Eleventh Night: Boy critical after being burnt at Ballysillan bonfire

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Boy at bonfireImage source, Social media
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A video on social media showed the boy running from the bonfire in flames

A 17-year-old boy is in a critical but stable condition after he suffered burns to his face and body at a bonfire at Silverstream Crescent in north Belfast shortly after midnight.

Bonfires were lit in parts of Northern Ireland as part of Eleventh night celebrations.

While an investigation is still ongoing, no crime is suspected to have occurred.

It is thought the youth caught fire after adding accelerant to the bonfire.

Image source, Social Media

Firefighters treated the teenager at the scene until the ambulance service arrived.

He was taken to Belfast's Royal Victoria Hospital where he is being treated in an intensive care unit.

Across Northern Ireland, NI Fire and Rescue Service (NIFRS) said it had dealt with a "significant increase in emergency calls and mobilisations to bonfire-related incidents".

Image source, PA Media
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A bonfire at Adam Street in the unionist Tiger's Bay area in north Belfast was among those lit on Sunday night

One at Adam Street in Tiger's Bay in north Belfast, which had been subject to legal action, passed off peacefully.

NIFRS dealt with 40 bonfire-related calls between 18:00 BST on Sunday and 02:00 on Monday, compared to 24 during the same timeframe in 2020.

Last week legal action from two Stormont ministers failed in a bid to force police to assist in the removal of the bonfire at Adam Street in the unionist Tiger's Bay area, close to an interface with the nationalist New Lodge.

It was lit shortly after midnight.

The fire service had to cool the back of one neighbouring building, but a number of community representatives marshalled people at the fire.

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There was a significant police presence at the Adam Street bonfire

An Irish tricolour was placed on the bonfire just before it was set alight and at one point a laser was shone from a block of flats in New Lodge towards the crowd.

Pastor Brian Madden from Tiger's Bay said those on both sides of the interface had worked to calm tensions, but said the executive had to start work now to make sure the same situation did not arise next year.

"We've worked hard to make sure this has been peaceful and I know people on the other side have worked hard to make sure the New Lodge has been peaceful," he added.

"People don't know the half of the effort that's gone into this - meetings, behind meetings, behind meetings.

"I know people think it's all one-sided, but we've been working really, really hard to get the bonfire moved, to get the tyres out and other stuff removed off it.

"I know they burnt a flag tonight and I don't condone that at all, I didn't want anything burned on it."

'Safety paramount'

DUP leader Sir Jeffrey Donaldson commended the efforts of community workers and fire service staff who ensured bonfires "passed off peacefully".

He said work needed to continue with those organising bonfires to "look at safety issues, the height of bonfires and where they are located".

"Public safety is absolutely paramount when it comes to this," he told BBC NI's Good Morning Ulster.

"If you take the bonfire that has been much talked of in Tiger's Bay, it was significantly reduced in size this year and I think that you can still celebrate your tradition and your culture - you don't have to have the highest bonfire in the world to do that."

Image source, Liam McBurney/PA Wire
Image caption,

An Irish tricolour was placed on the Adam Street bonfire before it was lit

Sir Jeffrey said he did not want to see election posters and flags burnt on bonfires.

"I think we can celebrate our culture and tradition in a respectful way," he added.

"Respect is a two-way street, if you want to gain respect for your tradition and culture you have got to show respect for the traditions, cultures, symbols of other communities.

"I have seen the union flag burnt on internment bonfires and I find it offensive and therefore I understand why people are offended when they see a flag or an election poster being burnt on a bonfire at this time of the year.

"The Republic of Ireland are our neighbours and I don't want to see their flag burnt any more than I want to see the union flag burnt and destroyed on other bonfires."

Sinn Féin assembly member for north Belfast, Gerry Kelly, said the Eleventh Night had been "better than we expected, thankfully", and added that there were "a lot of youth workers out and about to try and keep things quiet".

Commenting on the burning of the Irish tricolour on the Adam Street bonfire in Tiger's Bay, he said it was "unacceptable to have the type of hatred which is involved in burning other people's flags".

"I think there's something like 250 bonfires, but there was only a small number which caused all the trouble - but they caused severe trouble and that's the difficulty," he added.

"It's being described as culture, and I accept that it's culture, but if part of that culture is brought to interfaces... then there needs to be strong work done."

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'We have worked hard to make sure this has been peaceful'

The fire and rescue service said it was was "exceptionally busy on each of the three nights of Friday, Saturday and Sunday, with "direct intervention required to protect properties from radiated heat and embers from the bonfires".

Paddy Gallagher, Assistant Chief Fire Officer with the NIFRS, said that of the 244 incidents they attended from Friday to Sunday, 81 were bonfire-related.

He said there were no attacks on fire service personnel or appliances at any bonfires.

Eleventh Night bonfires take place annually ahead of the Twelfth of July.

Traditionally, tens of thousands of people attend parades on 12 July, which is held every year to mark the anniversary of the Battle of the Boyne.