Leisure centre in Larne set alight by rioters as violence extends beyond Ballymena
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20 mins ago
A LEISURE CENTRE in Larne in Northern Ireland has been set on fire by rioters as violence seen in Ballymena over the last two nights spreads to other areas.
Footage shared online shows masked individuals smashing windows and setting fires outside Larne Leisure Centre. The fire has since been brought under control, according to the local fire service.
Alliance MLA Danny Donnelly said: 'Larne does not need this.'
Police have been deployed for a third night in a row in Ballymena. The Belfast Telegraph has reported that
police are also at the scene of disorder in Coleraine
, where footage online has shown bins set alight near a train track.
Larne leisure centre has been attacked by masked thugs. Windows smashed and fires lit nearby. Larne does not need this.
pic.twitter.com/F3mlQVwgFy
— Danny Donnelly MLA (@DannyDonnelly1)
June 11, 2025
Ulster Unionist Party MLA John Stewart described the events in Larne as 'despicable and disgraceful'
'The violence, vandalism, and intimidation seen this evening have absolutely no place in our society,' Stewart said.
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He said the leisure centre is a 'vital community asset at the very heart of Larne' and that 'to see it targeted in such a senseless and deliberate manner is both truly shocking and deeply saddening'.
Riot police have been deployed to different parts of Antrim, including in Larne (pictured) this evening.
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Alamy
The Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) has deployed riot police in Ballymena for the third consecutive night as a significant crowd gathered around the Clonavon Terrace area.
Demonstrators who gathered on Bridge Street near the residential area were told to disperse shortly before 9pm after a firework was thrown at officers. Petrol bombs and fireworks, as well as other projectiles, have been thrown at police this evening.
Earlier today, the PSNI
requested assistance from police forces in Britain
following the violence in Ballymena over the last two nights.
The PSNI said 17 officers were injured, and six people were arrested last night, after violent disorder erupted for a second night in a row.
Multiple cars and properties were set on fire while rioters hurled petrol bombs, fireworks and masonry at police officers.
Riot police block a road close to Clonavon Terrace in Ballymena this evening
Jonathan McCambridge / PA
Jonathan McCambridge / PA / PA
Alongside the injuring of police officers, much of the violence has been targeted at homes that rioters believe to belong to people from eastern European countries.
Related Reads
PSNI seeks reinforcements from Britain as Starmer condemns 'mindless' Ballymena violence
I went to talk to people in Ballymena, and was told to make myself 'scarce' or there'd be trouble
On Monday, two teenage boys appeared in court charged with the sexual assault of a young teenage girl. The two teenagers spoke through a Romanian translator.
The Journal
has documented some of the damage done by rioters
in Ballymena, including to the home of a Bulgarian man who was targeted, a neighbouring home where the window of a child's bedroom was smashed in, and a home belonging to Filipinos who had to leave because of the extensive damage.
On Clonavon Terrace, where four homes were burnt on Monday night, a Romanian teenager told
The Journal
that the rioters claim to be fighting for the victim of the alleged sexual assault but they're 'just destroying their own town'.
'Where is the justice for this poor girl? This isn't justice for her, this is just racism destroying where we live,' the teenager said.
A pram and wheelchair outside the smashed window of a child's bedroom in Ballymena
Diarmuid Pepper / The Journal
Diarmuid Pepper / The Journal / The Journal
Additional reporting by Press Association
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Irish Times
an hour ago
- Irish Times
Larne violence: ‘I thought Northern Ireland was past this; I thought we were 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'.


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Irish Times
2 hours ago
- Irish Times
Young victim of alleged sexual assault ‘further traumatised' by Ballymena rioting, says PSNI chief
Northern Ireland's police chief Jon Boutcher has warned 'bigots and racists' behind three nights of disorder in the region that his officers will be coming after them. Mr Boutcher said a young girl who was the victim of an alleged sexual assault in Ballymena at the weekend – an incident that triggered protests that descended into violence in the Co Antrim town – has been 'further traumatised' by the rioting that has been witnessed since Monday. Forty-one officers have been injured in the unrest that had also resulted in 15 arrests by Thursday evening. The riotous behaviour saw vandalism, vehicles burned and arson attacks on a number of properties across several towns. READ MORE Petrol bombs, fireworks, masonry and a hatchet were among items thrown at officers over the three nights of disorder. Police responded with with water cannon, dogs and plastic baton rounds in an attempt to disperse crowds in the town. PSNI Chief Constable Jon Boutcher speaks to media following three nights of disorder in Ballymena, Co Antrim. Photograph: Brian Lawless/ PA Wire Mr Boutcher, who met with the girl's family on Thursday, delivered a stark message to the rioters as he spoke to the media in Belfast following a meeting with his oversight body, the Northern Ireland Policing Board. 'Stop this violence,' he said. 'We will come after you. We will arrest you. We will prosecute you successfully. It is not in any way a way for a civilised society to behave and it must stop now. 'I want to specifically mention the 41 police officers who've been injured. Each of those officers have put themselves in harm's way to protect our communities. 'I want to send a very clear message to all our diverse communities: we stand absolutely shoulder to shoulder with you. We are here to protect you. 'We are your police service, and these bigots and racists will not win the day. This will be policed properly,' he said. He said the girl and her family 'want it to end'. Two teenage boys, who spoke to a court through a Romanian interpreter, have been charged in relation to the alleged sexual assault. The PSNI chief said the initial lawful and legitimate process before unrest broke out was done in a way that was responsible and empathetic to the victim. However, he said the protest was 'hijacked' and turned into 'wanton, disgraceful criminal behaviour that is absolutely race motivated'. Fireworks thrown at riot police illluminate the road during a thrid night of anti-immigration demonstrations in Ballymena on Thursday. Photograph: Paul Faith/AFP via Getty Images The chief said the service was under-resourced and needed to be funded 'properly' rather than 'disgracefully'. However, he said his officers would still bring people to justice and will release images of those responsible. Mr Boutcher said 80 public-order officers from Scotland would arrive in the region on Thursday to support policing efforts. The head officer described how PSNI members helped evacuate foreign national families who were hiding in attics and wardrobes in their homes in Ballymena as rioters went on the rampage on Monday night. He said the families targeted had done nothing wrong and contribute positively to society. 'Fire Service colleagues described how they went to the scenes to stop arson attacks at those addresses, and how they, in all their years in the Fire Service, have not seen levels of violence to that level and told me specifically and directly of the bravery, the courage of a very thin green line of police officers that without doubt, in my view, saved lives that night.' UK secretary of state Hilary Benn described the scenes as 'mindless racist thuggery' while Stormont Justice Minister Naomi Long said it has been a 'three-day festival of hate and destruction' which needs to stop before someone loses their life. Thirty minutes from Ballymena, a leisure centre in Larne was subjected to arson after temporarily being used as an emergency shelter for those in urgent need following disturbances in the town earlier in the week. Larne Leisure Centre was targeted on Wednesday evening as a third night of unrest unfolds Communities Minister Gordon Lyons, who highlighted the use of the building 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. Mr Lyons has said he would 'strongly hit back at any notion' that he had publicly revealed the facility was being used to house immigrant families who were affected by the violence. Northern Ireland's First Minister Michelle O'Neill said Mr Lyons should resign over his post while the leader of the opposition in the Northern Ireland Assembly SDLP MLA Matthew O'Toole said he would refer the Communities Minister to the standards commission. Mr Benn also asked the minister to 'reflect upon his words' and 'not upon his position'. —Press Association