Belfast: Emergency Stormont meeting after night of violence

By Jayne McCormack BBC News NI Political Reporter

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image copyright Reuters
image caption A bus was set on fire during another night of violence in Belfast

An emergency meeting of Northern Ireland's power-sharing executive will take place on Thursday morning after a night of violence in west Belfast.

During several hours of disorder police officers were attacked, petrol bombs were thrown and a bus was burnt.

Condemnation of the violence was led by Prime Minister Boris Johnson who said the scenes "deeply concerned" him.

The violence happened on both sides of an interface in the loyalist Shankill and nationalist Springfield Road areas.

media caption Belfast violence: Youths attack bus

The BBC's Ireland correspondent Emma Vardy said crowds of a few hundred people on each side were throwing petrol bombs in both directions.

On Thursday the Stormont assembly is being recalled to debate violence over Easter that left 41 police officers injured .

Politicians will consider a motion calling for an "immediate and complete end" to violence in loyalist areas.

The motion brought by Alliance Party asks MLAs to unequivocally condemn those involved and support the rule of law.

image copyright Pacemaker
image caption There was widespread disorder at the Shankill and Springfield Road areas on Wednesday night

Leaders of the main political parties in Northern Ireland have condemned Wednesday night's violence, as has Taoiseach (Irish Prime Minister) Micheál Martin.

"Now is the time for the two governments and leaders on all sides to work together to defuse tensions and restore calm," he wrote on social media.

Mr Johnson said: "The way to resolve differences is through dialogue, not violence or criminality."

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All of other the main parties have also criticised the trouble but they are divided over its causes.

In recent days 10 people have been arrested as a result of rioting by gangs of people, some as young as 13.

Unionist leaders have attributed the violence to the decision not to prosecute Sinn Féin members attending the funeral of republican Bobby Storey in June 2020.

It was attended by 2,000 mourners - including Deputy First Minister Michelle O'Neill, the Sinn Féin vice-president - at a time when Covid-19 restrictions were in place.

image copyright PA Media
image caption Cars were hijacked and burnt at the gates of an interface area in west Belfast

Unionist leaders have also linked the violence to simmering loyalist tensions over the Irish Sea border imposed as a result of the UK-EU Brexit deal .

Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) leader and First Minister Arlene Foster described the violence as "an embarrassment to Northern Ireland".

"These actions do not represent unionism or loyalism. They... only serve to take the focus off the real law breakers in Sinn Féin," she posted on social media.

image copyright Reuters
image caption Protesters attacked police with petrol bombs and masonry during the disorder

But Sinn Féin, the SDLP, and the Alliance Party have accused unionist politicians of ramping up rhetoric by calling for the Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) Chief Constable Simon Byrne to stand down over the police handling of Mr Storey's funeral.

On Wednesday, Mrs First Minister Foster repeated her call for Mr Byrne to resign.

She said she had a duty to speak out about the PSNI's failure to uphold Covid-19 rules at a number of republican funerals over the past year.

image caption Forty-one police officers have been hurt and 10 people arrested as a result of trouble in loyalist areas of several towns and cities

The assembly recall has the support of the five main Stormont parties and was proposed by Alliance Party leader and Justice Minister Naomi Long.

On Wednesday she said it was "not acceptable to make the police service a lightning rod for people's anger".

She said she hoped the motion would get the Stormont parties to "unite around a call for calm".

It also calls for MLAs to "recognise that leadership comes with responsibility and recommits to upholding a culture of lawfulness in both actions and words".

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