Dorothy Bain is reportedly moving on after five years in the job.
The Lord Advocate is poised to quit after a controversial period in office.
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Dorothy Bain has reportedly told the First Minister she intends to leave the role.
Bain was criticised this year over claims she tipped off John Swinney about details of the criminal case against former SNP chief executive Peter Murrell.
Swinney previously said he had “absolute confidence” in the Lord Advocate, but The Scotsman has reported she is standing down.
The new Scottish Parliament is set to swear in Swinney as first minister next week and one of his jobs will be identifying a new Lord Advocate.
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Bain, like her predecessors, faced accusations the job amounted to a conflict of interest.
She is head of the prosecution service and the top legal adviser to the Government, which critics say is unacceptable.
LOS ANGELES (AP) — Federal authorities served a search warrant on Wednesday at a Southern California aerospace facility where a chemical tank overheated last month, forcing 50,000 residents to evacuate because authorities feared a catastrophic explosion.
The warrant signed by a federal judge last week approved the seizure of documents and records related to the “storage, use, or disposal” of methyl methacrylate, the chemical inside the affected tank.
“Samples of the substance within any tank, tote, drum, vat, vessel, or container suspected of containing or having previously contained methyl methacrylate and/or any hazardous substance” were also sought, according to the warrant.
The warrant also orders agents to seize records related to “any cooling equipment or other equipment used to control or regulate the temperature of methyl methacrylate.”
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The FBI confirmed its agents were searching GKN Aerospace Transparency Systems in the Orange County city of Garden Grove. Multiple vehicles and several federal agents were seen outside the facility Wednesday morning.
Company says it’s cooperating with authorities
GKN Aerospace makes cockpit windows, canopies and windshields. The tank that overheated contained 6,000 to 7,000 gallons (22,700 to 26,500 liters) of methyl methacrylate, which is highly flammable. The liquid is used in the manufacturing of plastics and coatings, such as Plexiglas and dental prosthetics.
Exposure to the chemical can cause serious respiratory problems, neurological issues and irritation to the skin, eyes and throat, according to the Environmental Protection Agency.
The chemical that overheated is still in the holding tank, according to the Orange County Health Care Agency, which is leading the site cleanup and waste removal efforts.
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The agency had planned to pump the neutralized methyl methacrylate from the storage tanks into sealed trucks for transport and disposal starting at the end of last week, according to a press release on the agency’s website. But on Friday, they said the removal didn’t happen “due to unavailable resources.”
Once a new date is confirmed, they will provide advance notice to the community.
Responding to a request for comment on the FBI investigation, a GKN spokesperson told the AP on Wednesday morning: “We are cooperating with authorities at our Garden Grove facility and will continue to do so.”
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GKN Aerospace’s Steve Carlin spoke at a community meeting Tuesday evening. He thanked the firefighters and local leaders who responded to the incident at the plant that employs more than 500 people, and apologized to the community.
“On behalf of GKN and the Garden Grove plant I want to say that I’m sorry that this event and this incident occurred. I understand and I realized sitting here tonight what a disruptive event it was and how unsettling it is to the greater community. Particularly unsettling to us at GKN because of the long history that we have with Garden Grove and how connected we are to this community.”
Garden Grove city leaders and residents urged GKN Aerospace to consider moving these tanks of methyl methacrylate off of the Garden Grove plant, so the chemical would be far away from residents and businesses. But Carlin said it is very early in the investigation into what happened, so it is too soon to decide what the company might do in response to the incident. He promised to be transparent with the community about the investigation.
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Overheating tank risked a catastrophic explosion
The incident was reported on May 21 and evacuations began the next day. The tank overheated because a valve on the cooling system that kept it at 50 degrees Fahrenheit (10 degrees Celsius) failed, officials said.
Crews sprayed water on the tank until the interior temperature stabilized to 92 F (33.3 C), down from 100 F (37.7 C). A sprinkler system was used to douse the tank, and the company said its technical specialists and firefighters removed insulation from the tank to help cool it.
A crack that formed by chance on the tank relieved pressure and helped avert a catastrophic explosion, allowing most evacuees to return home over the Memorial Day weekend. Authorities announced they were lifting the final orders after the temperature on the tank remained stable for four hours without intervention from sprinklers.
Separately, the Orange County District Attorney’s Office also is conducting a criminal investigation into the GKN Aerospace plant, according to DA spokesperson Kimberly Edds.
