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Video: Several Dozens of People Threw Firecrackers, Stones at Police Officers in Belfast

© Photo : Twitter / @SMurphyTVScreenshot from a video showing a stand-off between the protesters and police officers in Belfast, Northern Ireland
Screenshot from a video showing a stand-off between the protesters and police officers in Belfast, Northern Ireland - Sputnik International, 1920, 09.04.2021
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BELFAST (Sputnik) – Several dozen people threw firecrackers and stones at police officers in the Northern Ireland capital of Belfast on late Friday, a Sputnik correspondent reported.

The incident took place in downtown Belfast despite the loyalists’ intention to stop protests over the death of Prince Philip. In others parts of the city, the situation remains stable.

Footage that shows protesters clashing with the police officers and attacking them with stones emerged online.

​Another video allegedly shows a hijacked car being pushed toward the police lines.

​According to some pictures, police used water cannons against the protesters.

​Some forms of protests even caused giggles from netizens, with the video of an elderly man throwing stones at police vehicles becoming viral.

​Northern Ireland has witnessed a spike of violence with predominantly young people rioting in cities and towns. The unrest was purportedly sparked by certain conditions of the UK withdrawal from the EU, stipulating customs posts between the rest of the UK and Northern Ireland, which previously had no physical borders either with Ireland or the rest of the UK before Brexit.

A more immediate reason for the protests is thought to be a decision by Northern Ireland's prosecutor's office, deciding not to punish nationalists from the Sinn Fein party for their June 2020 presence at the funeral of a former Irish Republican Army (IRA) member, despite strong restrictive measures against the spread of COVID-19. The commemoration of the dead is said to have exacerbated the conflict between loyalists, who support unity with the UK, and republicans, who seek independence.

On 8 April, Irish Prime Minister Micheal Martin and UK counterpart Boris Johnson called for calm and dialogue, with both asserting that “violence is unacceptable."

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