Mr.BaZzAr Posted April 8, 2021 Posted April 8, 2021 NI's power-sharing executive has said it is "gravely concerned" by recent street violence and has called for calm to be restored. During several hours of rioting in Belfast on Wednesday, police were attacked, petrol bombs were thrown and a bus was burnt. The Police Federation said seven officers were injured at an interface between loyalist and nationalist areas. The prime minister also condemned the violence. More than 50 police officers have been hurt in the violence in a number of areas since the end of last month. It was likely that paramilitary organisations were involved in the disorder, according to Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) Assistant Chief Constable Jonathan Roberts. He said several hundred people on each side were throwing petrol bombs in both directions in the loyalist Shankill Road and the nationalist Springfield Road. Police officers were called in from other parts of Northern Ireland to help to deal with the rioting. The bus driver whose double-decker was attacked and burned is "very shaken by the incident but is physically unhurt", according to the public transport provider Translink. Belfast has had plenty of practice clearing up after an overnight riot and the latest operation was almost complete by 09:00 BST. There was still smoke coming from a burning bus, but life went on and other bus services continued past the smouldering wreck. There has been an outbreak of violence in a part Northern Ireland every night now for more than a week. The Shankill Road and Springfield Road in west Belfast are now added to the list that includes Newtownabbey, Carrickfergus, Ballymena and the Waterside area of Londonderry. The longer it goes on, the harder it will be to stop. Presentational grey line In recent days 10 people have been arrested as a result of rioting by gangs of people, some as young as 13. Prime Minister Boris Johnson said: "The way to resolve differences is through dialogue, not violence or criminality." NI Secretary Brandon Lewis will travel to Northern Ireland later on Thursday to meet political parties. Taoiseach (Irish Prime Minister) Micheál Martin wrote on social media: "Now is the time for the two governments and leaders on all sides to work together to defuse tensions and restore calm. All of the main political parties in Northern Ireland have criticised the disorder but they are divided over its causes. However, following an emergency meeting of the NI Executive, a joint statement was issued from ministers condemning the violence. "We are gravely concerned by the scenes we have all witnessed on our streets over the last week, including those at the Lanark Way interface last night," the statement read. "Attacks on police officers, public services and communities are deplorable and they must stop. "Destruction, violence and the threat of violence are completely unacceptable and unjustifiable, no matter what concerns may exist in communities. Those who would seek to use and abuse our children and young people to carry out these attacks have no place in our society." The violence has been brought on by a combination of factors. Northern Ireland politics and bigger events like Brexit are all in play here but there is no single straightforward reason. There is a lot of fury over the attendance of Sinn Féin politicians at a funeral of a former IRA leader last summer which appeared to blatantly flout Covid-19 rules. Sinn Féin's most senior politicians, among long lines of former IRA members, walked through the streets behind a cortege at a time when many people missed attending funerals for their own loved ones. "Republicans do what they like and get away with it" has broadly become one of the narratives being used to justify trouble against the police. However there were also loyalist funerals which broke rules during the pandemic. Brexit has been creating tension in loyalist communities for months, with the growing realisation over just how differently Northern Ireland is now being treated from the rest of the UK. Signs of anger over the new Irish Sea trade border are plastered on walls and lampposts. In these areas it feels that Boris Johnson has betrayed Northern Ireland and there is a backlash. But that isn't all - there are much more localised issues too. Loyalist paramilitaries have been subject to a series of raids and arrests for their criminal activities and police believe in some areas these are the figures in the background helping to encourage trouble. Presentational grey line Unionist political leaders - including Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) leader and First Minister Arlene Foster - have said PSNI Chief Constable Simon Byrne should resign over the force's handling of the funeral of senior republican Bobby Storey in June 2020. Last week a decision was made not to prosecute senior Sinn Féin members who attended the funeral. Mrs Foster tweeted on Thursday morning that she had spoken to Mr Byrne in the wake of the violence, as did Sinn Féin president Mary Lou McDonald. The first minister had faced criticism for not speaking to the chief constable after the violence on previous days. It is understood Mrs Foster and DUP MLA Mervyn Storey, who also sits on the Policing Board, received a 10-minute briefing from Mr Byrne by conference call after the party was approached by the chief constable. Mrs Foster has described the violence as "an embarrassment to Northern Ireland" and said her thoughts were with the officers injured by the "unjustified and unjustifiable violence of recent days". It is understood Mr Byrne will brief the Stormont executive on Thursday morning, as well as all of the parties separately. A bus was set on fire during the violence On Thursday the Northern Ireland Assembly was recalled for politicians to consider a motion calling for an "immediate and complete end" to violence in loyalist areas. The motion brought by Alliance Party asks assembly members to unequivocally condemn those involved and support the rule of law. Mrs Foster, who addressed the chamber remotely as she was feeling unwell, said the violent scenes were unacceptable. "Northern Ireland is faced with a number of deep and significant political challenges in the time ahead, and collectively we must work through those challenges," she said. Deputy First Minister Michelle O'Neill of Sinn Féin said the violence in Belfast on Wednesday night was a "dangerous escalation" of events. "Our words are powerful, and it is important at this time that the executive has sent out that united front," Ms O'Neill said. "There is an onus on every single MLA and other public representatives to address the tensions as we see them, to restore calm and to work with those credible community leaders and the police to provide leadership to confront these problems." Sinn Féin, the SDLP, and the Alliance Party have accused unionist politicians of ramping up rhetoric in recent days by calling for Mr Byrne to stand down. Mark Lindsay, the chairman of the Police Federation, which represents rank and file officers, said removing the chief constable "in the middle of a crisis" would not be helpful, although he said there were "serious issues that need to be addressed". Cars were hijacked and burnt at the gates of an interface area in west Belfast "The police officers on the ground - to be honest it doesn't have an awful lot of impact on them who their chief constable is - they take their direction from lower down the command chain," he said. "So it's for politicians to decide and for the chief constable himself to decide." The assembly recall has the support of the five main Stormont parties and was proposed by Alliance Party leader and Justice Minister Naomi Long. She said she felt ill "listening to adults clapping, cheering, goading young children to put their lives at risk" during the violence. People attacked police with petrol bombs and masonry during the disorder "We need to step up to the plate as political representatives and talk about the political solutions to those problems as well as condemning the violence," she said. Sinn Féin MLA John O'Dowd said there were tensions "across the board". "People are deeply worried and deeply concerned as to where this is heading," he said. Forty-eight police officers have been hurt and 10 people arrested as a result of trouble in loyalist areas of several towns and cities SDLP leader and Foyle MP Colum Eastwood described the violent scenes as disgusting and said he would also meet the PSNI chief constable. "We need to tone down the rhetoric, we need to come together and discuss the problems," he said. "There clearly has been tensions building, I think, frankly since Brexit." Ulster Unionist Party (UUP) leader Steve Aiken and Policing Board member Mike Nesbitt will also meet the chief constable, party sources have said.
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