Tag Archives: Belfast

Fifth night of violence roils Belfast

Police were attacked with petrol bombs and a French press photographer assaulted during a fifth night of violence on the streets of east Belfast, police said.

Clashes broke out as large crowds gathered on the city’s on the Lower Newtownards Road, the Northern Ireland Police Service (PSNI) said.

A police vehicle was struck by two petrol bombs and a number of other missiles, but there were no reports of any injuries, police said.

The French photographer who was assaulted also had his camera stolen.

Four cars were hijacked and set on fire and in the latest wave of unrest.

Trouble also flared in the Mount Vernon area of north Belfast and in the Woodvale Road and North Queen Street areas.

The clashes began on Friday after police tried to enforce a decision banning the Orange Order from marching through a Catholic republican area of the Northern Ireland capital.

About a thousand police officers from mainland Britain had been sent to Northern Ireland in anticipation of tensions over the traditional Twelfth of July parades.

That event is the climax of the Protestant Orange Order’s marching season.

The July 12 parade marks the victory of Protestant king William III of Orange over the deposed Catholic king James II at the Battle of the Boyne in 1690.

It is a flashpoint for tensions between the Protestant and Catholic communities in the province.

Northern Ireland was devastated by three decades of sectarian violence in the 1970s, 1980s and 1990s.

…read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Celtic struggling to find best form, says Lennon

Celtic manager Neil Lennon admits his side are nowhere near their best as they prepare to take on Cliftonville in a vital Champions League qualifier in Belfast on Wednesday.

Lennon’s team have endured a far from ideal preparation for the crucial tie after conceding 12 goals in four friendly defeats on a pre-season tour of Germany disrupted by injuries and star sales.

The Scottish champions could be without a number of key players for the second qualifying round first leg match against the Northern Irish minnows.

Adam Matthews, Gary Hooper and Joe Ledley are all expected to be sidelined, while Kenya midfielder Victor Wanyama, a key figure last season, has been sold to Southampton.

And Lennon says starting their European campaign less than eight weeks since their Scottish Cup win over Hibernian at the end of last season is far from ideal.

“It’s so early, it’s a harsh reality of where we are,” Lennon said.

“We won the cup final at the end of May and we are back in on June 24.

“It’s been staggered and a bit disjointed because we have had a lot of injuries as well.

“I don’t even know what my best team is at the moment or which players I’ll have available to me.

“They are the ups and downs you have to cope with during pre-season, but I don’t think you’ll see us anywhere near our best for another two weeks or so.

“We know how difficult it’s going to be because these games are so early in the season.

“We’ll cover it as best we can but it won’t be easy for us.”

Despite the financial gulf that separates the two sides, Lennon has warned his players against complacency against the team of part-timers, whose tiny Solitude ground has been extended to allow a 5,000 capacity crowd.

“What we can’t get involved in is the party or the carnival atmosphere,” Lennon said. “We have to be professional and go there to do a job.”

One player desperate to play and make an impact at the Parkhead club is Australian international Tom Rogic

The midfielder, who helped the Socceroos book their slot in Brazil next summer with a 1-0 win over Iraq, missed out on Celtic’s run to the Champions League last 16 last season after only joining the club from A-League side Central Coast Mariners in January.

The Scottish champions’ task this season is even tougher as they face three qualifying rounds just to reach the money-spinning group stages of the competition, but Rogic can’t wait to get involved.

“The Champions League will be a new experience for me,” he said.

“It would be a great achievement if I could play a part in it and it would also be good for the club and our season if we could make it into the group stage again. We just have to do our best to make sure we get there.

“I’m sure we’ll be ready for Cliftonville on Wednesday night. The squad is more or less the same and we all know our jobs.

