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  • 8
    Jan
    2013
    4:15am, EST

    Flag fury ignites some of Northern Ireland's worst violence in 15 years

    ITN's Neil Connery reports from Belfast, where a fifth consecutive night of violence followed a loyalist rally outside City Hall.

    By Ian Johnston, NBC News

    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    A spat over the flag fluttering over a local government building might sound trivial. But in Northern Ireland, the decision to stop permanently flying the British flag outside Belfast City Hall has sparked some of the worst violence since the 1998 Good Friday peace deal.

    Dozens of officers have been injured in attacks on police lines by furious protesters who, night after night, have thrown stones, bottles, fireworks, and, sometimes, Molotov cocktails -- violence that police say is orchestrated by the Ulster Volunteer Force, a pro-British paramilitary group.

    Gunshots were heard Saturday, although police said later it appeared that blank rounds had been used. Monday night saw a mix of peaceful protest and riots during which police used water canon and fired plastic bullets, ITV News reported. 

    Peter Muhly / AFP - Getty Images

    Loyalist protesters confront police as they gather at Belfast City Hall during a city council meeting Monday evening.

    According to one pro-British politician, the demonstrators are staging a “revolution with a small r” against attempts by Irish nationalist parties to “remove their Britishness.”

    Irish nationalists say they wanted to stop flying the flag from outside city hall because it is also used by pro-British paramilitaries and others to mark out their territory in the divided city and “intimidate” Catholics.

    The Good Friday Agreement was credited with largely ending three decades of sectarian violence known as "The Troubles," during which British troops were sent in to patrol the streets and at least 3,600 people were killed.

    It created an elected Northern Ireland assembly and devolved government in which power is shared between all sides, with traditional arch-enemies remarkably sitting side by side. The assembly meets in an imposing historic building, Stormont, over which the British flag flies for just 15 pre-agreed days each year. The recent violence was sparked by a vote that agreed a similar policy at local government level in Belfast last month.

    Naomi Long, deputy leader of the Alliance Party, warned Northern Ireland was now facing "an incredibly volatile and extremely serious situation."

    "I don't think anyone should underestimate the threat it poses to long-term peace and security in Northern Ireland," she told NBC News.

    "If people continue with violence, if it continues to escalate, if paramilitary involvement in that violence continues to grow, there's a real risk that we lose the progress we've made," Long said.

    In the month since Belfast City Council in Northern Ireland voted to limit the numbers of days the Union flag flies over its City Hall, 62 police officers have been injured, tens of thousands of dollars' worth of damage caused and senior loyalist paramilitaries have been involved in orchestrating the violence.  Channel Four Alex Thomson Channel Four Europe reports.

    Long described the violence as a "reality check." While politics had delivered the peace process, she said, true reconciliation between the divided communities had been "left to one side because it's painful and difficult."

    "What we have had is a papering over of the cracks," she said. "We have deep divisions, deep hatred and sectarianism and it won't go away by itself."

    Long, a member of the U.K. parliament, said she and other politicians had received death threats after the Alliance Party members on Belfast City Council voted for an attempted compromise deal over the flag on Dec. 3. 

    It allowed the British flag to be flown on a number of designated days -- about 17 or 18 depending on the year -- rather than all the time or not at all.

    Riots continue to erupt in Belfast, Northern Ireland, after lawmakers announced restrictions over flying the Union Jack. ITV's Mark Mallett reports.

    Cops hurt as British unionist protesters try to storm Belfast City Hall in flag spat

    An angry mob tried to storm the council chamber on the night of the vote and protests have continued sporadically since, with Monday seeing the fifth straight night of violence as the council met for the first time since last month’s controversial vote.

    Police said Monday afternoon in an emailed statement that 96 people had been arrested since the latest unrest broke out and 61 police officers had been injured.

    'Attempt to kill': Police in Belfast attacked as flag riots rage on

    Billy Hutchinson, leader of the Progressive Unionist Party, which he said provides political advice to the UVF, told NBC News that the flag decision had “driven people mad.”

