Major Antiracist Rally Held in Belfast to Condemn Anti-Immigrant Riots
Democracy Now! host Amy Goodman is in Belfast, where several days of racist riots have targeted immigrants and ethnic minorities with violence, threats and property destruction. It is the third consecutive summer of organized mob violence against immigrants in Northern Ireland, with roots in the extant paramilitary structures that remain there after decades of sectarian warfare. Our broadcast from the Northern Ireland capital features guests Sinéad Marmion, an immigration lawyer, and Patrick Corrigan, the Northern Ireland director of Amnesty International UK. Both were among the tens of thousands who attended a recent rally in Belfast condemning racism and standing in solidarity with immigrants. The vast majority of people in Belfast, as across Northern Ireland, are antiracist and very welcoming to the people who have come here to make their lives from around the world, says Corrigan. We wanted to send, most importantly, a message to them, to say, 'You are welcome. This is your city. This is your home, just as much as it is ours.'
As mob violence drives residents from their homes and leaves many fearing for their lives, its the community that has picked up the pieces. Its women in the community, its migrant women in the community, that have organized and mobilized the response. And our authorities have been left wanting, says Marmion. We have political parties that are stoking the flames and encouraging what they call a 'legitimate concern on immigration,'
and the conversation, resultingly, is always toxic.