PSNI investigating Irish flag and poster of Taoiseach placed on loyalist bonfire as ‘hate crime’

Loyalist activist Jamie Bryson addressed gathering ahead of ‘No Irish Sea Border Bonfire’ lighting

The pyre at Moygashel near Dungannon, Co Tyrone, featuring a boat, an anti-Good Friday Agreement message, Irish flags and an image of Taoiseach Leo Varadkar. Photograph: Niall Carson/PA
The pyre at Moygashel near Dungannon, Co Tyrone, featuring a boat, an anti-Good Friday Agreement message, Irish flags and an image of Taoiseach Leo Varadkar. Photograph: Niall Carson/PA

Police in Northern Ireland are investigating the placing of an Irish flag and a picture of Taoiseach Leo Varadkar on a loyalist bonfire in Co Tyrone as a “hate crime”.

The towering pyre in Moygashel, themed as an anti-Northern Ireland protocol bonfire, attracted attention online after a boat was placed on the top of it.

By Saturday evening, an Irish tricolour and a republican flag, as well as a picture of Mr Varadkar, had been added on the boat.

The Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) has confirmed it is investigating the incident.

READ MORE

Chief Inspector John Keers said: “We received a report on Saturday evening, July 8th, in relation to material placed on a bonfire in the Main Road area of Moygashel.

“Police are treating this as a hate crime.”

Speaking in Cork, the Taoiseach said he was aware of the bonfire and did not think it was “reflective in any way of the opinion of unionists in Northern Ireland”.

“Any time I travel north of the border, I get a very good welcome, a very good reception in unionist and nationalist communities and from all sections of society really so I think it’s the actions of a small minority of people and it won’t distract us in any way of our from our main mission here, which is to get the Good Friday Agreement working again and the institutions up and running,” he said.

On the side of the boat a banner reading “Good Friday Agreement? That ship has sailed” was hung, with a mock copy of the 1998 accord across which the words “null and void” were printed.

The boat, flags and image of the Taoiseach were atop a traditional large bonfire. Photograph: Niall Carson/PA
The boat, flags and image of the Taoiseach were atop a traditional large bonfire. Photograph: Niall Carson/PA

Given the title No Irish Sea Border Bonfire, in reference to opposition in unionist and loyalist communities to post-Brexit trading arrangements, the bonfire was lit at about 11pm after a parade and an address by loyalist activist Jamie Bryson.

Unionist leaders have condemned the placing of the Irish flag and Mr Varadkar’s picture on the bonfire.

DUP leader Jeffrey Donaldson tweeted: “I am proud of my tradition but if we want respect for our culture & identity, then we must show respect to others.

“Burning the flag of our neighbouring state & a poster of the head of government of that state is disrespectful and wrong. It is not culture!”

Ulster Unionist leader Doug Beattie said: “This is not acceptable, it is childish and promotes hate. Again the many are let down by a few.”

Most of the bonfires to mark Northern Ireland’s traditional July 12th celebrations will be lit on July 11th.

The Twelfth marks the victory of Protestant King William of Orange over Catholic King James II in the Battle of the Boyne in 1690, an act that secured a Protestant line of succession for the British crown.

There has been controversy around bonfires in previous years, with election posters and Irish flags hung from the stacks of wood, with some towering more than 100ft high.

Meanwhile, the annual Drumcree parade is taking place in Co Armagh on Sunday, from Carleton Street Orange Hall in Portadown to a church service at Drumcree Parish Church.

It is 25 years since the parade was first prevented from completing its traditional return route along Garvaghy Road, with the Parades Commission again refusing permission for the return leg this year.

The stand-off at Drumcree made headlines in the 1990s with nationalist residents of the Garvaghy Road resolutely opposed to the parade passing through the area, leading to violent clashes for several summers and political tensions necessitating a major security operation.

The pyre at Moygashel, intended to oppose the so-called Irish Sea border in place post-Brexit, is set alight. Photograph: Niall Carson/PA
The pyre at Moygashel, intended to oppose the so-called Irish Sea border in place post-Brexit, is set alight. Photograph: Niall Carson/PA

DUP MP Carla Lockhart said it was a “very sad day that 25 years on from this dispute we’re still in the same situation where Orange feet are not welcome on a particular stretch of road”.

Ms Lockhart told the BBC’s Sunday Politics programme: “I want to see a society where our culture is respected, our identity is respected, and I think it is no big thing to ask that the Garvaghy Road Residents Association enter into some form of mediation.

“Unfortunately for many, many years their intransigence has actually been rewarded by the Parades Commission.

“We can’t move on if there is no respect or tolerance for a 10-minute walk down a route which has changed enormously over the last 25 years.”

Most of the hundreds of bonfires constructed in loyalist neighbourhoods across Northern Ireland pass off without incident, but several continue to be the source of controversy.

Bonfires, effigies and the ‘Battle of the Bins’Opens in new window ]

In previous years, there have been complaints from nationalist and cross-community politicians about their images being placed on the fires.

It is the busiest date for the Northern Ireland Fire and Rescue Service which usually deals with hundreds of calls related to the towering pyres. – PA

Barry Roche

Barry Roche

Barry Roche is Southern Correspondent of The Irish Times