
Ballymena riots: Leisure centre attacked, petrol bombs thrown in third night of violence
Petrol bombs, a hatchet and masonry were among items thrown at police during a third consecutive night of disorder in
Ballymena
.
Officers
responded with water cannon, dogs and plastic baton rounds in an attempt to disperse crowds in the Co Antrim town.
Unrest
spread to other towns
on Wednesday, including Coleraine and Larne, 30 minutes away from Ballymena – where the leisure centre was set on fire by masked vandals who also smashed windows.
The facility had temporarily been used as emergency shelter for those in urgent need following disturbances in Ballymena earlier in the week.
READ MORE
Larne Leisure Centre was targeted on Wednesday evening as a third night of unrest unfolds
Several arrests have been made and dozens of police officers have been injured during the sustained unrest in Ballymena, which also saw multiple properties and vehicles set on fire.
Communities Minister Gordon Lyons, who highlighted the use of the leisure centre in a social media post, said all those who had been staying at the leisure centre are in the care of the Housing Executive and have been moved out of Larne.
SLDP MLA Matthew O'Toole, the leader of the opposition in the Northern Ireland Assembly, said he would refer Mr Lyons to the standards commission following the fire.
Police officers on Clonavon Road in Ballymena following a second night of violence in Ballymena, during a protest over an alleged sexual assault in the Co Antrim town. Photograph: Liam McBurney/PA Wire
In the town, the PSNI deployed riot police for a third night in a row as hundreds gathered around the Clonavon Terrace area.
At least one protester was struck by plastic baton rounds fired by police while officers also used a water cannon on the crowd.
Officers also used dog units and drones in their response to the gathering.
Riot police with shields advanced on the crowd to disperse them down Bridge Street onto other roadways.
They came under sustained attack as those participating in disorder hurled petrol bombs, masonry and fireworks at police vehicles and officers standing nearby.
Rioters smashed the windows of a house on North Street and set multiple fires on streets in the surrounding area.
The disorder and stand-off with police continued past midnight.
Elsewhere, social media footage appeared to show an established fire on train tracks running through Coleraine.
Earlier, a senior officer said the PSNI had requested support from colleagues in the rest of the UK following further violence in Ballymena.
The PSNI have also noted scenes of disorder in Belfast, Lisburn, Carrickfergus and Newtownabbey earlier in the week, as businesses, homes and cars were attacked and damaged.
By Wednesday, six individuals had been arrested for public order offences, and one charged.
Prime Minister Sir
Keir Starmer
said he 'utterly condemns' violence which left 32 police officers injured after the second night of disturbances.
PSNI Chief Constable
Jon Boutcher
has warned the rioting 'risks undermining' the criminal justice process into an allegation of a sex attack on a teenage girl in Ballymena at the weekend.
Stormont ministers have also made an urgent appeal for calm and said the justice process had to be allowed to take its course.
First Minister Michelle O'Neill and deputy First Minister Emma Little-Pengelly appeared together on Wednesday to voice their condemnation.
Sinn Fein vice-president Ms O'Neill told reporters in Belfast: 'It's pure racism, there is no other way to dress it up.'
Ms Little-Pengelly described the scenes in Ballymena as 'unacceptable thuggery'.
With the protests focused in predominantly loyalist areas in Ballymena, Ms O'Neill said she did not believe it would be helpful for her to visit in the current context. DUP MLA Ms Little-Pengelly met residents in the town on Wednesday and said the local community are in fear and wanted the violence to stop.
'The key message here today is around that violence, and that the violence needs to stop, that's what the community wants to put across, and that's why I'm here to send that very clear and united message from right throughout the community and local residents for that to stop,' she said.
The violence began around Clonavon Terrace on Monday night following an earlier peaceful protest which was organised in support of the family of a girl who was the victim of an alleged sexual assault in the area.
