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Irish Examiner view: Intolerance fuelled unrest in Ballymena

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.
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Irish Examiner view: Free speech does not equal a right to intimidate

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Ballymena: Week of violent attacks on Northern Ireland's small immigrant community ‘akin to 1930s Germany'
Ballymena: Week of violent attacks on Northern Ireland's small immigrant community ‘akin to 1930s Germany'

Irish Times

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  • Irish Times

Ballymena: Week of violent attacks on Northern Ireland's small immigrant community ‘akin to 1930s Germany'

When children were evacuated from a swimming lesson at a Co Antrim leisure centre this week, they walked out to find masked men banging on the windows. The youngest fleeing the Larne complex – which had provided temporary shelter to displaced immigrants – was six-years-old. 'The fear those kids experienced going out to their families has left them traumatised,' said Danielle Hill, swim coach and Irish Olympian, who escorted the children to safety before the building was set on fire on Wednesday evening. Forty-eight hours earlier, in a terraced house 30 kilometres away in Ballymena , a mother hid her babies in the attic as rioters kicked in their door and set fire to curtains. Older children hid in wardrobes. READ MORE Outside, police were attacked with hatchets and petrol bombs by a rampaging mob. In a week that has seen violent disorder erupt across Northern Ireland , 14 migrant families have been forced to seek emergency accommodation after being burnt out of their homes. Dozens received assistance from the Housing Executive. 'Bigots and racists' were blamed by Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) chief constable Jon Boutcher for four consecutive nights of unrest. The disorder began in Ballymena on Monday evening following a peaceful protest over an alleged sexual assault . Two teenage boys appeared in court earlier that day charged with the attempted rape of a girl in the Co Antrim town. The 14-year-olds confirmed their names through a Romanian interpreter. They deny the offences. Clonavon Terrace, a street close to the town centre that faces on to the rear of Ballymena police station, resembled a war zone by Tuesday morning. It is absolutely ridiculous that in 2025 people are having to identify themselves with signs on their door — Philip McGuigan Six homes were set alight and many others were vandalised the previous evening. By teatime on Tuesday, Windows that were not boarded up along the row of former mill houses were instead filled with Union Jack flags , British royal family memorabilia, and red, white and blue bunting. Cornelia Amarei from Romania said it was the first time in her seven years living in the street that she put a Union flag in her home. 'We were told it would protect us from any more attacks,' she told The Irish Times. They were trying to keep her eight-year-old grandson, who is autistic, safe. 'He needs routine so we can't move from here. We put his earphones on him at a room at the back of the house,' said Ms Amarei, who works at a manufacturing company in the town. Pre-printed black and white signs stating 'Locals Live Here' were stuck on front doors throughout the town by Wednesday evening . Social media was awash with disinformation about immigration figures and the impact on public services. One Facebook group, with more than 5,000 followers, urged people to share addresses of 'locals' they wanted to protect – and of those they wanted to target. 'It is akin to something from 1930s Germany,' said North Antrim Sinn Féin MLA, Philip McGuigan. 'It is absolutely ridiculous that in 2025 people are having to identify themselves with signs on their door.' Mr McGuigan says lies from some political parties are 'feeding into an anti-immigration sentiment' and playing on people's fears. His comments follow remarks made by the MP for the area, Jim Allister, leader of the Traditional Unionist Voice (TUV), in the aftermath of the attacks. Mr Allister condemned the violence but told the BBC that underlying tensions in Ballymena had been 'there for a long time' because there was 'an oversubscription of migrants who had been placed there'. When asked what evidence he was drawing on, Mr Allister said he had canvassed a street with 50 houses and came 'upon five local, if I can call them that, residents of Ballymena'. His statistics 'don't stack up', argues Mr McGuigan, pointing to Stormont Assembly research showing that Northern Ireland is the 'least diverse part of the UK'. Just 3.5 per cent (65,600 people) of the population are from a minority ethnic group. That compares to 18.3 per cent in England and Wales, and 12.9 per cent in Scotland, according to the Assembly report on migration. Police Scotland was asked on Tuesday and it still hasn't arrived — Jon Burrows In Ballymena, there are no registered asylum seekers in the entire Mid and East Antrim local government area, which takes in Ballymena and Larne. Of Ballymena's 24,295 population, 94 per cent of people are white, while just 6 per cent belong to other ethnic groups, according to the last census. 'Bottom line, these are not big figures,' says Mr McGuigan. 'Yes, there is a foreign national population in Ballymena, but it is there for a reason in that local industry and local businesses need people coming in to work. 'Brexit had an impact here in that businesses struggled to find workers.' To date, 63 PSNI officers have been injured in the disturbances after coming under 'sustained attack with heavy masonry and fireworks'. As of Friday afternoon, there have been 17 arrests, with three teenagers – the youngest aged 15 – refused bail and remanded in custody for riot-related offences. Of the 17 people arrested, 13 face criminal charges. Violent protests moved to Portadown in Co Armagh on Thursday, on a night when there was relative calm in Ballymena amid heavy rainfall. Police Scotland has agreed to deploy extra resources to the PSNI as part of a mutual aid arrangement. 'What the PSNI are struggling with now is any kind of spontaneity – they just don't have the resources available,' says Jon Burrows, a retired senior PSNI officer. He believes the policing arrangement only works for big pre-planned events such as the G8 summit. 'Police Scotland was asked on Tuesday and it still hasn't arrived. It could be next week – in which case the horse has already bolted,' he said. Photographic images of suspects should be released by the PSNI more quickly – ideally within 48 hours – to show that 'actions have consequences', according to Mr Burrows. I have been flooded with messages for speaking up against the racist violence — Danielle Hill The use of social media to mobilise rioters and spread disinformation should also be challenged on platforms like TikTok – as opposed to 'the PSNI website and newspapers'. Danielle Hill is determined to resume coaching at Larne Swimming Club and last night met the families of children affected by the disorder. The Olympian, who represented Ireland at the Tokyo and Paris games and took gold at the European Championships last year, has been overwhelmed by the support she has received since condemning the violence. 'As someone who swims for Ireland, who lives in a street flagged with British flags for the Twelfth [of July celebrations], I come to Larne dressed in my Olympic kit that says Ireland on my back and I've always been accepted,' she said. 'I have been flooded with messages for speaking up against the racist violence – which had nothing to do about the protection of women and girls – instead of being a bystander.' Some of the children she coaches are from ethnic minority backgrounds. One child is 'probably going to be our next [big] thing,' she adds. 'Our main mission is getting back to normal for the children's sake and rewriting the script to ensure the leisure centre is full of great memories for them. 'I met the families to help everyone come together and let them know they are not alone in this. For now, we will await our return to the pool.'