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“We have sent a preservation letter to GKN directing them not to modify or destroy any evidence, which the company’s outside counsel confirmed receipt,” Edds told The Associated Press in an email.
Lawyers in federal lawsuits welcome the FBI’s involvement
About a dozen people and businesses that were among the 50,000 evacuated during the chemical emergency have filed lawsuits against the company. Some residents reported strong odors, respiratory irritation, headaches and dizziness. They question why the chemical plant was allowed to operate so close to homes.
Lawyer Rickard McCune represents Big Rob’s Pizzeria and Fruit Caboose Concessions in a federal lawsuit claiming GKN Aerospace and parent company Melrose Industries were negligent and put the surrounding communities at risk. He said they’re pleased the federal government is investigating. The FBI’s involvement will help bring justice to those who were harmed, he said.
Another lawyer, Alex Wheeler, represents Dinh Tran and Drippys Gourmet Ice Cream Sandwiches and said they’re relieved that the FBI is using its resources to investigate potential criminal acts.
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“As more information becomes public, it’s becoming clearer and clearer that the risk to our community posed by GKN’s operation of the Garden Grove facility may require a long term and lasting solution,” Wheeler said.
GKN did not immediately respond to the allegations in the lawsuits.
Orange County health officials assured residents that no contamination or fumes were released, and that they would keep monitoring the air for several months and checking the sewer and storm drains.
The California incident was the first of two major hazardous chemical emergencies on the West Coast within a week of each other. Five days after the GKN Aerospace situation began, a large tank containing a corrosive chemical at a Longview, Washington paper mill ruptured and imploded, killing 11 people.
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Bellisle reported from Seattle. Associated Press journalist Josh Funk in Omaha, Nebraska, contributed.
WASHINGTON (AP) — UFC fighter Josh Hokit was decked out in an American flag bandana and American eagle gloves as he unleashed vigorous trash talk ahead of the company’s White House debut.
Sean O’Malley earned American style points for dressing in red — his hair and suit — and blue — dress shirt, tie and, well, hair again — and Michael Chandler visualized accessorizing his fight night walk-out before he dished out a patriotic pounding draped in an American flag.
“For me to walk from the White House to the octagon to represent America, to represent myself, to represent just who I am and what this country means to me,” Chandler said, “it’s just a dream come true.”
The usual foul-mouthed fight hype from UFC’s American fighters ahead of their prime-time debut Sunday on the White House grounds largely yielded to bursts of national pride Wednesday.
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O’Malley, known as much for his cornucopia of colors that turn his locks into rainbows or cotton candy tops as his fight skills, tried to downplay the week and called it business as usual. In the next breath, O’Malley confessed fighting on a UFC card on the South Lawn was indeed “epic.”
Hokit, meanwhile, wasn’t about to modify his style on the microphone just because he will fight in the mixed martial arts show timed to coincide with President Donald Trump’s 80th birthday and the celebration of the nation’s 250th anniversary.
“You’ll never see me apologize for anything I do,” Hokit said.
Well, the heavyweight is in the right city for that declaration. He was one of several fighters who added a dash of brashness and boldness in the nation’s capital just four days before the surreal juxtaposition of pummeling and patriotism set for Trump and UFC boss Dana White’s big-fight vision of UFC Freedom 250.
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Forget the Washington Monument. The claw, the temporary arena structure that houses the eight-sided cage, is the buzziest landmark this week in DC.
Weather is a slight concern for fight night
Umbrellas were a necessary accessory around Washington early Wednesday and the threat of heavier rain later in the week, which could dampen both a scheduled press conference at the Lincoln Memorial as well as fight night, was the only true concern ahead of the fight card.
White, who helped launch UFC into a global sports empire, insisted inclement weather will not keep the spectacle from proceeding as scheduled.
“We’re going to be good on Sunday,” White said this week. “I don’t care if it snows, rains, we’re going. Even lightning. You guys all played sports when you were growing up. Whenever there was lightning, you’d sit the lightning out. When it was over, you played. That’s what we’ll do.”
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Two titles at stake on the South Lawn
While the South Lawn setting normally reserved for low-contact events like the annual Easter Egg Roll is the real star of the show, there are two championship fights set for the Paramount+ show.