“We’re comfortable playing with each other. We’ve all …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Bombs Thrown at Cops in Belfast Riots

By Ruth Brown

Protestors have been rioting for four nights on the streets of Belfast, after authorities banned Protestants from marching past a Catholic area of the city during a parade last week, reports Bloomberg . During a clash with police today, the protestors threw blast bombs and Molotov cocktails at the cops, who… …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Newser – Home

Readout of the Vice President’s Calls on Support for Building a United Community in Northern Ireland

By The White House

The Vice President spoke with First Minister Robinson and Deputy First Minister McGuinness of Northern Ireland today to welcome the launch of an All-Party Group process to address sensitive issues such as parades and protests; flags, symbols and emblems; and dealing with the past. Underscoring the importance of the All-Party process, the Vice President expressed his deep concern at parade-related violence and attacks on police, and supported calls for calm and respect for rule of law.

The Vice President also spoke with the chair of the All-Party Group process, former U.S. Special Envoy to Northern Ireland Dr. Richard Haass, to pledge the full support of the United States and his personal support in this vital effort. The Vice President and the U.S. Government, along with the British and Irish governments, will stay in close touch with Dr. Haass as he assists the political parties of Northern Ireland in the crucial work of healing the divisions of the past and building a truly shared future.

As the President said in Belfast in June, the people and institutions of Northern Ireland should be commended for the tremendous progress since the 1998 Good Friday Agreement. However, more work remains. Tackling sensitive issues are essential to creating a lasting peace and assuring the road to prosperity for all in Northern Ireland. It will require political courage, creativity, and compromise on the part of all Northern Ireland’s political parties. We welcome the launch of the All-Party process as a necessary step toward building a united community.

…read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at The White House Press Office

Call for calm as Belfast suffers third night of trouble

Northern Ireland’s First Minister Peter Robinson has called for peace as riots erupted in Belfast for the third night running, injuring a police officer.

Seven officers were injured on Saturday after being attacked with petrol bombs by Protestant rioters in the Northern Irish capital, a spokeswoman said.

“It’s very important that this violence stops,” said Robinson.

“It’s very important that cool heads prevail in these circumstances and I hope people will obey the announcement and statement by the Orange Institution that people should desist from violence.

“The only kind of protest that is ever justifiable is a lawful and peaceful protest,” he added.

The Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) said one officer had been injured in Sunday’s clashes.

Bricks, bottles, furniture and other missiles were hurled on Saturday night by hooded youths, some with British flags covering their faces.

The seven officers injured on Saturday did not require hospital treatment and remained on duty.

On Friday night, 32 officers were injured and a leading politician was knocked unconscious by a brick.

About a thousand police officers from mainland Britain were sent to Northern Ireland in anticipation of tensions over the traditional Twelfth of July parades, the pinnacle of the Protestant Orange Order’s marching season.

Trouble flared Friday after police tried to enforce a decision by an adjudication body banning the Orange Order from marching through a Catholic republican area of Belfast.

“The scenes were both shameful and disgraceful,” Chief Constable Matt Baggott of the PSNI told reporters on Saturday.

He criticised leaders in the Orange Order who had called for protests against the decision to block their march through the republican Ardoyne area, saying they had been “reckless”.

Nigel Dodds, the member of parliament for North Belfast, was taken to hospital after being hit on the head with a brick while trying to calm the crowds down on Friday night. He was later discharged.

The July 12 parade marks the victory of Protestant king William III of Orange over the deposed Catholic king James II at the Battle of the Boyne in 1690.

It is a flashpoint for tensions between the Protestant and Catholic communities in the province, which was devastated by three decades of sectarian violence in the 1970s, 1980s and 1990s.

The 1998 Good Friday peace accords largely brought an end to the unrest, known as The Troubles, although sporadic violence and bomb threats continue.

…read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Belfast police attacked in second night of riots

Police in Belfast were attacked with petrol bombs in a second night of violence by Protestant rioters in the Northern Irish capital.

Bricks, bottles, furniture and other missiles were also hurled on Saturday following riots that left 32 officers injured and a politician hospitalised on Friday.

Hooded youths, some with British flags covering their faces, were involved in the clashes in the north of the city.

Police responded by firing baton rounds and deploying water cannon.

The unrest was not as intense as on Friday night, when crowds attacked police with petrol bombs, sticks, fireworks, bricks, bottles, masonry and even a sword.