Cops identify remains found in Co. Down river of man missing since last year
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Cops identify remains found in Co. Down river of man missing since last year

Gary Patterson (45) went missing from his hometown of Larne in October of last year was last caught on CCTV leaving his flat. The PSNI have identified the remains of a body found in a river near Crawfordsburn last weekend. A post-mortem examination has found the remains to be that of Gary Patterson who went missing from his hometown of Larne in October of last year. The 45-year-old was last caught on CCTV leaving his flat in Priory Gardens and withdrew £100 from a cash machine in the Co Antrim town on October 12 at 10.30am Detective Inspector Lyttle said: 'Mr Patterson, who was reported missing to police, was last seen in the Larne area on Saturday, 12th October 2024 . Our thoughts are with Gary's family at this sad time, and we express our heartfelt condolences to them. 'We would also like to thank the public for all of their assistance throughout this difficult time with searches and subsequent enquiries.' Gary Patterson Today's News in 90 Seconds - June 13 2025 Gary's disappearance sparked a multi-agency search operation with rivers, forests and the Larne Lough with his heartbroken brother, Simon Patterson, accepting they were 'looking for a body.' Remains that were subsequently discovered in a river Crawfordsburn near the Ballyrobert Road area on Saturday have been found to be that of Gary's. Speaking to the Belfast Telegraph, Simon expressed his relief at finding the body and said he received a call from the police detailing the remains were found alongside his brothers possessions. 'I first got the news on Sunday while we were doing a search and we received a phone call from police in CID [Criminal Investigation Department] asking them to come across to speak to us,' Simon said. 'There was that much information in the call [with the police], we sort of knew because the coat and his wallet had actually been found with the body." 'We're just going through the motions. Because we have known for a wee while, we've sort of contacted funeral homes and stuff to have ourselves organized whenever the body is released. 'At the end of the day, our priority is to get closure and get him laid to rest.' Throughout the months his brother was missing, Simon employed specialist diving squads with a submersible Remotely Operated Vehicle (ROV) to search enclaves in Larne Lough. Simon told this newspaper he had been conducting searches 'religiously' every week and pledged not to stop until his brother was found. Gary was described an avid collector of DVDs, quiet and 'a wee bit of a loner', by his brother. He was known to be proud of his flat where he lived alone and 'was set in his routine', usually returning home by 4pm. His distraught brother also labelled his sibling as a 'kind' man who 'never took a drink or drugs' and loved to frequent charity shops in his hometown.

