North Belfast MP Nigel Dodds has blamed "militant republicans"  opposed to the peace process for organising a sustained riot in the  Ardoyne area that lasted into the early hours of Wednesday morning.
The  Democratic Unionist MP said the violence, which lasted for more than  six hours, had nothing to do with an Orange Order march past the area.  Dodds pointed out there had also been a peaceful protest against the  parade.
Police officers came under attack for the second night  running, with petrol bombs and missiles  thrown by youths from  Ardoyne.  There were also pockets of trouble elsewhere,  with two cars hijacked  and burned in the nationalist Market area of central Belfast. A riot in  Derry's Bogside  led to seven arrests, including that of a 14-year-old  boy.
The violence at the Brompton Park and Estoril Gardens  entrances to Ardoyne continued into the early hours of Wednesday  morning. Several police officers were injured, as well as a press  photographer who was hit with a plastic baton round.
Police fired  dozens of plastic bullets at rioters and repeatedly deployed water  cannon after coming under attack from  a crowd of up to 200 people.
At  one stage a petrol bomb exploded on an officer's head as he stood on  the Crumlin Road shortly after 10pm. Colleagues doused the flames with a  fire extinguisher and the officer escaped unhurt. The rioters also set  fire to water cannon with  petrol bombs.
The attackers kept up a  constant barrage of stones,  bottles and other missiles for several  hours once a controversial Orange Order parade had passed the Ardoyne  shops shortly after 7pm on Tuesday night.
The disturbances took  place on the most  important day in the Ulster loyalist marching  calendar, just a few hours after previous riots that had left 24 police  officers injured.
Most of the violence on Monday happened in the  Broadway area of Belfast close to the Falls Road, where local republican  youths fought running battles with riot squad officers who were  blocking their way to a loyalist area across the M1 motorway.
On  Tuesday night the tension continued on the Crumlin Road as Orangemen  were verbally absued by groups of nationalist women as they returned  from a rally in the south of the city. The women sang the Irish national  anthem and hurled verbal insults at the marchers.
Ardoyne  residents have consistently opposed the loyalist parade passing their  area and last night a number tried to stage a counter march just before  loyalists arrived back from the city centre. When nationalists were  prevented from doing so the violence erupted.
The latest  disturbances also expose divisions in Ardoyne between mainstream  republicans who support the peace process and those who back republican  dissidents' armed campaigns.
One  former member of the Irish  National Liberation Army told the Guardian  those who took part in the  street disorder were future recruits for dissident republican  organisations who oppose the power sharing settlement in Northern Ireland.
by Henry McDonald taken from http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2011/jul/13/belfast-riots-nigel-dodds-blames-militant-republicans
 
 
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