47 minutes ago
Darran MarshallBBC News NI, at Belfast City Hall

Reuters
The rally started at about 13:00 in the centre of Belfast
The disorder was sparked after footage of a knife attack in north Belfast on Monday night was shared widely on social media.
The "Together Against Hate" rally started at about 13:00 at Belfast City Hall.
Police have closed a number of roads to facilitate the crowd.

Reuters
A number of political parties and trade unions are represented in the crowd
A number of political parties and trade unions are represented in the crowd.
Some in the crowd are holding up banners saying: "Strike back against racism", "Refugees welcome" and "Riots don't speak for Belfast".
The protest has been organised by the group United Against Racism.
'The whole world watched Belfast in horror'

Reuters
People cheered as speeches were given
The event started with the crowd chanting: "Say it loud, say it clear, refugees are welcome here. Who is Belfast? We are Belfast."
Speaker Ivanka Antova said: "This week we witnessed something we will never forget. The scenes of families and young children fleeing their homes in terror. We'll never forget how rich and powerful people used their online platforms," she said.

Reuters
People held placards
"The whole world watched Belfast in horror. There is nothing legitimate about racist pogroms, and racism has no place in our city."
Solidarity was extended to the hundreds of volunteers "who evacuated people, provided meals, and reassured frightened communities".


Houses across Belfast were damaged and destroyed during several nights of disorder
"I got a call from a government minister who asked what he could do. The only practical thing that Westminster can do is provide money to tackle the poverty that fuels racism," she said.
She said her "message to the far right was to 'get out of our communities'."
"We will not stand for you in our communities," she said.

PA Media
There were pockets of disorder in Belfast and other towns across Northern Ireland
The disorder was sparked after footage of a knife attack in north Belfast on Monday night was shared widely on social media.
Many of those protests passed peacefully but, elsewhere, hundreds of masked people took to the streets and violence followed.
The disorder was restricted to pockets of Belfast and other towns, but across Northern Ireland schools and shops closed early, and public transport shut down.

PA Media
Rioters burned a bus in east Belfast on Tuesday - bus and rail services were suspended across Northern Ireland for several nights
Hadi Alodid, a 30-year-old originally from Sudan, appeared in court on Wednesday charged with attempted murder over the attack which left the victim, Stephen Ogilvie, with serious injuries.

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