More than 600 police from mainland Britain had been sent to Northern Ireland in anticipation of tensions over the traditional Twelfth of July parades, the pinnacle of the Protestant Orange Order’s marching season.

A further 400 were sent for Saturday following riots the night before.

Trouble flared Friday after police tried to enforce a decision by an adjudication body banning the Orange Order from marching through a Catholic republican area of Belfast.

“The scenes were both shameful and disgraceful,” Chief Constable Matt Baggott of the Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) told reporters.

He criticised leaders in the Orange Order who had called for protests against the decision to block their march through the republican Ardoyne area.

“Some of their language was emotive and having called thousands of people to protest they had no plan and no control,” Baggott said.

“Rather than being responsible, I think the word for that is reckless.”

The PSNI said 32 officers were injured in Friday night’s violence. Leading Protestant politician Nigel Dodds was taken to hospital after being hit on the head with a brick and knocked out.

Dodds, who represents North Belfast in the British parliament, had been trying to calm the crowds down. He was discharged from hospital early on Saturday.

The July 12 parade marks the victory of Protestant king William III of Orange over the deposed Catholic king James II at the Battle of the Boyne in 1690.

It is a flashpoint for tensions between the Protestant and Catholic communities in the province, which was devastated by three decades of sectarian violence in the 1970s, 1980s and 1990s.

The 1998 Good Friday peace accords largely brought an end to the unrest, known as The Troubles, although sporadic violence and bomb threats continue.

…read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

N. Ireland police reinforced after night of riots

Hundreds of extra police were deployed to Northern Ireland on Saturday following a night of rioting in Belfast that left 32 officers injured and a politician hospitalised.

More than 600 police from other parts of Britain had been sent to the province in anticipation of tensions over the traditional Twelfth of July parades, the pinnacle of the Protestant Orange Order’s marching season.

A police spokesman said a further 400 were due to arrive on Saturday following the riots, in which crowds attacked police with petrol bombs, sticks, fireworks, bricks, bottles, masonry and even a sword.

Trouble flared after police tried to enforce a decision by an adjudication body banning the Orange Order from marching through a Catholic republican area of Belfast.

“The scenes were both shameful and disgraceful,” Chief Constable Matt Baggott of the Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) told reporters.

He criticised leaders in the Orange Order who had called for protests against the decision to block their march through the republican Ardoyne area.

“Some of their language was emotive and having called thousands of people to protest they had no plan and no control,” Baggott said.

“Rather than being responsible, I think the word for that is reckless.”

The PSNI said 32 officers were injured in Friday night’s violence, while leading Protestant politician Nigel Dodds was taken to hospital after being hit on the head with a brick.

Dodds, a member of the Democratic Unionist Party (DUP), was knocked unconcious as he tried to urge the rioters to calm down. He was discharged from hospital early on Saturday.

Northern Ireland First Minister Peter Robinson, the DUP leader who shares power in the government with the Catholic Sinn Fein, urged “cool heads to prevail at this time”.

“Violence is undermining a just cause and runs totally against the wishes of the Orange Order for protest to be entirely peaceful,” he said in a statement.

The July 12 parade marks the victory of Protestant king William III of Orange over the deposed Catholic king James II at the Battle of the Boyne in 1690.

It is a flashpoint for tensions between the Protestant and Catholic communities in the British-ruled province, which was devastated by three decades of sectarian violence in the 1970s, 1980s and 1990s.

The 1998 Good Friday peace accords largely brought an end to the unrest, known as The Troubles, although sporadic violence and bomb threats continue.

…read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

32 police officers injured in Belfast riots

Northern Ireland’s police commander says 32 officers have been wounded and reinforcements are arriving from Britain to combat rioting by Protestant extremists inspired by the Orange Order brotherhood.

Chief Constable Matt Baggott says 400 officers from England, Scotland and Wales are being deployed Saturday on Belfast’s streets to help prevent any direct Catholic-Protestant clashes a day after the Orangemen’s annual July 12 parades descended into chaos in two parts of the capital.

