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Northern Ireland outbreak of violence surprises Johnson government

2021-04-08T12:52:36.692Z


In recent days, 55 police officers were injured in the riots, sparked by unionists' frustration at the consequences of Brexit


The Autonomous Assembly of Northern Ireland has begun to urgently debate on Thursday how to appease the violence in the streets, which has already lasted for more than a week and has left more than fifty police officers injured and numerous material damage.

For the first time since the riots began, the British Government has begun to pay attention.

The Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, Boris Johnson, has been "deeply concerned" and has asked the different Northern Irish factions to find a solution.

"The way to resolve differences is through dialogue, not through delinquency or criminal actions," he said.

The British Minister for Northern Ireland, Brandon Lewis, has traveled urgently to Belfast to participate in the search for a solution.

  • Unionist paramilitary groups in Northern Ireland withdraw their support for the 1998 peace agreement

  • The crisis in Northern Ireland forces London and Brussels to re-negotiate after Brexit

This time the origin of the tension has been in the unionist community, the Protestant population in favor of Northern Ireland remaining within the United Kingdom.

The 1998 Good Friday Agreement restored peace to the island, but sectarian violence has never completely disappeared.

It tends to resurface at the slightest spark.

This time, however, there have been several sparks at once, and Northern Irish politicians have begun to fear that it will be more difficult to control.

The Northern Ireland Protocol, the document annexed to the UK's Withdrawal Agreement from the EU, left this British territory within the customs space of the Community Internal Market.

It was the way to avoid the imposition of a new border that would split Ireland and revive the quarrels.

The Republic of Ireland is today the only EU territory with which the UK shares a physical delimitation, but any inhabitant of the island moves seamlessly across a border that remains invisible.

Unionist politicians, who feel betrayed by London's decision, have stirred with their speech a feeling of frustration and abandonment among the Protestant community.

But this political reality does not serve by itself to explain the new eruption of violence.

We must add a long confinement due to the pandemic that has unnerved the population.

And a specific episode that has resurrected resentments.

On June 30, 2020, 24 members of the leadership of the Republican party Sinn Féin, including its president Mary Lou McDonald, attended, along with thousands of people, the funeral of the historical member of the IRA, Bobby Storey.

They clearly violated the social distancing rules then in force.

The Northern Irish prosecution, however, ultimately chose not to prosecute any of those present.

He limited himself to "voluntarily" questioning some of the leaders, in an investigation that had some farce and some prudence and common sense, to avoid greater evils.

Two-cushion game

Although no authority has presented conclusive evidence to date, the widespread conviction among Northern Irish society and its politicians points to unionist paramilitary groups, such as

South East Antrim UDA -

which remain latent despite the peace agreement - as those responsible. having stirred the waters.

The hundreds of protesters who have taken to the streets of Belfast or Derry every night are young people and children (some as young as 12), but no one accepts that it was their own rebellious spirit, spontaneously, that led them to setting cars, containers or phone booths on fire, or throwing rocks and Molotov cocktails at buses, private vehicles or police cars.

"Destruction, violence or the threat of violence are completely unacceptable and unjustifiable, whatever the concerns that exist in the different communities," the Autonomous Government of Northern Ireland said in a statement this Thursday, in which they share power. Republican and Unionists.

"Those who try to use and abuse our children and young people to commit these attacks have no place in our society."

However, the current Chief Minister Arlene Foster, of the unionist DUP party, has tried throughout the crisis to play two-way.

While condemning the violence without palliative, he joins the voices of those calling for the resignation of the Chief Commissioner of the Police of Northern Ireland (PSNI, in its acronym in English), Simon Byrne.

She also believes that, with her way of managing the funeral of the former member of the republican terrorist organization, she has lost the trust of the unionist community.

The walls and fences of the Protestant neighborhoods of West Belfast, Newtonabbey, Carrickfergus or Derry are covered with graffiti against security forces.

"PSNI out" or "PSNI pigs" (PSNI pigs), which are mixed with the slogans against the new border that Brexit has imposed in the Irish Sea, the strip of water that separates the two islands.

The Government of the Republic of Ireland, much more aware than the British of the tinderbox that exists in the autonomous territory, has called on Northern Irish politicians to work on a response to the current tension "before someone dies."

The Irish Foreign Minister, Simon Coveney, has indicated a clear responsibility in everything that happened: “Statements of the Irish Government will not serve to calm the tension within the unionist communities.

The answer must come from themselves ”.

Source: elparis

All news articles on 2021-04-08

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