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Larne: Café attacked by rioters at leisure centre re-opens

Larne: Café attacked by rioters at leisure centre re-opens

BBC News16 hours ago

The owner of a café which was closed due to violent disorder on Wednesday has said how thankful she is that it can now reopen.Larne Leisure Centre, where the Prom Café is located, was set alight by masked youths after it was used to provide emergency accommodation for families who fled racist attacks in BallymenaThe disorder started on Monday after a peaceful protest over an alleged sexual assault in the County Antrim town. Some of the café's regulars have been telling BBC News NI how glad they are that it has reopened.
The leisure centre sustained most of the damage and remains closed, but the café did not go unscathed, owner Louise Magill told BBC News NI that its stock took as much of a toil as the buildings infrastructure. "The fire exit was smashed, glass everywhere; no damage in the café, but we did lose a lot of food as the power was off.Ms Magill praised the work of staff from Mid and East Antrim Council in helping her reopen on Friday. She said she had been terrified she would have no business, adding that "it's hard enough in the hospitality industry, but the community has been more than supportive, and I've been very happy"."I'm a bit emotional, tired, but so very thankful I'm up and running again today," she said.
Austin McKay has been a regular of the café for more than a decade, when he saw video circulating around social media of the disorder in Larne he feared the worst."Whenever we saw the social media post the other night, it looked like the leisure centre was going to be gone and it is a hub for the town," he told BBC News NI."However, life has resumed to normality, it's wonderful.""It would've been sorely missed, a big chunk of our daily routine would be gone, we've been coming here 12 years since it opened."
Jim Crooks lives close to the centre and, like Austin, he too feared the blaze had claimed the café."From where I live, we could see the smoke rising and I was convinced the building was gone."My initial thought was where am I going to go for coffee? Then you realize there is a bigger picture here."The routine of visiting the café is part of his life now."We are glad its back, because if it wasn't here, it would be a bit of a problem," he said."You get to an age when it's important, for men in particular, because of mental health, to bounce things off one another."Larne gets a bad press normally, let's just hope there is no more, we don't need this sort of thing in the town."

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Ballymena disorder: Six arrested in Northern Ireland - as 32 officers injured in second night of violence
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Ballymena disorder: Six arrested in Northern Ireland - as 32 officers injured in second night of violence