Baggott blamed leaders of the Orange Order for encouraging mobs to try to overwhelm police lines in north Belfast, where officers blocked one small parade from passing a hostile Catholic district.

He says leaders of the anti-Catholic fraternal order behaved recklessly, incited violence and had “no plan” for controlling crowds. The rioting lasted six hours.

…read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Leading politician knocked out in Belfast riots

A leading Northern Irish politician was knocked unconscious by a thrown missile as sectarian tensions spilled over into rioting in Belfast at the climax of the Protestant marching season.

Nigel Dodds, the deputy leader of the Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) — the province’s pro-British, Protestant, conservative largest party — was rushed to hospital Friday after being hit in the clashes between Protestant loyalists and riot police.

It followed a day of what had been peaceful Twelfth of July parades across Northern Ireland, the pinnacle of Orange Order loyalists’ marching season.

Rioting Protestants, some wielding swords, attacked police at a roadblock across the loyalist marchers’ preferred route through north Belfast.

Petrol bombs, sticks, fireworks, bricks, bottles, beer cans, drain pipes, and part of a wall were hurled at police, with teenagers among the rioters.

Shirtless men, and others in football tops, attacked police vehicles and officers in riot gear.

Loyalist bandsmen played sectarian tunes.

Around 20 plastic bullets were fired and water cannon used by police. Seven officers were injured, at least three of them knocked unconscious.

Dodds has represented North Belfast in the British parliament since 2001. He had been urging people to desist from violence at the roadblock.

The BBC reported a man who treated Dodds at the scene as saying: “He grasped his head as he went down. He was knocked out cold. I put him in the recovery position and checked his airway.

“He was unlucky because he was also hit by water cannon as I was trying to administer first aid and he got soaked.”

The July 12 parade is the culmination of the Orange Order’s marching season, and is usually accompanied by violence. The day is a public holiday in Northern Ireland.

The march marks the Protestant king William III’s victory at the Battle of the Boyne in 1690 over the deposed Catholic king James II.

The marchers like to stick to traditional routes but there are often clashes as they sometimes pass through what have now become Catholic areas.

The violence broke out following a decision to bar loyalists from walking through a contested flashpoint area where Catholic republicans have gathered in the past to attack police.

Northern Ireland’s First Minister Peter Robinson, the DUP leader, appealed for “cool heads”.

“Violence and attacks on the Police Service of Northern Ireland and the wider community are wrong, can never be justified and must stop,” he said.

“Those who are using the cover of protest to attack the police are massively damaging the cause they support.”

Around 3,500 people died in the three decades of sectarian violence between Northern Ireland’s Catholics and Protestants that largely ended with a 1998 peace agreement, though sporadic unrest and bomb threats continue.

…read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Sinn Fein chief testifies vs. brother in rape case

Sinn Fein leader Gerry Adams is testifying in a Belfast court against his brother, who is charged with raping his own daughter.

The long-delayed case has raised awkward questions for the Irish nationalist party, because Adams admits he knew for decades about the criminal allegations but didn’t tell police. That reflected Sinn Fein‘s traditional hostility to law enforcement agencies in the British territory of Northern Ireland.

Adams testified Monday that his niece Aine told him of abuse allegations in 1987 when she was 14. He said he confronted his brother in 2000, when his brother admitted one act of abuse.

Liam Adams denies 10 counts of rape, indecent assault and gross indecency from 1977 to 1983. He fled to the Republic of Ireland in 2009 but was extradited in 2011.

From: http://feeds.foxnews.com/~r/foxnews/world/~3/D1wnVKSSq1Y/

Car bomb defused near Northern Ireland border

British Army experts defused a car bomb Saturday that had been abandoned on a rural roadside in Northern Ireland, a threat that is raising concerns about the region’s hosting of the G8 summit later this year.

The Police Service of Northern Ireland said the car contained a beer keg packed with about 60 kilograms (130 pounds) of homemade explosives. Metal kegs often have been used in the construction of Irish Republican Army-style bombs because they are easily portable and produce showers of shrapnel when detonated.

