A man is set to appear in court charged with attempted murder over a stabbing attack following a night of violence in Belfast.
The 30-year-old accused, who is Sudanese, is also charged with possession of an article with a blade or point in a public place and making threats to kill.
He is due to appear at Belfast Magistrates’ Court later on Wednesday.
Immigrant communities in Belfast have expressed fear that they could be targeted, following the attack.
As the Guardian reports, Sudanese business owners on Sandy Row, a loyalist area of central Belfast, closed their stores with steel shutters by 4pm and said they planned to stay at home that night.
The Belfast Islamic Centre cancelled evening prayers. Ameer Ibrahim, a project manager who spoke in a personal capacity said:
We are telling our congregation to go home, don’t go out, look after your children, don’t share rumours and do listen to the authorities.”
Some new images from the ground in Belfast, where teams are working to extinguish the fires set during demonstrations in response to Monday night’s stabbing attack in the city.
North Belfast MP John Finucane described the violence from the protests as “despicable” and unacceptable.
“The scenes we are seeing this evening are shameful and there is no place for it on our streets.
“Family homes and businesses attacked, cars and buses burned out, and parts of our community in flames.”
Later, on the Shankill road, two phone shops had been looted, and an African shop had been set on fire, with smoke spilling into the street and fire engines stationed outside as a few stragglers braved the rain to watch the fire fighters tackle the flames.
Northern Ireland’s first minister Michelle O’Neill described scenes of violence in Belfast as “outright thuggery”.
In a social media post, O’Neill said: “Groups of masked men burning families out of their homes is nothing less than disgusting cowardice.
“This has nothing to do with community. This is outright thuggery.
“The attack in North Belfast was heinous and wrong.
“But there are dangerous attempts to exploit that to target and attack innocent people who are simply trying to live, work and raise their families here.
“Racism, intimidation and violence are wrong wherever they occur.
“There can be no excuse and no justification for these attacks tonight.
“No one wants to see this on our streets and I again appeal for calm.”
Northern Ireland secretary Hilary Benn condemned the “thuggery” seen in some areas on Tuesday evening in response to the Belfast stabbing attack.
He said on X: “People have been rightly shocked by the brutal attack in north Belfast, but the police must be allowed to do their job so the law can take its course.
“The scenes of disorder we have witnessed in some parts of Northern Ireland this evening are only damaging communities and putting innocent lives at risk.
“There is no justification at all for this type of thuggery. I echo the call from the PSNI for this violence to end now.”
By around 11pm, heavy rain started to fall over Belfast, and the crowds that had gathered began to disperse more quickly, leaving the burning wreckage of vehicles and street furniture behind them.
On a residential street draped in loyalist flags near Belfast’s Shankill Road, the masked men approached a house with a boarded-up window and a security camera stationed outside, write Hannah Al-Othman and Rory Carroll.
As a woman from an ethnic minority background looked down from an upstairs window, some of the men rushed the front door and broke it down. With the air thick with smoke from fireworks, they attacked the downstairs windows with bricks.
As they stormed the property, some claimed to be “liberating” it. Graffiti nearby demanded “local homes for local people”. A woman in the crowd said to her friend: “There’s wee girls inside.”
Nearby, a car was set on fire. As the chaos unfolded, a man in a skull face mask told people to put their phones away. Helicopters circled overhead, and two police officers looked on from their car as smoke billowed towards the sky – but appeared to conclude that it was not safe to intervene.
By the time reinforcements arrived in four police vans, most of the hundreds-strong crowd had melted away, leaving only a few stragglers in their wake.
The violent scenes played out after a Sudanese asylum seeker was charged with attempted murder in relation to a knife attack filmed in a graphic video widely shared on social media on Tuesday. Footage was posted by Tommy Robinson and other far-right figures, prompting demands for protests in response.
On a terraced street strung with union flag bunting, off Newtownards Road in east Belfast, within view of the city’s famous yellow Samson & Goliath cranes, a house has been set alight, the white render stained black with soot.
A group of men and women stood watching as fire engines blocked the street, as firefighters struggled to bring the blaze under control, with the flames spilling out onto the street.
On a parallel street, a smaller fire burned in the middle of the road, the smell of burning plastic heavy in the air. At the end of the Newtownards Road closest to the city centre, a row of police vans and cars were stationed, poised to respond to any escalating violence.
At the other end of the road, the shell of a burned out bus stood beside a pavement littered with shattered glass, and in front of upended, smouldering wheelie bins, as a union flag fluttered gently from a flagpole overhead.
Men in masks and hoods stopped to pose for photographs beside the wreckage of the bus as they moved away from the scene of the violence.
Northern Ireland’s Justice Minister Naomi Long said “hate cannot be allowed” to win, as disorder broke out in a number of areas.
Long said: “Earlier today, I stood beside the First Minister, deputy First Minister and the PSNI Chief Constable and we appealed for calm.
“Sadly, there are those who have chosen to ignore those pleas; they are intent on wreaking destruction on the very communities they claim they are trying to protect.
“They are weaponising the genuine hurt, concern and anger that people are feeling for their own misguided purposes.
“There is no place for masked thugs to take to the streets and threaten, intimidate, disrupt and cause wanton damage – it is simply disingenuous to claim this is being carried out for the good of Northern Ireland.
“I would appeal once again to communities not to allow themselves to be used and abused in this manner. Disorder on the streets, such as we are seeing tonight, is diverting valuable police resources away from those who genuinely need them. These are not the actions of people who genuinely care about their communities.
“While I recognise and understand the concerns following on from the attack in north Belfast, hate cannot be allowed to win.”
Footage of a Glider bus being set on fire by protesters in east Belfast this evening.
Northern Ireland’s deputy First Minister Emma Little-Pengelly has appealed for calm following outbreaks of violence in a number of areas.
In a social media post, Little-Pengelly said: “I know all are horrified about what has happened. I know so many are angry and there are those who want to register a protest.
“This is an appeal to act in an entirely peaceful way. Violence does not advance any cause, it damages it.
“Destroying things within your own community benefits no one.
“Taking frustration at the evil actions of a person out on those who had no part in it is utterly wrong. Safety is at the heart of so much of the concern.
“Engaging in violence risks your own safety, that of others and fundamentally does any cause or campaign to be heard terrible disservice and damage.”
Residents are being removed from houses which have caught fire in Lendrick Street in east Belfast.
Northern Ireland Fire and Rescue Service officers attended the scene on Tuesday night.
Disclaimer : This story is auto aggregated by a computer programme and has not been created or edited by DOWNTHENEWS. Publisher: theguardian.com






