RUC under fire as violence erupts
At least two police officers were injured when serious loyalist rioting broke out in north Belfast.
Police fired plastic bullets at rioters as blast bombs, petrol bombs and fireworks were hurled at them in the Ardoyne area last night.
Police later came under gunfire. A number of police vehicles were hit but no one was injured.
The RUC said at least 300 people were involved in the trouble which they described as ‘‘serious disorder’’.
Two officers were taken to hospital for treatment but were not seriously injured, a police spokeswoman said.
Trouble started after loyalists blocked the Crumlin Road near the Ardoyne shops to stage a protest.
Earlier loyalist protesters threw fireworks at the parents of the Holy Cross schoolchildren in north Belfast.
Parents from the Catholic Ardoyne area were on their way through the neighbouring Protestant Glenbryn district to collect pupils when the fireworks were thrown, police said. Nobody was hurt in the incident.
The trouble broke out when crowds taking part in what had been a peaceful protest on the Crumlin Road tried to force their way up the road to Brookfield Mill where Catholic workers had a narrow escape earlier in the day when an explosive device was thrown into the yard where they were standing.
None was injured but a number of cars were damaged.
RUC Assistant Chief Constable Alan McQuillan said: ‘‘Once again we have seen disgraceful scenes of disorder in north Belfast.
‘‘This comes on top of the appalling scenes earlier in the day when a section of the protesters at Ardoyne threw fireworks at parents going to collect their children from Holy Cross School.
‘‘Last night, police again find themselves in the middle attempting to prevent a concerted attack on the nationalist community.’’
He said many police officers had to be deployed and had to fire plastic bullets because of the nature and scale of the violence.
Mr McQuillan appealed to public representatives to do all in their power to ‘‘return some sort of sanity to this situation’’.
The Lord Mayor of Belfast, Jim Rodgers, appealed for the rioters to stop. He said they would achieve nothing through violence.