Police District Commander Pauline Shields said detectives suspected that an IRA splinter group planned to blast the nearby police base in the County Fermanagh border town of Lisnaskea, but may have been forced by a police patrol to abandon the bomb short of its target.

It would be the third foiled IRA attack on police installations this month, following two attempted mortar attacks on police stations in Northern Ireland‘s two major cities, Londonderry on March 3 and Belfast on March 15.

The car bomb was left before dawn Friday on a bridge near the Fermanagh village of Derrylin 4 miles (6 kilometers) from Northern Ireland‘s border with the Republic of Ireland.

Police shut the main road connecting the Fermanagh town of Enniskillen with the Irish capital, Dublin, and evacuated several homes for two days as bomb disposal technicians worked slowly in heavy snow and mindful that the bomb could have been placed to lure soldiers and police into the area for an ambush.

Troublingly for Northern Ireland‘s security and political chiefs, the bomb was left just 13 miles (18 kilometers) down the road from the planned venue for the June 17-18 summit of the world’s Group of Eight leaders, including U.S. President Barack Obama and Russian President Vladimir Putin.

British Prime Minister David Cameron, who also is to attend the summit, picked Northern Ireland as host to showcase the British region’s broadly successful peace process — a triumph undercut, in part, by the unrelenting violence of IRA die-hards rooted in the province’s Irish Catholic minority.

“Those responsible (for the car bomb) have neither mandate nor legitimacy. They are totally out of touch with what the vast majority of people in Northern Ireland want,” said Cameron’s senior official in Northern Ireland, Secretary of State Theresa Villiers.

The long-dominant …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Belfast judge finds 2 men liable for Omagh bombing

A Belfast judge has ruled that two reputed leaders of the Real IRA splinter group are liable for damages to victims of the 1998 Omagh car bombing.

Justice John Gillen ruled Wednesday that evidence against Colm Murphy and Seamus Daly strongly linked them to the attack that killed 29 people — the deadliest blast in four decades of Northern Ireland bombings.

Neither man testified during the civil trial, nor were they present to hear the judgment. Their lawyers said they would pursue an appeal in the European Court of Human Rights.

The judgment represented the second chapter in the Omagh families’ efforts to sue alleged Real IRA figures over the attack.

Murphy and Daly were found liable for the Omagh bombing in 2009 but successfully appealed that judgment.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Today in History for 14th March 2013

Historical Events

1869 – Defeat of Titokowaru.
1946 – Belgian government of Spaak, forms
1980 – 3rd Emmy Sports Award presentation
1984 – Gerry Adams, head of Sinn Féin, is seriously wounded in an assassination attempt in central Belfast.
2003 – Start of weekend of protests against war in Iraq that are attended by millions
2005 – Cedar Revolution, where over one and a million Lebanese went into the streets of Beirut to demonstrate against the Syrian military presence in Lebanon, and against the government, following the assassination of Prime Minister Rafik Hariri.

More Historical Events »

Famous Birthdays

1782 – Thomas Hart Benton, (rep), “Old Bullion”
1884 – Winter Haynes Watts, composer
1933 – René Felber, former member of the Swiss Federal Council
1951 – Rick Dees, radio disc jock (KIIS LA)
1958 – Albert Alexandre Louis Pierre, Prince of Monaco/bobsledder (Oly-1988)
1972 – Aris Brimanis, Cleveland, NHL defenseman (Phila Flyers)

More Famous Birthdays »

Famous Deaths

1757 – John Byng, English Admiral executed by firing squad at 52 for for neglecting his duty in defence of Minorca
1883 – Karl Marx, German philosopher (Communist Manifesto), dies at 64
1981 – Ken Barrington, cricketer (82 Tests for England, 6806 runs), dies
1983 – Maurice Ronet, actor (Circle of Love, Frantic, Sphinx), dies at 55
1986 – Marlin Perkins, TV host (Wild Kingdom) at 80
1996 – Nico Kiasashvii, professor of English Literature, dies at 69

More Famous Deaths »

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at HistoryOrb.Com – This Day in History

Jutland survivor to get a facelift

By hnn

It is the last remaining survivor of the 1916 Battle of Jutland with its glory days far behind it.

