[Typically, bourgeois Brit media characterize rebellious violence in Northern Ireland as nonsensical and anarchistic, without good or understandable cause. This is especially true since the highly touted peace deals were consummated years ago. But today, conditions in Northern Ireland continue to worsen for the people as the economic crisis grows. Farmers march in protest of milk prices, mass resentment grows at plans for a celebratory visit by the hated British monarchy, provocative Orange marches are staged, and the gap between the conciliating compradors of Sinn Fein and the abused and discarded working class youth in the streets is a faultline that the powers only address with force. — Frontlines ed.]
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Police Wounded In Northern Ireland Violence
Sky’s David Blevins reports on the anarchy that emerged in Belfast as the annual Orange Order march reached an ugly end.
By David Blevins, Ireland correspondent, Sky News — Friday, July 13, 2012

Nationalist protesters face the police in Ardoyne in north Belfast after an earlier Orange parade returned back past shops in the area
At least 20 police officers have been injured during public disorder at a flashpoint in North Belfast.
Nationalist youths rioted for hours after a loyalist march on a contentious stretch of road.
The teenagers went from hurling missiles to ramming police lines with vehicles they had stolen.
Officers deployed water canon and later fired plastic bullets in an attempt to restore calm.
Police later came under gun attack. Officers escaped injury when at least 10 shots were directed at them.
Nigel Dodds, the Democratic Unionist MP, witnessed the unrest in his constituency.
“There comes a point where everybody has to stand up against people who only are interested in violence,” he said.
The Orange Order had been told it must complete its annual parade earlier than usual.
Loyalists were outraged when the Parades Commission then permitted a nationalist protest march on the road.
Tension reached breaking point when rival factions came face to face, exchanged chants and threw bottles at each other.
Not for the first time, police were caught in the middle.

Protesters clash with police in Ardoyne following an Orange Order parade in north Belfast
Gerry Kelly, a Sinn Fein member the Stormont Assembly, said: “Let’s sit down, talk this out and come to some sort of accommodation. We have had worse problems to solve.”
North Belfast witnesses similar disturbances every July but they are now being fuelled by a power struggle.
Sinn Fein had called for calm but dissident Republicans made no such appeals.
Assistant chief constable Will Kerr, the officer in charge of policing parades in Northern Ireland, encouraged “individuals and communities” affected by trouble to respond in a “calm and responsible manner”.
With the Orange Order demanding its right to walk traditional routes and Catholic residents objecting, the marching season often provides the backdrop for a period of tension on the streets.
Loyalists march to mark the victory of King William of Orange over the Catholic King James in 1690.
To some, it is tradition; to others, triumphalism and they rarely compromise.