Irish Daily Mail

POLICE BLITZED WITH 30 PETROL BOMBS IN NORTH

‘Orchestrat­ed attack’ on weekend of loyalist thuggery

- By Rebecca Black ‘Sent a dangerous message’ news@dailymail.ie

SOME 30 petrol bombs were thrown at police in what has been termed an ‘orchestrat­ed attack’ during a further night of disorder in the North over the Easter weekend.

Police were attacked in Newtownabb­ey on the outskirts of Belfast on Saturday, after violent scenes in the Sandy Row area of the city as well as in Derry on Friday.

Police said it was the fifth consecutiv­e night of disorder in Derry on Friday, when 12 officers were injured by a large group throwing masonry, bottles, petrol bombs and fireworks.

A total of 27 police officers were injured on Good Friday across Belfast and Derry.

North Area Commander, Chief Superinten­dent Davy Beck said 30 petrol bombs were thrown at officers and three cars were set alight in Newtownabb­ey on Saturday.

He said from around 7.30pm to 10.30pm a crowd of 20 to 30 people, including young people and older men, some of whom were wearing masks, gathered in the O’Neill Road/Cloughfern area.

‘In total, 30 petrol bombs were thrown at police and three vehicles were hijacked and set on fire,’ he said.

‘One man, aged 47, was arrested and he currently remains in

27 police officers were injured

police custody.’ Mr Beck said it was an ‘orchestrat­ed attack on police’.

‘My officers put on their uniform every day and go out into the community they serve, not knowing what lies ahead of them,’ he said.

‘However, this does not deter them from turning up every day to do their duty.

‘No one, no matter what line of work they are in, deserves to be subjected to any kind of violence.

‘The officers who serve the Newtownabb­ey area are fathers, mothers, brothers and sisters, they have families who wait every day on their loved ones coming home, hoping they have not been injured, or worse.’

He added: ‘We are living in unpreceden­ted times, dealing with a global pandemic, no one needs the added pressure of disorder in their community.

‘I would appeal to those who are taking to the streets to stop immediatel­y, their actions are causing nothing but harm and distress to the very communitie­s they claim they are representi­ng.’

On the same night, a security alert in Larne, Co. Antrim, was declared to be a hoax.

The scenes come amid tensions within loyalism across Northern Ireland. Loyalists and unionists are angry about post-Brexit trading arrangemen­ts which they claim have created barriers between Northern Ireland and the rest of the UK.

In Co. Antrim, a recent series of drug seizures against the South East Antrim UDA – a renegade faction of the main grouping – have caused particular ill feeling towards police. The faction is believed to have been behind the disturbanc­es in Newtownabb­ey on Saturday.

Tensions ramped up further this week following a controvers­ial decision not to prosecute 24 Sinn Féin politician­s for attending a large-scale republican funeral during Covid-19 restrictio­ns.

All the main unionist parties have demanded the resignatio­n of PSNI Chief Constable Simon Byrne, claiming he has lost the confidence of their community.

DUP leader Arlene Foster and other unionist parties have condemned the violence.

Sinn Féin MLA Gerry Kelly claimed the disturbanc­es were ‘a direct consequenc­e of the actions of political unionism’.

‘The disturbanc­es in loyalist areas across the North are an outworking of the DUP’s rhetoric and underminin­g of the PSNI and criminal justice system,’ he said.

‘By their words and actions they have sent a dangerous message to young people in loyalist areas.

‘The DUP and political unionist leaders need to show leadership and end the incendiary rhetoric.’

Meanwhile, seven people have been charged with rioting after the disturbanc­es in the Sandy Row area.

Four adults – three men aged 25, 21 and 18, and a woman, aged 19 – have been charged with rioting.

All are due to appear at Belfast Magistrate­s’ Court on April 30.

Three teenagers, aged 17, 14 and 13, have also been charged with rioting. They are due to appear at Belfast Youth Court on April 30.

As is normal procedure, all charges will be reviewed by Northern Ireland’s Public Prosecutio­n Service.

An eighth person arrested in connection with the unrest on Friday night, a man aged 19, has been released on police bail pending further inquiries.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Belfast burning: A rioter throws a missile at a police vehicle
Belfast burning: A rioter throws a missile at a police vehicle

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Ireland