But now, the future of this historically significant war ship looks decidedly brighter.

HMS Caroline has been given a grant of £1million for urgent repairs.

The vital money will pay for work that will prevent further decay to the Belfast-based light cruiser while plans are finalised for its long-term future in the city.

Works will include making the ship wind and water tight and incorporate the removal of dangerous asbestos while the ship is in situ and afloat….

Source:
Daily Mail (UK)

Source URL:
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2272914/Sweet-HMS-Caroline-Iconic-warship-involved-naval-battle-turned-tide-World-War-One-set-1m-renovation.html#axzz2JwYIMzfG

Date:
2-4-13

Source: FULL ARTICLE at History News Network – George Mason University

Woman at center of case against alleged IRA commander found dead

Police say a veteran Irish Republican Army member at the center of allegations against Sinn Fein leader Gerry Adams has been found dead at her home.

Dolours Price had alleged that Adams was her IRA commander in Belfast in the early 1970s and was involved in ordering several Catholic civilians to be abducted, executed and buried in secret.

The Northern Ireland police have been seeking her tape-recorded interviews from an audio archive in Boston College, a case expected to be heard by the U.S. Supreme Court.

The 61-year-old Price was imprisoned in 1973 for being part of the IRA‘s first car-bomb attack on London. She received early parole in 1980.

Ireland‘s police force said in a statement Thursday she was found dead at her home in Malahide north of Dublin.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Irishwoman at center of IRA tapes story found dead

Police say a veteran Irish Republican Army member at the center of allegations against Sinn Fein leader Gerry Adams has been found dead at her home.

Dolours Price had alleged that Adams was her IRA commander in Belfast in the early 1970s and was involved in ordering several Catholic civilians to be abducted, executed and buried in secret.

The Northern Ireland police have been seeking her tape-recorded interviews from an audio archive in Boston College, a case expected to be heard by the U.S. Supreme Court.

The 61-year-old Price was imprisoned in 1973 for being part of the IRA‘s first car-bomb attack on London. She received early parole in 1980.

Ireland‘s police force said in a statement Thursday she was found dead at her home in Malahide north of Dublin.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Belfast tears of joy as 1 Algerian abductee freed

The Belfast family of Stephen McFaul says it cannot believe he’s escaped from the Algerian hostage crisis — and never wants him to work in the oil fields there again.

The 36-year-old Irish electrician telephoned his wife Thursday to say he had escaped the custody of al-Qaida extremists. The news came hours after reports that dozens of hostages may have been killed as the Algerian army struck the militants’ positions inside the Ain Amenas plant.

While dozens of families in many nations waited in hope for similar news, the McFauls jumped with joy and expressed tearful disbelief.

His sobbing 13-year-old son Dylan said “I feel over the moon. … I’ll never let him go back there.” He plans to give his father “a big hug, and I won’t let go.”

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Eliminating Feminist Teacher Bias Erases Boys’ Falling Grades, Study Finds

By Breaking News

School Bus SC Eliminating feminist teacher bias erases boys falling grades, study finds

January 17, 2013, (LifeSiteNews.com) – Has the Sexual Revolution, and the feminist ideology that drives it, pushed men out of universities by undermining boys in school as early as kindergarten? Some writers are beginning to connect the dots between the shift over the last few decades in educational practices from fact-based grading to evaluation based on “non-cognitive” and “emotional skills” and the drop in school performance of boys.

In the 1970s, feminist critics regularly complained that the school system favored “male thinking.” Facts, dates, rote learning, and math skills that were seen as “too masculine” for girls. In the intervening decades, feminists have made huge strides throughout the Western world, and education – particularly in the training of teachers – has been transformed as a result.

