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Police of Northern Ireland is investigating the burning of dolls representing migrants for a crime of hatred

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The traditional Protestant orange marches began in Northern Ireland with contradictions for the burning of an immigrant vessel located at the top of a large bonfire, in the action that the autonomous police (PSNI) reported on Friday that it was investigating a crime of hatred.

This Friday, Psni emphasized that last morning last morning in Moigashel in the city of Tyron would take measures, and confirmed that their goal is to help those who “feel vulnerable” and guarantee their safety.

The problem-cunning community celebrates from last night on July 12 “in the midst of growing stress as a result of recent violations encouraged by extreme right groups that left dozens of wounded police, large damage and family of immigrants expelled from their houses in different parts of the region.

In addition to the parades of the orange, hundreds of bonfires built with pallets are burned these days in the Protestant areas in which the scarecases of nationalist Catholic rivals or the flag of the Tricolor of the Irish Republic are also burned.

This year, after the “racist” violence in June last year, according to PSNI, the Moygashel fire put the patter with mannequins with offers for two banners on two banners with the messages “Parado Ships” and “War) before the refugees”.

The primacy of the Irish Church (Protestant), Archbishop Armet John MacDauella, believed that this incident was “racist, threatening and insulting” and warned that he was not at all “Christianity or Protestant culture”, then he is actually “inhuman and anti -Christian”.

Also, the director of Amnesty International in Northern Ireland, Patrick Corrigan, called the fire “a vile and dehumanized act that feeds hatred and racism.”

For his part, the Moigashel committee defended the “added”, located on the top of the fire, and asked not to be interpreted as “racist, threatening or insulting”, but as an “expression of our discomfort with illegal immigration crisis”.

In the message, before this weekend of the “parades and bonfire”, the PSNI superintendent John Butcher called for peace to ensure safe, respectful, respectful and inclusive for everyone. ”

“There is no place for hatred or intimidation, only the space for the celebration that conducts and celebrates does not share,” said Butcher, who emphasized that this tradition is “a valuable part of local history and culture” of Northern Ireland.

The order of the orange notes in July 12 the victory of the Protestant King Guillermo III from Orange over the Catholic Haim II in the battle of Boyn in 1690, with marches, which, in some cases, cross the nationalist Catholic areas and this often cause serious riots.

With this holiday, the trade union community celebrates its traditions and ties with Great Britain, currently in danger, according to some of its leaders, Brexit and, recently, the restoration of immigration.

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