Belfast Is Burning - Part Two: What They're Actually Trying to Relight | Prime Togue

The Troubles Ended in 1998. The Networks Didn't. Here's What's Actually Happening in Belfast. | Prime Rogue Follow-up to yesterday's Belfast video. If you don't know the history of Northern Ireland, last night looks like an anti-immigration riot. It's that — but it's also something older. The Troubles ran from the late 1960s to 1998. Loyalist paramilitaries — the UVF and UDA — and republican ones — the IRA — fought a sectarian conflict that killed thousands. The Good Friday Agreement ended the formal conflict. It didn't dissolve the organisations. Last night's protests gathered on the Newtownards Road and the Crumlin Road — not random streets. Those are historically contested sectarian interface areas. You don't accidentally organise there. A 2025 intelligence report documented far-right anti-immigration networks explicitly working alongside Ulster loyalists, connected to British neo-Nazi groups, North American influencers, and Russian-aligned propaganda outlets. Tommy Robinson has identified as a loyalist and has ties to those networks. And here's the deepest irony: the people claiming to defend the union by rioting are destabilising the Good Friday Agreement — the only legal framework keeping Northern Ireland in the UK with any stability. Every burning bus accelerates the case for Irish reunification. Some of the people organising this know that. Prime Rogue / Signal Cage. Belfast riots Troubles history loyalist paramilitary UVF UDA, Good Friday Agreement destabilised Belfast riots 2026, Tommy Robinson loyalist Northern Ireland far right, Belfast anti-immigration protests sectarian interface, Northern Ireland peace process far right threat 2026, Signal Cage Prime Rogue Belfast follow up, loyalist far right network neo-Nazi Northern Ireland, Belfast riots Irish reunification border poll