Ireland executive including the Democratic Unionist party (DUP), Sinn Féin and the Alliance party.

Northern Ireland was plunged into crisis after violence escalated at the intersecti­on between loyalist and nationalis­t communitie­s in the Shankill and Springfiel­d areas, with a petrol bomb attack on a bus driver who was steering clear of protests and missiles hurled over a “peace wall”.

Police said rioters had thrown petrol bombs, bottles, masonry and fireworks, and a Belfast Telegraph photograph­er was attacked. Police fired six plastic bullets known as attenuatin­g energy projectile­s, or AEPs, on Wednesday night. Eight officers were injured in the unrest and two men aged 28 and 18 were arrested on suspicion of riotous behaviour.

Some signs of tensions easing emerged on Thursday as the Ulster Political Research Group, which is linked to the paramilita­ry Ulster Defence Associatio­n, called for an end to the violence, saying “street disturbanc­es will not solve our issues”. The Loyalist Communitie­s Council, which represents loyalist paramilita­ry groups, reportedly met on Thursday afternoon but failed to reach agreement on a statement condemning the violence.

Sources said a meeting of party leaders including the DUP, Sinn Féin, Alliance and the SDLP may take place on Friday morning.

Lewis said: “I will be meeting with community, faith and political leaders. Following engagement earlier today, I welcome the statement from the executive and join them in appealing for calm. I will do all I can to continue to facilitate further constructi­ve discussion­s on the way forward over the coming days. I remain in close contact with the prime minister to keep him updated.”

The meetings follow an emergency session of Northern Ireland’s powershari­ng executive to debate the ongoing violence.

Simon Byrne, the chief constable of the Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI), briefed party leaders on the security situation on Thursday before the debate. Arlene Foster, the first minister and DUP leader, spoke with Byrne, marking a sharp turnaround from her refusal to meet him earlier this week despite escalating violence.

The DUP has demanded the chief constable’s resignatio­n over policing of republican funerals, but Foster did not repeat that demand in a tweet after the meeting. She condemned the violence as unjustifie­d and unjustifia­ble. “Those responsibl­e must be subject to the full rigour of the law,” she said.

The shadow Northern Ireland secretary, Louise Haigh, accused Boris Johnson of being responsibl­e for a loss of trust in the loyalist community, citing his statements about Brexit in the run-up to the 2019 general election.

“It is Northern Ireland’s deep misfortune that the person who bears a shared responsibi­lity for safeguardi­ng the agreement has placed such little value on his words, and has shown such little regard for the consequenc­es of his decisions.

“To make a promise as he did when he stood up in Northern Ireland and vowed to the unionist community that he would never impose a sea border, and then just a few months later do exactly that, showed a profound lack of integrity,” she said.

There were reports that loyalists are planning fresh protests this weekend, a prospect that will alarm the British and Irish government­s.

Officers were injured on Wednesday night when masked youths in the loyalist Shankill Road area hurled petrol bombs and rocks and sent a burning, empty bus careering down the street. Kevin Scott, a Belfast Telegraph photograph­er, was assaulted and his camera smashed.

Youths on the adjacent nationalis­t Springfiel­d Road hurled missiles over a “peace wall” on to the loyalist side, triggering a fusillade in response. Mobs skirmished when one of the gates in the wall was prised open and set alight.

“Calm is needed on BOTH sides of the gates before we are looking at a tragedy. These are scenes we hoped had been confined to history,” the Police Federation tweeted.

At least 55 police officers have been wounded during the seven nights of disturbanc­es, with trouble switching between Belfast, Derry, Newtownabb­ey and Carrickfer­gus.

Loyalist anger at policing, a perception of nationalis­t ascendance and the consequenc­es of Brexit, along with criminal gang activity, have fuelled the riots. It is among the worst rioting since the 2013 flag protests, and comes as Northern Ireland prepares to mark the centenary of its foundation dating from the 1921 partition of Ireland.

Unionist parties have been accused of tacitly encouragin­g unrest by demanding the resignatio­n of the chief constable over the force’s alleged favouritis­m towards Sinn Féin during the policing of republican funerals, notably

that of Bobby Storey, which drew an estimated 2,000 people including Sinn Féin leaders last June during lockdown restrictio­ns.

Critics have accused the DUP of stoking the controvers­y to deflect loyalist anger over the party’s role in the creation of a trade border down the Irish Sea. The justice minister, Naomi Long of the Alliance party, said “dishonesty” over Brexit had fuelled resentment.

Youths interviewe­d during protests in Newtownabb­ey and the Shankill Road on Thursday cited the sea border, alleged police bias and a sense that Protestant­s had become second-class citizens as the reasons they were carrying rocks and bottles. In some cases older men appeared to be directing them, but it is unclear if major paramilita­ry groups were involved.

The Irish and British government­s expressed grave concern at the attacks on police, the bus driver and the photograph­er. “The way to resolve difference­s is through dialogue, not violence or criminalit­y,” Boris Johnson tweeted.

Some in Westminste­r urged the prime minister to visit Northern Ireland. Haigh said Johnson needed to step up to protect a “fragile” peace process.

“This moment demands leadership,” she said. “The prime minister must convene cross-party talks in Northern Ireland, and engage with the joint custodians to the Belfast/Good Friday agreement, the Irish government to find solutions and address tensions.”

Simon Coveney, Ireland’s foreign minister, said political leaders needed to come together to cool tensions.

“This needs to stop before somebody is killed or seriously injured,” he told RTÉ. “These are scenes we haven’t seen in Northern Ireland for a very long time, they are scenes that many people thought were consigned to history and I think there needs to be a collective effort to try to defuse tension.”

 ?? Photograph: Paul Faith/AFP/Getty Images ?? The remains of a burnt-out bus on the loyalist Shankill Road in Belfast on Thursday.
Photograph: Paul Faith/AFP/Getty Images The remains of a burnt-out bus on the loyalist Shankill Road in Belfast on Thursday.

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