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Acknowledgment: Catholic World News Service | |||
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BELFAST (CWNews.com) - A British-controlled commission in
Northern Ireland on Friday banned a Protestant parade that
had been set to move through a Catholic neighborhood on the
first day of the troubled province's "marching season."
The province is gripped with tension between republican
Catholics and loyalist Protestants each year at the start
of the marching season, when Protestants hold parades to
commemorate historic victories and affirm their British
identity. The Parades Commission, established by the
British government last year to regulate the parades,
banned the parade by the Apprentice Boys group which had
been set to march through south Belfast on Easter Monday,
April 13.
The chairman of the commission, Alistair Graham, said it
had not been an easy decision. "In the final analysis,
however, we have been most concerned about the impact that
a parade along the Lower Ormeau Road at this time would
have on relationships within the community," Graham told a
news conference.
Although most parades are held without violence, there have
been riots during some marches over the past three years.
With multi-party peace talks approaching their deadline on
April 13, the British and Irish governments have been
counseling calm to avoid sparking increased tensions.
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