PSNI given emergency Stormont cash to tackle anti-immigration riots
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The Police Service of Northern Ireland is to get emergency Stormont funding to cope with anti-immigration riots across Northern Ireland, First Minister Michelle O'Neill has said. Saying that a proposal for a £5 million payment will be brought quickly to the Northern Ireland Executive, Ms O'Neill said the heavily-understaffed police service was 'really under pressure and really under financial strain'. 'Keeping the public safe is an absolute priority, not just for the PSNI but for us,' she said, speaking after a meeting of the British-Irish Council in Newcastle, Co Down, that included Taoiseach Micheál Martin and Northern Ireland Secretary of State Hilary Benn. However, the First Minister and her Democratic Unionist Party counterpart, Deputy First Minister Emma Little-Pengelly insisted that divisions over Communities Minister Gordon Lyons would not threaten the existence, or the operation of the Executive. READ MORE Mr Lyons has been heavily criticised for a social media message about the use of Larne Leisure Centre to house Roma who were forced to flee their Ballymena homes after riots erupted this week. [ The DUP couldn't have chosen a worse moment to get tough on immigration Opens in new window ] Saying that the Executive's parties are 'all on the same page', Ms O'Neill said: 'This violent racism that we have seen on our streets has to be called out for what it is. It's absolutely wrong and it must stop.' 'What we've seen over the course of the last few days has been devastation and has been horrific for those people that have been targeted,' said Ms O'Neill, who said on Wednesday that Mr Lyons should resign. 'This is about women and children; this is about families. They have been at the front of racist, violent attacks and it is wrong on every level. I think the whole of the Executive is united on that front,' she went on. Defending Mr Lyons, Ms Little-Pengelly said her DUP colleague had been 'unambiguous' in trying to prevent violence, adding that the controversy about his remarks had been 'a distraction throughout' Thursday 'from our very clear and unified message'. Violence for four nights in a row is 'totally unacceptable', she said, adding that Mr Lyons's intention had been 'to defuse tensions' locally due to a significant amount of rumour' that had been circulating in Larne in the hours before. The calls for Mr Lyons's resignation shared by Sinn Féin, Alliance and by Stormont's only opposition party, the SDLP, hold little weight under Stormont rules, since each party controls the choice of their own ministers at the Executive table. Rioting in Larne and Portadown was 'a source of great shame for Northern Ireland', Church of Ireland Primate and Archbishop of Armagh John McDowell said. Portadown is in his diocese. 'Hiding behind the figment of `legitimate concerns' but in fact motivated by crude racism, groups of young men (and the shadowy and unaccountable people who control them) planned and carried out attacks on civil society and on democracy,' he said. With Drumcree Sunday looming on July 6th, rioting in nearby Portadown over recent nights is of particular concern. A total 22 officers were injured with two arrests made there following violence on Thursday night. The annual Orange march from Portadown to the Church of Ireland's Church of the Ascension at Drumcree became a focus for violence, particularly in the years from 1995 to 2000, when it was prevented from going through the nationalist Garvaghy Road area en route back to Portadown. The last Orange march allowed back to Portadown by that route was in 1997.

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