EXPLAINER: What is behind the latest unrest in N Ireland?

Young people have hurled bricks, fireworks and gasoline bombs at police and set hijacked cars and a bus on fire during a week of violence on the streets of Northern Ireland. Police responded with rubber bullets and water cannons.
The
streets were calmer Friday night, as community leaders appealed for calm after
the death of Prince Philip, Queen Elizabeth II's 99-year-old husband. But small
gangs of youths pelted police with objects and set a car ablaze during sporadic
outbreaks in Belfast.
The
chaotic scenes have stirred memories of decades of Catholic-Protestant
conflict, known as “The Troubles.” A 1998 peace deal ended large-scale violence
but did not resolve Northern Ireland’s deep-rooted tensions.
Ireland,
long dominated by its bigger neighbor, broke free about 100 years ago after
centuries of colonization and an uneasy union. Twenty-six of its 32 counties
became an independent, Roman Catholic-majority country. Six counties in the
north, which have a Protestant majority, stayed British.
Northern
Ireland’s Catholic minority experienced discrimination in jobs, housing and
other areas in the Protestant-run state. In the 1960s, a Catholic civil rights
movement demanded change, but faced a harsh response from the government and
police. Some people on both the Catholic and Protestant sides formed armed
groups that escalated the violence with bombings and shootings.
The
British Army was deployed in 1969, initially to keep the peace. The situation
deteriorated into a conflict between Irish republican militants who wanted to
unite with the south, loyalist paramilitaries who sought to keep Northern
Ireland British, and U.K. troops.
During
three decades of conflict more than 3,600 people, a majority of them civilians,
were killed in bombings and shootings. Most were in Northern Ireland, though
the Irish Republican Army also set off bombs in London and other British
cities.
HOW
DID THE CONFLICT END?
By
the 1990s, after secret talks and with the help of diplomatic efforts by
Ireland, Britain and the United States, the combatants reached a peace deal.
The 1998 Good Friday accord saw the paramilitaries lay down their arms and
established a Catholic-Protestant power-sharing government for Northern
Ireland. The question of Northern Ireland’s ultimate status was deferred: it
would remain British as long as that was the majority’s wish, but a future
referendum on reunification was not ruled out.
While
the peace has largely endured, small Irish Republican Army splinter groups have
mounted occasional attacks on security forces, and there have been outbreaks of
sectarian street violence.
Politically,
the power-sharing arrangement has had periods of success and failure. The
Belfast administration collapsed in January 2017 over a botched green energy
project. It remained suspended for more than two years amid a rift between
British unionist and Irish nationalist parties over cultural and political
issues, including the status of the Irish language. Northern Ireland's
government resumed work at the start of 2020, but there remains deep mistrust
on both sides.
HOW
HAS BREXIT COMPLICATED THINGS?
Northern
Ireland has been called the “problem child” of Brexit, the U.K.'s divorce from
the European Union. As the only part of the U.K. that has a border with an EU
nation — Ireland — it was the trickiest issue to resolve after Britain voted
narrowly in 2016 to leave the 27-nation bloc.
An
open Irish border, over which people and goods flow freely, underpins the peace
process, allowing people in Northern Ireland to feel at home in both Ireland
and the U.K.
The
insistence of Britain’s Conservative government on a “hard Brexit” that took
the country out of the EU’s economic order meant the creation of new barriers
and checks on trade. Both Britain and the EU agreed that border could not be in
Ireland because of the risk that would pose to the peace process. The
alternative was to put it, metaphorically, in the Irish Sea — between Northern
Ireland and the rest of the U.K.
That
arrangement has alarmed British unionists, who say it weakens Northern
Ireland’s place in the United Kingdom and could bolster calls for Irish
reunification.
WHY
HAS VIOLENCE ERUPTED NOW?
The
violence has been largely in Protestant areas in and around Belfast and
Northern Ireland’s second city, Londonderry, although the disturbances have
spread to Catholic neighborhoods.
Britain
left the EU’s economic embrace on Dec. 31, and the new trade arrangements
quickly became an irritant to Northern Ireland unionists who want to stay in
the U.K. Early trade glitches, exacerbated by the coronavirus pandemic, led to
some empty supermarket shelves, fueling alarm. Border staff were temporarily
withdrawn from Northern Ireland ports in February after threatening graffiti
appeared to target port workers.
There
was anger that British Prime Minister Boris Johnson, who long insisted there
would be no new checks on trade as a result of Brexit, had downplayed the scale
of the changes wrought by leaving the EU. Some in Northern Ireland's British
loyalist community feel as if their identity is under threat.
“Many loyalists believe that, de
facto, Northern Ireland has ceased to be as much a part of the U.K. as it was,”
Ulster University politics professor Henry Patterson told Sky News.
Unionists
are also angry at a police decision not to prosecute politicians from the
IRA-linked Sinn Fein party who attended the funeral of a former Irish
Republican Army commander in June, despite coronavirus restrictions.
Meanwhile,
outlawed armed groups continue to operate as criminal drug gangs and still
exert influence in working-class communities — though the main paramilitaries
have denied involvement in the recent unrest.
Many
of those involved in the violence were teenagers and even children as young as
12. They grew up after the Troubles, but live in areas where poverty and
unemployment remain high and where sectarian divides have not healed. Two
decades after the Good Friday peace accord, concrete “peace walls” still
separate working-class Catholic and Protestant areas of Belfast.
The
coronavirus pandemic has added new layers of economic damage, education
disruptions and lockdown-induced boredom to the mix.
Despite
calls for peace from political leaders in Belfast, London, Dublin and
Washington, the knot of problems may prove difficult to resolve.
“These are areas of multiple deprivation with the sense of not much to lose,” Katy Hayward, a professor of politics at Queen’s University Belfast, said. “And when (people) are mobilized by social media telling them ‘Enough is enough, now is the time to defend Ulster,’ then many of them — too many — respond to that.”