That most government policy makers and academics accept this as an unqualified success has left bewilderment as to how the new, more “fair” teaching styles have resulted in poor outcomes for boys and ultimately for the men they must become.

A five-year research project, funded by the Departments of Education and Justice in Northern Ireland, has just been released that found “systemic flaws” in the way students are evaluated that leave boys disadvantaged. Boys from poor neighbourhoods in Belfast and other cities are especially vulnerable to learning underachievement and health problems.

Dr. Ken Harland and Sam McCready from the University of Ulster said that the problem has been clear for “several decades,” but that “it was extremely difficult for the research team to find specific strategies addressing boys’ underachievement.”

Read More at lifesitenews.com . By Hilary White.

Photo Credit: nikki.jane (Creative Commons)

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Western Journalism

29 Belfast cops hurt in Catholic-Protestant clash

Northern Ireland police fought day-and-night street battles with Protestant militants Saturday as a protest march to Belfast City Hall degenerated into riots when many marchers returned home to the Protestant east side.

The Protestants, who have blocked streets daily since Catholics on the council decided Dec. 3 to curtail the flying of the British flag, have frequently clashed with police in hopes of forcing politicians to overturn the decision. The street confrontations have stirred sectarian passions, particularly in Protestant east Belfast and its lone Catholic enclave, Short Strand, flashpoint for the most protracted rioting over the past six weeks.

Saturday’s violence began as police donning helmets, shields and flame-retardent suits tried to shepherd the British flag-bedecked crowd past Short Strand, where masked and hooded Catholic men and youths waited by their doors armed with Gaelic hurling bats, golf clubs and other makeshift weapons. The two sides began throwing bottles, rocks and other missiles at each other and, as police on foot struggled to keep the two sides apart, Protestant anger turned against the police.

Police marched down the street with shields locked, backed by blasts from three massive mobile water cannons. Officers also fired at least a half-dozen baton rounds — blunt-nosed, inch-thick cylinders colloquially known as plastic bullets — at rioters.

After the initial two-hour clash subsided, police at nighttime confronted a renewed mob of Protestant youths on nearby Castlereagh Street, where a car was stolen and burned as a barricade. A police helicopter overhead shone its spotlight on the crowd, which chanted anti-police and anti-Catholic slogans.

Police commander Mark Baggott said 29 of his officers were injured in the two operations, bringing total police casualties above 100 since the first riots outside city hall on Dec. 3. The clashes have cost Northern Ireland an estimated 25 million pounds ($40 million) in lost trade and tourism and in police overtime bills.

Baggott described Saturday’s police deployment as “a difficult operation dealing with a large number of people determined to cause disorder and violence.” He credited his officers with “exceptional courage and professionalism.”

The Protestant hard-liners, however, have accused police of pursuing heavy-handed tactics that have worsened the riots. Police have provided no casualty figures for civilians, who often avoid hospital treatment so that they are not identified as rioters and arrested. More than 100 rioters have been arrested since Dec. 3. The Associated Press photographer in Belfast, Peter Morrison, suffered serious injuries to his head and hand when clubbed by policemen on Dec. 3 outside city hall.

The Irish nationalist Sinn Fein party said 10 Short Strand homes were damaged during Saturday’s clashes. Sinn Fein councilman Niall O Donnghaile, who represents Short Strand, said it was the 15th illegal Protestant march past the Catholic enclave since last month. He said the marchers clearly wanted to attack Short Strand residents.

“People do not come to `peaceful protests’ armed with bricks, bottles, golf balls and fireworks,” O Donnghaile said of the Protestant marchers.

Belfast used to have a strong Protestant majority, but the Dec. 3 vote demonstrated that Catholics have gained the democratic upper hand, stoking Protestant anxiety that one day Northern Ireland could be merged with the Republic of Ireland as many Catholics want.

Sinn Fein council members had wanted to remove the British flag completely from city hall, where the Union Jack had flown continuously for more than a century. But they accepted a compromise motion that would allow the UK flag to be raised on 18 official days annually, the same rule already observed on many British government buildings throughout the United Kingdom.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News