Two teenage boys, who spoke to a court through a Romanian interpreter, have been charged. - Press Association
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Irish Times
an hour ago
- Irish Times
‘Burn them all out': The prejudice bubbling under Ireland's thin veneer of normality
On Tuesday, by way of marking the death of the legendary American musician Sly Stone , John Kelly plays a selection of tunes by the late funk-rock visionary on Mystery Train (Lyric FM, Sunday-Thursday), starting with the yodelling psychedelic soul track Spaced Cowboy. 'Probably not the obvious choice to begin,' the presenter remarks with a wry chuckle, 'but that's from the album There's a Riot Goin' On'. Kelly may not say it, but an album with such an insurrectionary title is, unfortunately, an obvious choice in a week when Irish and American streets are convulsed by scenes of unrest. At least Sly's revolutionary impulses were musical, as Kelly's well-chosen set testifies to stirring effect. (With the death of Brian Wilson of The Beach Boys on Wednesday, Kelly has a busy week paying tribute to departed greats, this time playing the Pet Sounds album in its entirety.) 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And, as Crosbie glumly notes, there's ample fuel for the rioting to continue: 'We're coming into marching season, so tensions are already high.' Good vibrations are also in short supply in California, as Cuddihy hears about Donald Trump's crackdown on protests against large-scale deportation raids against illegal immigrants in Los Angeles. The BBC reporter Peter Bowes said the unrest has been sporadic in intensity, hardly enough to justify the American president's decision to call in the US marines. And Bowes emphasises that the disorder has been so far confined to a small area of the city: 'The image that all of LA is in chaos is completely incorrect.' In a divided United States, such facts would seem to count for little, particularly with the Maga base. Not that people here can be afford to be complacent about such inflammatory situations. 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Irish Times
4 hours ago
- Irish Times
Larne violence: ‘I thought Northern Ireland was past this, beyond balaclavas'
On a leafy avenue overlooking Larne promenade on Wednesday night, groups of masked men made their way to the Co Antrim town's leisure centre. Residents living in large detached houses on Tower Road watched on in horror as the centre – which had provided emergency shelter to migrant families burnt out of their homes 32km away in Ballymena – was set on fire . 'They were coming up the road handing out balaclavas to each other, they were well organised. I've been living in this area for 50 years and never seen anything like it… it's appalling,' said one woman walking along the promenade on Thursday. Inside the centre, children as young as six were getting changed for their weekly swimming lesson and a yoga session was under way as protesters began banging on windows. READ MORE It marked the third night of violent disorder in Northern Ireland following an alleged sexual assault of a girl in Ballymena at the weekend. Two 14-year-old boys appeared in court on Monday charged with attempted rape. The charges were read to the teenagers by a Romanian interpreter. Larne Leisure Centre was set on fire on Wednesday evening Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) chief constable Jon Boutcher described the unrest as 'absolutely race-motivated'. As of Thursday evening, 41 officers had been injured and 15 people had been arrested. Standing outside a police cordon at Larne Leisure Centre on Thursday afternoon, swim coach Danielle Hill became emotional as she recalled the moment she saw four masked men appear when she went to move her car the previous evening. [ Three teenagers charged with riot in Ballymena while leisure centre set alight in Larne in third night of violence Opens in new window ] Hill (25) is a double Olympian from Newtownabbey, Co Antrim – she represented Ireland at the Tokyo and Paris summer games – and was waiting to take a group of children into the 25m pool at 7pm. At 7.22pm she received a phone call, warning her that trouble had flared following an earlier peaceful protest outside the centre attended by about 50 people. 'Hundreds had gathered by the time I went to move my car. Four men wearing balaclavas came around the corner. I have never experienced anything like that. When I saw them I paused. It was very scary,' she said. Larne leisure centre swim coach, Olympian Danielle Hill, became emotional as she recalled the moment she saw four masked men appear when she went to move her car outside the centre on Wednesday evening. Photograph: Seanín Graham 'My first thought was to get back inside to inform everybody. They had no idea what was going on, I was the eyes and ears outside. My first port of call was the children – there was about 30 to 40 kids inside.' Hill has not slept in 24 hours and appealed for calm. 'I thought Northern Ireland was past this; I thought we were beyond balaclavas. I thought we were beyond the violence. Kids shouldn't have to grow up in that. Last night was so unnecessary, it didn't achieve anything,' she said. 'This stemmed from an alleged sexual attack on a young girl, but last night has nothing to do with sexual violence. What unfolded was racism in its rawest and most dangerous form.' Earlier on Thursday, a political row erupted over comments by Stormont Communities Minister Gordon Lyons on social media hours before the attack in Larne, in which he posted the location of the centre – where migrants had stayed earlier in the week after fleeing their homes. First Minister Michelle O'Neill called for his resignation, accusing him of 'failing to show correct leadership', but Mr Lyons defended his position and said he had no intention of resigning. Extra police resources are being deployed to the North from Police Scotland to deal with the disturbances. First Minister Michelle O'Neill speaks to media in Belfast on Thursday following three nights of violence and public disorder in the town of Ballymena. Photograph: Rebecca Black/PA Wire During a PSNI press conference on Thursday, Mr Boutcher admitted the service 'did not have the resources' to deal with spontaneous violence on Monday but was equipped to deal with the disorder that followed on Tuesday and Wednesday. Asked about the arson attack in Larne, the chief constable said the responsibility for injured officers and damaged buildings falls on 'the people committing these crimes' rather than the PSNI. In late afternoon, an 80-year-old pensioner on the Larne promenade said she hoped the violence would end. 'Goodness knows, we had plenty of trouble years ago,' she said, 'we don't need that back again'.


