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The priest said girls, many of them dressed for a night out
-- "At one stage it looked like a Milan catwalk," he quipped
-- had come to watch the boys riot. The boys in turn appeared determined to impress the girls with their bravery. He said alcohol and drug abuse fueled their dangerous behavior as police doused the crowd with jets from a water cannon. He said IRA dissidents opposed to Northern Ireland's peace process undoubtedly have played a background role in stoking the past three nights' rioting, which has spread to several other working-class Catholic parts of Belfast and other towns. But the priest said he and Ardoyne community leaders were openly questioning whether the area's children would have sought street fights with police even if the cited catalyst for the trouble
-- a small Orange parade near Ardoyne on Monday night -- had been barred by police. "That's the burning question for us," he said. "I saw children facing down what would have been hardened mainstream (IRA) republicans of yesteryear who are now full weight behind the peace process, and they were taking (abuse) from these young people who were literally out of control."
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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