Call for Stormont return after anti-immigration violence
The Alliance Party has called for the recall of the Northern Ireland Assembly after violence erupted following an anti-immigration protest in Belfast.
The party has submitted a recall petition, which will require the support of 30 members.
A number of businesses were attacked and set on fire on Saturday.
A Syrian-owned supermarket on Donegal Road was among businesses that were badly damaged by arson.
âOur political leaders now have to act decisively. The first minister and deputy first minister need to reverse the de-prioritisation of good relations work,â Alliance Executive Office spokesperson Paula Bradshaw said.
Four men, aged 53, 46, 38 and 34, have been charged with different offences linked to Saturdayâs disorder and they are due in court on Monday.
âUpsetting and infuriatingâ
Matthew OâToole, from the Social Democratic and Labour Party (SDLP), attended a counter-demonstration against the anti-immigration protest.
He said the violent scenes witnessed in Belfast âcanât be allowed to happen againâ.
Speaking to the BBCâs Good Morning Ulster programme, he described the attacks on south Belfast businesses as âa violation of a community that is proudly diverseâ.
âTo think that a group of people with nothing but hate on their minds were allowed to rampage through that area is profoundly upsetting and infuriating and we need to ensure nothing like that ever happens again,â he said.
The SDLP assembly member added: âPeople have felt for a long time that racially-motivated hate crime is not taken as seriously in Northern Ireland as it should be and that is profoundly concerning.â
âAppallingâ
Ulster Unionist leader Doug Beattie said the violence was âappallingâ.
âIt was quite clear there were people who were whipped up on social media, and this is on national social media I have to say, not just in Northern Ireland but right across the United Kingdom.â
Mr Beattie said some of the people involved had come out âspoiling for a fightâ.
âThey burnt businesses, they attacked people, they put lives in danger.â
The UUP leader said the police should not only track down those involved in the rioting, but they should also go after the people who âincited this violenceâ.
He added that society needs to have a âgrown-up, adult conversationâ about concerns about immigration, but he claimed those responsible for the rioting were not interested in having that discussion.
After the protest outside the city hall on Saturday, some anti-immigration protesters attempted to march to the Belfast Islamic Centre in south Belfast â but were prevented from getting there by the police.
Kashif Akram, a member of the executive committee for Belfast Islamic Centre, said the building itself was âwell protectedâ but the community and shops in the area were ânot safe at allâ.
Mr Akram said the Islamic Centre has received an âunbelievableâ amount of messages over the weekend.
âThe fear in a lot of them: âShould we be opening up today, should we be going to work, should we be leaving home?â Especially in this day and age, for someone having a fear for their life, their livelihood, their income, itâs not acceptable.
âDespite all the assurances from PSNI leadership in the run up to Saturdayâs mobilisations of what looked like far right thugs, they were simply allowed to run free on the streets of Belfast.
âThe inevitable outcome youâve seen on the route â people were verbally abused, there was racist comments being made, people were physically attacked, youâve seen the state of some of the shops.â
He said the rally planned for Friday âneeds to be stoppedâ.
âItâs organised crime, itâs racism and it needs to be nipped in the bud. Itâs the first time in a long time Iâve felt fearful for my children leaving the house on a Saturday afternoon to enjoy themselves and it needs to be addressed.â
More than 150 people have been arrested after demonstrations organised by far-right groups descended into riots in UK towns and cities over the weekend.
There was unrest in Hull, Liverpool, Bristol, Manchester, Stoke-on-Trent, Blackpool, as well as Belfast, with missiles thrown, shops looted and police attacked in some places. Other smaller demonstrations elsewhere did not turn violent.
Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer has pledged to give police forces the governmentâs âfull supportâ to take action against âextremistsâ attempting to âsow hateâ.
Downing Street has confirmed there will be an emergency response meeting on Monday.