Irish Examiner
6 hours ago
- Irish Examiner
Irish Examiner view: Intolerance fuelled unrest in Ballymena
In recent days, there has been sustained rioting in Ballymena, in the North. Readers have no doubt seen for themselves on television and social media plentiful footage of disorder and chaos from the town in Antrim. There was a time when such violence was very familiar, and at this time of year in particular. The North's marching season often involved confrontation between different groups, and the imagery of police in riot gear and youths throwing petrol bombs was a regular feature of the evening news. This violence is different, however. It began as a peaceful protest after an alleged sexual assault in the area, an incident which resulted in two teenage boys being charged at Coleraine Magistrates' Court on Monday morning. The two boys had a Romanian interpreter in court and there is an undeniable racial component to the subsequent violent demonstrations, with the PSNI Assistant Chief Constable Ryan Henderson describing those scenes as 'racist thuggery targeted at ethnic minorities and police officers'. The disorder has led to dozens of police officers being injured and has spread elsewhere in the North, including Larne. A leisure centre in the latter town was set alight after it was suggested that families driven out of Ballymena would be accommodated there. The apparent breakdown of law and order in one small town in the North is shocking in and of itself, with the scale of violence so great that police forces in Scotland have promised to send officers to help. The weaponisation of an alleged crime to facilitate racially-motivated rioting is a significant development, and a worrying one. There will be plenty of observers south of the border happy to point out that decades of institutional bigotry in the North may have prepared fertile ground for various forms of intolerance. Whatever substance there may be to that view, it would be naive to imagine a similar situation arising here might not be subject to the same kind of manipulation. Air India crash News of a major air disaster is always chilling, and that was certainly the case yesterday when we learned of the crash of Air India Flight AI171. The London-bound aircraft, carrying 242 people, crashed shortly after take-off in Ahmedabad, western India, and was scheduled to fly to Gatwick. At the time of writing, the final death toll had not been established. The plane came down in a residential area and is understood to have crashed directly into an accommodation block which houses medical staff. The cause of the crash has not been determined yet. Investigators will be keen to examine the black box flight recorders from the aircraft, a Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner. It was unsurprising that that company's stock price fell sharply once news of the crash spread. Though reports suggest it is the first crash involving an aircraft of that type, the entire 787 fleet was reportedly grounded in 2013 after fires related to batteries in its electrical power system. This news will have a particular resonance in Ireland, and Cork in particular, as it is almost exactly 40 years to the day since Air India Flight 182 — a passenger flight on the Montreal-Mumbai route — crashed off our south-west coast. On June 23, 1985, Flight 182, a Boeing 747-237B, broke up when a bomb planted by Canadian Sikh terrorists exploded in its cargo area. There was a major recovery operation undertaken at the time to retrieve the bodies, one of the largest missions of its kind in Irish history, while hundreds of relatives of those lost in the crash travelled to Ireland in the aftermath. A memorial at Ahakista in West Cork, built at the nearest point on land to where Air India Flight 182 disintegrated, was unveiled on the first anniversary of the bombing in June 23, 1986. Some 30 years after that unveiling, the Canadian ambassador to Ireland, Kevin Vickers, said: 'Canada will be forever indebted to the people of Cork and of the community here on the Sheep's Head for all the support and kindness [they] have shown the relatives and their families.' Many of those people who remember 1985 will be thinking of Flight AI171 today. School phone pouches The phone pouch scheme for schools remains a lightning rod for controversy. We learned this week that a tender for the central provision of the pouches was published in January but the Department of Education last week stated that the competition would be cancelled without a winner, though 12 tenders were received. The department will issue guidance on developing school policy on phone use and on how to apply for funding for the pouches, even though schools are not obliged to apply for the funding. This means a delay in implementing policy, increased bureaucracy, and higher costs — all for the sake of an unnecessary initiative being introduced as a top-down measure, when school phone storage is a classic example of a local issue requiring local solutions. This ongoing fiasco is reminiscent of the cliched scenario in which a sensible six-year-old child points out the obvious and glaring flaws in a plan to adults who are invested in approving that plan. The Department of Education is not the only State body in need of that kind of advice but it would do well even now to listen to this mythical six-year-old and abandon this measure. Read More Irish Examiner view: Free speech does not equal a right to intimidate