The glow of fire illuminated the streets of east Belfast last night as a night of unrest saw multiple homes set ablaze, sending residents fleeing into the cold January air. At least four properties were destroyed in what police have described as ‘targeted attacks’, with petrol bombs and missiles thrown at emergency services. The violence marks the most severe outbreak of sectarian tensions in Northern Ireland in years, prompting the UK Government to announce an urgent security review.
Northern Ireland Secretary Hilary Benn confirmed the review in a statement this morning, calling the attacks ‘a reckless and cowardly assault on families’. The review will examine police resources, community tensions, and the potential role of paramilitary groups. ‘We will not allow a minority to drag Northern Ireland back to the darkest days of its past,’ Benn said.
For the residents of the targeted homes, the darkest days are already here. Families, some still in their nightclothes, watched from behind police cordons as fire crews battled the inferno. One woman, cradling a child, told reporters: ‘We have nothing. Everything is gone. They took my home, my memories, my safety.’
The attacks follow a period of heightened tension linked to the ongoing disputes over the Northern Ireland Protocol and the legacy of the Troubles. Loyalist and republican groups have been jostling for influence, with some analysts suggesting that paramilitary organisations are exploiting the political vacuum to reassert control. Dr. Patricia McCann, a professor of conflict studies at Queen’s University Belfast, told me: ‘This is not spontaneous violence. It is orchestrated. The use of incendiary devices, the coordination of attacks on homes rather than symbols, suggests a deliberate strategy to create fear and instability.’
The question now is whether the security review can stem the tide. The Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) has already deployed additional officers to the area, but their resources are stretched thin. The threat level remains severe, with intelligence suggesting that further attacks could be imminent.
Yet beneath the immediate crisis lies a deeper, slower catastrophe. The UK’s ongoing failure to stabilise the region’s politics, coupled with austerity and social inequity, has created a tinderbox. The fires of Belfast are a symptom of a system under stress, a feedback loop of grievance and violence that, if left unchecked, could spiral. As a scientist, I see the same pattern in climate tipping points: small, abrupt shocks that can flip a system into a new, less stable state.
For now, the people of east Belfast are left to pick through the ashes. The government’s promises are welcome, but they must be matched with substance. As one resident said, ‘We need action, not words. The fire is still burning.’
The night’s events are a stark reminder that progress is never linear. The peace process of 1998 brought hope, but the embers of division still smoulder. Security reviews are a start. But rebuilding trust, like rebuilding a home, takes time, resources, and a collective will to keep the flames of hatred from spreading anew.








