Police arrest 3 suspects over acts of violence in Belfast

Suspects hijacked car, rammed it into a business, caused damage as rioters jolted Northern Ireland's capital city for past few days

By Nur Asena Erturk

Three suspects were arrested in Belfast following the acts of violence that took over the Northern Ireland's capital city, police said Wednesday.

“A car was hijacked by a group of masked men” on Tuesday evening, according to a statement, and was “deliberately driven at the front of a business … causing minimal damage to the building …” it added.

“Three men, aged 26, 28 and 41 years, were arrested on suspicion of offences including criminal damage and remain in custody at this time,” police noted.

Rioters on Monday night threw petrol bombs, bottles, and bricks at police officers in Belfast, according to media reports.

Violence broke out at night in a series of protests across the UK since last week and a crowd of over 200 people gathered outside the Islamic Center in Belfast.

Riot police and drones were in the field, the Belfast Telegraph said, and police also used Attenuating Energy Projectile against rioters.

Monday night’s violence was mainly caused by loyalists who traditionally oppose Irish nationalists aiming for the unity of Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland.


- Far-right violence

The UK has been gripped by far-right riots for days, with violent mobs spewing racist and Islamophobic vitriol and targeting Muslims, minority groups, and migrants.

The riots were fueled by online misinformation that a suspect arrested after a fatal stabbing in Southport, England, last week was a Muslim asylum seeker, a claim which was false.

Three young girls were killed and five more children critically injured during a knife attack as they attended a dance class last Monday.

Far-right groups are reorganizing for more violence targeting asylum and immigration centers in London and across the UK on Wednesday.

“There will be a reckoning for criminals & thugs who took part in violence on streets, burning buildings, attacks on mosques, looting shops & the whipping up of racist violence online,” Home Secretary Yvette Cooper also warned the far-right rioters on X.


- Fragile peace

Belfast is a Northern Ireland city where a fragile peace was established after years of violence.

The Troubles – an era of conflict between the British government and pro-British paramilitaries on one side and Irish Republicans and nationalists on the other – ended in 1998 when the Belfast Agreement put an end to decades of armed struggle in the divided UK region of Northern Ireland.

The UK and the Republic of Ireland signed the deal, brokered by the US and eight political parties in Northern Ireland, on April 10, 1998.

The deal, dubbed the Good Friday Agreement, largely saw the end of the Troubles-era violence, in which 3,500 people lost their lives.

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