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Bus torched, plastic bullets fired in Northern Ireland riots

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Northern Ireland riot police officers confront Pro-British Loyalists who were launching fireworks, petrol bombs and rocks at Newtownabbey in Northern Ireland. Photo AFP

Police in Northern Ireland fired plastic bullets and water cannon on Friday as pro-British loyalists furious over restrictions on flying the British flag torched a bus and hurled petrol bombs at officers.

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Violence also flared in towns outside the capital Belfast as loyalists – the Protestant community’s working-class hardcore – blocked roads around the province to express their anger.

Northern Ireland has been swept with a wave of sometimes violent protests since December 3, when Belfast City Council voted to restrict the number of days the British flag is flown at City Hall to 18 per year.

Most of Friday’s province-wide protests were peaceful, with demonstrators taking the flag onto the streets, but serious disorder broke out in the towns of Newtownabbey and Carrickfergus, just north of Belfast.

Police fired water cannon and five plastic bullets at rioters after they were attacked with a total of 33 petrol bombs, as well as fireworks and masonry.

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Four officers were injured, with one requiring hospital treatment, police said, bringing the total number of officers injured since December to around 70.

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