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BackNorthern Ireland Protests Pass Without Major Incident After 'Robust' Police Response
Northern Ireland Protests Pass Without Major Incident After 'Robust' Police Response
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BBC UK News6/11/2026Crime2 min readUnited Kingdom

Northern Ireland Protests Pass Without Major Incident After 'Robust' Police Response

Quick Look

Protests in Northern Ireland sparked by a knife attack video on social media have passed without major incident after a robust police response, with 12 officers injured and 16 arrests amid social media-driven unrest.

AI-generated summary

Why It Matters

Tensions in Northern Ireland have historical roots, with recent events exacerbated by social media.

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After two nights of unrest, pockets of protests held across Northern Ireland have passed off without major incident following a "robust" police response. The Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) said extra officers, including mutual aid officers from other UK forces, had been deployed across Northern Ireland amid concerns about further violence. The disorder was sparked after footage of a knife attack in north Belfast on Monday night was shared widely on social media. On Thursday, a senior police officer said there was no evidence loyalist paramilitaries were co-ordinating the unrest. Assistant Chief Constable Ryan Henderson instead pointed to significant activity on social media. "At this stage we have no evidence to say that the violence is being coordinated by loyalist paramilitaries," he said. "What we have seen is significant coordination from online social media activity, some from people within Northern Ireland - and some from outside of Northern Ireland, outside the island of Ireland - generating that activity. "That momentum, that drive, that toxicity is what's bringing people out onto the streets. It needs to stop." Further disorder followed on Wednesday, particularly in Glengormley and Portadown, where police came under attack and deployed water cannon. Police said 12 officers were injured and 16 people were arrested during Wednesday night's unrest. Ahead of Thursday evening, the PSNI increased its presence across Northern Ireland, bringing in additional officers from forces elsewhere in the UK. Henderson warned that water cannon, public order dogs and officers in "significant numbers" would be deployed if required, adding: "We will be robust in bringing order to our streets." About 170 people gathered at a protest in Whiteabbey, in County Antrim, while around 100 people blocked the Newtownards Road in east Belfast. In a post on social media, the First Minister Michelle O'Neill said there has been "dangerous and disgraceful racist attacks" across Northern Ireland over the last few days. "But what has not been recognised enough is the work being done every day by people at the heart of our communities to support one another," she said.

What to Watch

AI outlook — possibilities, not facts

  • Further protests are possible but will likely be met with robust police response.

    Likely · Within days

Open Questions

  • Will the unrest continue?
  • What measures will be taken to address social media's role?

Related Topics

This article was originally published by BBC UK News.

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