Northern Ireland officer firebombed

— Leaders from across Northern Ireland appealed Tuesday for a week of angry, illegal Protestant street protests to end after a gang surrounded a police officer’s car and hurled a Molotov cocktail inside.

Police said the officer wasn’t wounded because the car didn’t catch on fire, but about 40 other police have been hurt during the past week of street clashes, driving away tourism and soiling Northern Ireland’s image as a land at peace. Extremists from the British Protestant majority have turned out in force, blocking roads across Belfast and several suburbs ever since the Belfast City Council voted Dec. 3 to stop flying the British flag year-round.

Road blockades in some Protestant parts of Belfast resumed Tuesday night despite warnings from politicians and police chiefs that someone would be killed if the trouble continued.

The politician at the center of the storm, Alliance Partydeputy leader Naomi Long, accused the protesters of seeking to impose “mob rule” on Northern Ireland, the part of the island that remained in the United Kingdom when the predominantly Catholic rest of Ireland won independence in 1922.

Death threats have forced Long, who represents Protestant east Belfast in the British Parliament, to abandon her home and office. Protestant extremists blame her small cross-community party for providing the council votes needed to approve a Catholic-backed motion removing the British flag from Belfast City Hall for all but 18 days a year. The female police officer attacked Monday night was guarding Long’s unoccupied office.

Long said the police “are not there to protect me, or protect the Alliance Party. They are to protect Northern Ireland from slipping back into the abyss of terrorism. They are there holding the line between mob rule and the rule of law.”

She said the often masked,hooded street protesters were guilty of Nazi-style thuggery that “is not compatible with British identity. People fought under that flag not for a piece of material. They fought for principles, like democracy and the rule of law. They fought against fascism, and what we have seen on the streets of Belfast over the last seven days has been nothing short of fascism.”

Britain’s minister responsible for Northern Ireland, Theresa Villiers, told lawmakers in London there was “nothing remotely British about what they [the Protestant protesters] are doing. They are dishonoring and shaming the flag of our country with their lawless and violent activities.They discredit the cause they claim to support.”

But underpinning this month’s protests has been the Protestant community’s centuries-old belief that they must stand their ground - expressed with such favored slogans as “Not an inch” and “No surrender” - versus an ever-growing, ever-demanding Irish minority.

Front Section, Pages 5 on 12/12/2012

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