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Irish PM warns of ‘spiral back’ as N.Ireland wracked by week of riots

Yesterday marks 23rd anniversary of 1998 Good Friday Agreement

Updated 5 years ago · Published on 11 Apr 2021 8:30PM

Irish PM warns of ‘spiral back’ as N.Ireland wracked by week of riots
Fireworks exploding on police vehicles during clashes in Belfast on Friday night. – AFP pic, April 11, 2021

BELFAST – Irish prime minister Micheal Martin warned against a “spiral back” into sectarian conflict in Northern Ireland yesterday, as a week-long streak of riots raised fears for the future of a fragile peace in the British province.

Police issued no statements on unrest here yesterday, and the streets appeared calm in the regional capital which has been marred by rioting from pro-UK unionists and pro-Ireland nationalists in the longest run of violence in recent years.

On Friday night, 14 officers were injured as petrol bombs and masonry were thrown in a unionist enclave, police said.

A car was also “hijacked and set on fire and pushed towards police lines”, as the total number of officers injured in recent disorder reached 88.

Elsewhere on Friday, police clashed with a crowd of 40 in the northern town of Coleraine and a man was charged with “possessing petrol bombs in suspicious circumstances” following disorder in Newtownabbey, a suburb north of here.

Yesterday marked the 23rd anniversary of the 1998 Good Friday Agreement, which wound down the three decades-long sectarian conflict over British rule in Northern Ireland, which claimed 3,500 lives.

“We owe it to the agreement generation and indeed future generations not to spiral back to that dark place of sectarian murders and political discord,” Irish Prime Minister Micheal Martin said yesterday.

“There is now a particular onus on those of us who currently hold the responsibility of political leadership to step forward and play our part and ensure that this cannot happen.”

Irish Foreign Minister Simon Coveney said it “has been a difficult and worrying week”.

“This anniversary comes as a reminder of the responsibilities we all have, as well as what politics, determination and dialogue can achieve,” he said.

“That is the spirit we need now.”

A divided region 

The most bitter unrest in recent years has mainly emanated from the pro-UK unionist community.

Resentment is simmering in some quarters over apparent economic dislocation due to Brexit and existing tensions with pro-Irish nationalist communities.

But the violence has since spread into the nationalist community in the divided British province.

“It is incumbent on all of us to support Northern Ireland in leaving its divisive past behind,” said Britain’s Northern Ireland Secretary, Brandon Lewis.

On Thursday night, nationalist rioters hurled petrol bombs, fireworks, bricks and bottles at ranks of armoured police vehicles preventing their advance to a unionist area.

Officers deployed a water cannon for the first time in years and drove back the surging crowds late into the night.

The previous evening, the gates in a “peace wall” separating unionist and nationalist neighbourhoods were set alight.

Police said crowds from either side broke through to attack each other with petrol bombs, missiles and fireworks.

On Friday, numerous marches had been planned in unionist communities here but they were cancelled following the news that Prince Philip – the husband of Queen Elizabeth II – had died. 

“Protests are postponed as a mark of respect to the queen and the royal family,” a hastily erected placard in one unionist neighbourhood announced. – AFP, April 11, 2021

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