What has happened todaay?published at 21:53 BST
We're going to pause our coverage on this live page for now. Here's a recap of what we've been covering today.
- A protest in Whiteabbey, where a crowd of around 170 people had gathered earlier has ended peacefully. An earlier protest on Belfast’s Malone Road also ended without incident.
- Earlier police warned of a “robust” response after disorder on both Tuesday and Wednesday night
- They also revealed that twelve officers were injured and 16 arrests were made during a second night of trouble on Wednesday following Monday night’s knife attack
- Most of the trouble was concentrated in Glengormley, but there were smaller pockets of disorder in places like Portadown, County Armagh
- Officers fired 20 baton rounds as well as using a water cannon against crowds
- Two people have been charged in relation to disorder in Portadown
- The Northern Ireland Fire and Rescue Service received 82 emergency calls on Wednesday night - incidents included vehicles, a house, a derelict building and bins being set on fire
- PSNI Assistant Chief Constable Ryan Henderson said water cannon would again be deployed on Thursday night, alongside additional police and public order dogs
- Bus services in and out of Belfast have been suspended from 17:30 BST on Thursday
- First Minister Michelle O'Neill said the disorder that has unfolded since Monday’s attack in north Belfast is "pure racism"
- Deputy First Minister Emma Little-Pengelly said those responsible are "only destroying their own communities and the cause they claim to support"
- Hilary Benn, the UK secretary of state for Northern Ireland said a sense of fear that "has spread amongst ethnic minority people" in Northern Ireland
- Stephen Ogilvie’s condition is improving, the Democratic Unionist Party leader Gavin Robinson said
- You can read the latest story here