Six people have been arrested after disorder broke out for a second night across Northern Ireland, with 32 officers injured. The Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) said officers in Ballymena "came under sustained attack over a number of hours" with fireworks, petrol bombs and bricks. Tuesday evening saw a second night of rioting and disorder in the Co Antrim town, with "sporadic disorder" reported in Belfast, Newtownabbey and Carrickfergus. Protests also took place in areas of Lisburn and Coleraine. Stormont ministers across the powersharing Executive have condemned the disorder, saying those who look to exploit anger over an alleged sexual assault in Ballymena over the weekend to "sow racial tensions... have nothing to offer their communities but division and disorder". Meanwhile, Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer told MPs: "I utterly condemn the violence that we have seen overnight in Ballymena and in other parts of Northern Ireland." Some of the officers injured in Ballymena required hospital treatment, the force said, adding that it deployed Attenuating Energy Projectiles and a water cannon in an attempt to disperse the crowds. Five people were arrested on suspicion of riotous behaviour. They remain in police custody as of Wednesday morning. The PSNI said a man was also arrested on suspicion of disorderly behaviour on the O'Neill Road in Newtownabbey. Violent disorder broke out in Ballymena on Monday following a peaceful protest supporting the family of a girl who was allegedly sexually assaulted in the area over the weekend. Two teenage boys have been charged with attempted rape. The charges were read to them by a Romanian interpreter at Coleraine Magistrates' Court on Monday. Assistant Chief Constable Ryan Henderson said on Tuesday that some anti-immigrant groups then broke away from the Ballymena vigil. He described the scenes as "racist thuggery" and said the force was actively working to identify those responsible for the "racially motivated disorder". Sky correspondent Connor Gillies, who was in Ballymena on Tuesday, said one family had to barricade itself into the attic of their home as the clashes worsened. 2:11 Other families displayed posters on their windows in a desperate bid to ensure their house did not become a target, or had Union Jack flags on full display. Photos from Ballymena show one property with its windows boarded up and signs saying "Filipino lives here". 'Justice needs to take its course' In response to the disorder, the leader of the conservative party Traditional Unionist Voice, Jim Allister, said that while the scenes were "very distressing," he pointed to concerns about "unchecked migration". "There has been a bit of authorities not wanting to face up to the racial background of some of this over the years," the MP for North Antrim added. "That unchecked migration which is beyond what the town can cope with, is a source of past and future tensions, that is the reality of it." Mr Allister then called for the violence to stop, and added he had spoken to the family of the girl who was the victim of the alleged sexual assault and that they did not want to see violent scenes. "There needs now to be a period of calm and justice needs to take its course," he added. Meanwhile, the leaders of Sinn Fein, the DUP, Alliance Party and UUP called for calm in a joint statement from the Stormont Executive. They said: "While all of our citizens have the right to engage in peaceful protest, there can never be any justification for the violence that has taken place in recent days, during which residents have been terrorised and numerous PSNI officers injured." 'Absolutely no justification' for violence - minister PSNI Chief Constable Jon Boutcher said: "The mindless violence witnessed over the past two nights in Ballymena is deeply concerning and utterly unacceptable." He added that "ironically, and frustratingly, this violence threatens to derail the very pursuit of justice it claims to challenge," and said: "Let me be clear: this behaviour must stop. I appeal to everyone involved to cease all further acts of criminality and disorder immediately." Hilary Benn, secretary of state for Northern Ireland, added on X: "The terrible scenes of civil disorder we have witnessed in Ballymena again this evening have no place in Northern Ireland. "There is absolutely no justification for attacks on PSNI officers or for vandalism directed at people's homes or property."

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Why did Ballymena become the latest site of anti-immigration riots?

There have now been five consecutive nights of ongoing violence and disorder on the streets of Northern Ireland, with Ballymena at the focus of the unrest following a serious sexual assault on a teenage girl in the town on 7 June. Two 14-year-old boys were arrested and charged after the incident, and police in Northern Ireland said the pair used a Romanian interpreter to plead not guilty in court. After that, calls for "peaceful protest" from the victim's father were amplified online. Those protests took on an anti-immigration angle and erupted into riots and clashes with police. Analysis of social media messaging has shown there were already rising tensions in the town before the latest incident, following a decade of rapid demographic change. 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Of 621 primary schools in Northern Ireland where data is available, Ballymena Primary and Harryville Primary, both in central Ballymena, had the 7th and 8th highest share of "newcomer pupils". "Newcomer" is the term used by the Northern Irish Department for Education to refer to pupils who don't have satisfactory language skills to participate fully in the school curriculum. How, and when, will the violence end? Sky's Connor Gillies, who has been in Ballymena reporting on the violence and talking to locals for the past few days, said on Wednesday that " the talk here is that this unrest is only just beginning," adding that "it could go on for weeks". Meanwhile, locals have expressed that they don't like the talk from police and politicians that taking to the streets following an alleged sex attack on a teenage girl equates to them being "racist thugs". Police have responded to rioters' petrol bombs and bricks with rubber bullets and water cannon onslaughts of their own. There have been tens of arrests, as well as injuries to more than 50 police officers since Monday evening. Violence and disorder in Ballymena raged across Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday, appearing to have largely abated in the town by Thursday. However, the unrest has spread to other areas including Larne, Coleraine, Portadown and Belfast. A senior police officer insisted to Sky News that he did have "a grip" on the unravelling situation when questioned by Sky News, but officers from Scotland, Wales and England have been sent to bolster the forces of their Northern Irish colleagues. Anti-migrant rhetoric From 7-12 June, 39,000 Ballymena-related posts on X mentioned "migrants", with around 95% of them deemed to be negative by social media analysis tool Talkwalker. Well-known far-right activist Tommy Robinson, who thanked X-owner Elon Musk for his support when he was released from prison four months early on 27 May, was the most influential poster. 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