Wednesday, July 11, 2007

11th July Bonfires

Hundreds of bonfires will be lit across Northern Ireland tonight. The annual 11th July bonfires are lit in all the 'loyalist' areas of Northern Ireland as a celebration of the victory of the Protestant King William of Orange over the Catholic James in 1690.

In Belfast it’s often used as an excuse by the yob element for a booze-up and quickly becomes a denigration of the other side’s culture rather than a celebration of their own, with the symbolic burning of Tricolours (the flag of the republic of Ireland) evident on many fires.

Apart from all of that, bonfires are an eyesore, a health hazard and an environmental nightmare. Belfast City Council are throwing thousands of pounds (£50k) at this problem in an attempt to make them safer, more 'environmentally friendly' and to turn the whole event into a 'family night out'.

Has it been a wise investment of taxpayers money? Is the intiative working? Judge for yourself:

1 comment:

J said...

Your comments are so right, the cost to those through the rate & tax system is criminal, but you're missing out the extra costs such as fire service call out or council clean-up for all the alcopop, lager bottle & fast-food detritus (more commonly known as c**p) that's left by the 'friends' of the community; Family friendly? Well only if you want your children to grow up narrow minded bullies. Why do I have to pay for this?!

I'm non-sectarian & non-partisan, I think both sides are idiots! They need to realise it's 2009 not 1690 or 1916.