    “I think what this is about is ordinary citizens who feel people are trying to remove their Britishness,” he said.

    “You need to remember that this is the United Kingdom and the flag of the country is the union flag,” he added. “It would be a bit like if people wanted to take down the Stars and Stripes from some local government in the U.S.”

    Paul Mcerlane / EPA

    Local shoppers waiting for a bus watch as riot police follow pro-British protesters away from Belfast's City Hall during a protest Saturday.

    State collusion in 1989 murder of Belfast lawyer 'shocking,' British PM says

    Hutchinson said this was one of a number of actions by Sinn Fein that were “outside the spirit of the Good Friday Agreement.”

    “I think the flag issue is a very big issue, I think it was the straw that broke the camel’s back … the catalyst that brought people onto the streets,” he said.

    “I think it is serious, I think people need to recognize this is a revolution with a small ‘r.’ We cannot sustain this sort of inequality coming from Sinn Fein, who are disguising it as equality. They cannot force this through,” he said.

    “I think if you listen to what the protesters are doing and saying, I think it is a threat [to the peace process]. It’s not a threat of armed violence… it’s a threat of community and political action,” he added.

    Hutchinson stressed he believed in peaceful protest, and would seek to persude any UVF members taking part in violence to stop.

    Clinton condemns violence, revisits family legacy in trip to Belfast

    Jim McVeigh, leader of Sinn Fein’s councilors on Belfast City Council, said they had thought it would be better to have no national flags at city hall, but had agreed to the compromise deal, which was passed with votes from the nationalist Social Democratic and Labour Party, and the non-aligned Alliance Party.

    “The issue of the flag and allegiance and identity is a very important one here in Belfast. [In the city] you will see flags are used to mark out territory … to intimidate,” he told NBC News, highlighting murals painted on walls and national colors on curbs.

    Cathal Mcnaughton / Reuters

    A burnt out car blocks Dee Street in east Belfast Sunday near a mural that supports the Ulster Volunteer Force paramilitary group.

    McVeigh, who said he has had death threats since the vote, said he had expected some protests after the decision on Dec. 3, but added no one anticipated it would be “as ferocious as it has been.”

    “The bottom line is we made the right decision. We’re not going to change that decision. The flag is not going to go back up [permanently]. These protests are futile,” he said.

    A spokesman for the police trade union in Northern Ireland, who asked not to be named, told NBC News that the police were “severely stretched” in dealing with the riots and also the threat from dissident Irish nationalist groups.

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    197 comments

    Britain should get out of Ireland. Its the right thing to do.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: british, ireland, europe, world, peace, northern-ireland, flag, uk, featured, belfast
  • 7
    Jan
    2013
    5:44pm, EST

    Police: Paramilitary group 'orchestrating' Belfast violence

    In the month since Belfast City Council in Northern Ireland voted to limit the numbers of days the Union flag flies over its City Hall, 62 police officers have been injured, tens of thousands of dollars' worth of damage caused and senior loyalist paramilitaries have been involved in orchestrating the violence.  Channel Four Alex Thomson Channel Four Europe reports.

    By Reuters

    Police in Northern Ireland came under attack for a fifth straight night on Monday as the province's police chief urged politicians and parents to act to halt the riots on Belfast streets.

    The violence is some of the worst in the British-controlled province since a 1998 peace deal ended 30 years of conflict that pitted Catholics seeking union with Ireland against security forces and Protestants keen to remain British.


    The unrest was triggered by a decision by Belfast city council — which is dominated by pro-Irish members — to end the century-old tradition of flying the British flag from City Hall every day.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    The council met on Monday for the first time since taking the decision last month and a protest passed off peacefully outside City Hall.

    But later, in an eastern part of the capital where rival Protestant and Catholic communities live side by side, a crowd about 200-strong threw petrol bombs, fireworks and paint bombs at police who responded with water canon.

    Earlier on Monday, Northern Ireland's police chief appealed to political organisers and parents of youths involved in the violence — some of whom were as young as 10 — to rein it in.

    "As chief constable I'm taking the unusual step of calling directly now for protests, if not to be ended, to take a step back, for the violence to come to an end and for responsible voices to be heard," Matt Baggott told a news conference.

    He said members of pro-British militant groups, who ceased hostilities in recent years, were exploiting and in some cases instigating the riots.

    Militant Republican groups, responsible for the killings of three police officers and two soldiers since 2009, have so far not reacted violently to the flag protests.

    Some 3,600 people were killed during 30 years of sectarian violence in Northern Ireland before the 1998 peace agreement.
     

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    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    2 comments

    Living in the U.K as a child,and watching the riots,bombings and innocent people killed in the "war"and subsequently as an adult as well.I think the UN should get involved,much like they do in other countries,as a police action,to end this feud once an for all. Its terrible,how many souls have been  …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: northern-ireland, flag, featured, paramilitary, belfast
  • 4
    Dec
    2012
    6:14am, EST

    Cops hurt as British unionist protesters try to storm Belfast City Hall in flag spat

    Reuters

    Loyalists clash with police officers outside the City Hall in Belfast following a vote by local councilors to stop flying the British flag every day.

    By NBC News staff and wire reports

    Fifteen police officers were injured when hundreds of people tried to storm Belfast City Hall in Northern Ireland over a plan to stop flying the British flag as it currently does every day of the year, ITV News reported.

    The violence broke out after Irish nationalist councilors from the Sinn Fein and SDLP parties voted to take down the flag which has flown above the city hall every day since the building was opened in 1906.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    The decision means the flag will be flown only for 17 days of the year, as is the case at the provincial assembly at Stormont.

    Nationalist and Unionist parties share power under a 1998 peace deal that largely ended 30 years of sectarian violence in which more than 3,600 people died.

    Read more on this story from ITV News

    Many of the protesters who clashed with police were carrying British Union flags.

    Reuters reported that the attempt to storm the building was repelled by police.

    A photographer from the Press Association news agency and two security guards were also injured, a police spokeswoman told Reuters.

    Peter Morrison / AP

    Police and protesters face off during clashes that saw 15 officers and three others injured.

    Dozens of police hurt in Northern Ireland sectarian clashes

    Democratic Unionist Party councilor Ruth Patterson described the vote to remove the flag as "divisive, destructive and disrespectful of anything remotely Protestant, anything remotely British," ITV News reported.

    Northern Ireland's First Minister Peter Robinson condemned the violence.

    "There is no excuse or justification for attacks on police officers, council staff, and property," he said, according to ITV News.

    "Such behavior is not representative of those who campaigned to maintain the Union flag flying over Belfast City Hall," he added. "Those who talk most about building community relations have by their actions in the council substantially damaged relations across the city."

    Queen Elizabeth to hold historic meeting with former IRA commander

    Nationalist parties, which aspire to break from the U.K. and join a united Ireland, last year for the first time secured more seats on the council than Unionist parties, which support maintaining Northern Ireland's position in the United Kingdom.

    Gerry Kelly, a member of the Northern Irish Assembly, strongly criticized the police, according to ITV News.

    "I have to say, and I don't use these words unless I really mean them, it was a disgraceful police operation -- or lack of a police operation," he said. "If that had been 1,000 or more republicans, it would have been very different."

    Ireland PM in historic tribute to veterans on British Remembrance Day

    "They indiscriminately attacked cars. We are very, very lucky that they didn't get into the building or we could have been dealing with a lot more injuries," he added. "I am angry because it's not as if they were taken by surprise. This was a well-planned protest."

    ITV News, a U.K. partner of NBC News, and Reuters contributed to this report.

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    86 comments

    Democratic Unionist Party councilor Ruth Patterson described the vote to remove the flag as "divisive, destructive and disrespectful of anything remotely Protestant, anything remotely British," Now she understands how the Irish Catholics felt for hundreds of years.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: northern-ireland, police, flag, protest, nationalist, featured, belfast, unionist

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