In a card that has been panned by fans online as underwhelming, Brazil’s Alex Pereira will meet France’s Ciryl Gane for the interim UFC heavyweight title. Then Spanish-Georgian lightweight champion Ilia Topuria takes on interim champ Justin Gaethje, one of just two Americans who currently hold even a share of the UFC’s 11 championship belts.
Middleweight Bo Nickal was a three-time NCAA Division I wrestling champion at Penn State who was awed when he met Trump in 2019 at the White House during a ceremony for collegiate national champions.
“The president said hello to all the teams,” Nickal said Wednesday. “When he got to us, he was all excited because he likes wrestlers. He talked to us for maybe 10, 15 minutes because he likes chatting.”
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Nickal is set to fight on the main card Sunday against Philadelphia fighter Kyle Daukaus. Nickal called fighting on the show a “massive opportunity,” and one he may have manifested back in that 2019 meeting.
“I told him at that time in 2019 that I was going to fight at UFC,” Nickal said. “He asked if I needed an agent. He’s put in a good word for me, obviously, getting on this card.”
The bulk of UFC’s roster seemingly threw their names on the ballot and hoped to get the call they would fight in front of the president.
Chandler, the 40-year-old Missouri native, laughed when he said he would feel “as high as kite in the best way possible” on his way to the cage. He was thrilled when he earned a lightweight bout against Mauricio Ruffy.
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“Even if you’re not watching, you’ve heard about this card, whether you like to admit it or not,” Chandler said.
White not fazed by federal lawsuit
Not everyone is on board with fighters commandeering the same South Lawn where Dwight D. Eisenhower once put in a putting green.
A federal lawsuit filed Saturday by the Public Integrity Project on behalf of two Virginia residents contends the Trump administration’s authorization of the event was unlawful. The lawsuit says such approval violated National Park Service regulations prohibiting sporting events on federal parklands, Congress did not consent to the towering arch overlooking the event space and no environmental review was conducted before the construction.
White, a long-time friend and former business associate of Trump’s from the days when Boardwalk cards at Trump Taj Mahal lifted UFC into relevancy, brushed off the idea the lawsuit could halt the fight card.
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“We were expecting a lawsuit,” White said. “We expected everything coming into this event. We thought it would be sooner. We knew it was going to come. We didn’t know who or how, but we knew it was going to come.”
The car got stuck on the busway on Tuesday, June 9
Another car has fallen victim to the Cambridgeshire guided busway trap. The car got stuck on the busway along Station Road in St Ives at about 3.54pm on Tuesday, June 9.
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The car was pictured next to traffic lights at the guided busway. Cambridgeshire County Council were called with reports that a car entered the trap.
A member of the county council’s busway team helped the driver to push their vehicle back onto Station Road. The junction was cleared by 4.45pm.
A spokesperson for Cambridgeshire County Council said: “A car entered the car trap in St Ives at 15:54 yesterday (Tuesday) and became stuck. A member of our Guided Busway team helped the driver to push their vehicle back onto Station Road and the junction was clear by 16:45.”
The Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) has outlined the identity verification process for people making a new Universal Credit claim, including which documents can be used as evidence
Linda Howard Money and Consumer Writer
20:00, 10 Jun 2026
Those making a fresh Universal Credit claim may be required to submit specific documentation to confirm their identity, with the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) outlining the evidence that can be used online and what occurs should claimants be unable to prove who they are digitally.
Individuals who are unable to verify their identity online may be requested to attend a Jobcentre appointment or furnish additional information before their Universal Credit claim can proceed.
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Identity verification forms a crucial part of the Universal Credit application process, helping to ensure payments reach the correct recipient. The most recent DWP figures reveal that 8.3 million people throughout the UK are receiving financial support via Universal Credit.
According to GOV.UK guidance, people can usually verify their identity online if they have any two of the following:
A valid UK passport
A UK driving licence
Information from recent Self Assessment tax returns
Credit reference information
The online service cross-references information against official records and can help accelerate the application process for new claimants, reports the Daily Record.
However, not everybody will be in a position to verify their identity digitally. The DWP has stated that those who are unable to use the online service may be offered alternative means of confirming their identity.
This can include submitting documents, attending an in-person appointment at a Jobcentre, or completing a biographical interview by telephone.
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Claimants who are requested to attend a Jobcentre interview may be required to bring proof of identity and other supporting documentation with them. The official guidance notes that the precise paperwork required may differ depending on an individual’s personal circumstances and what details the DWP already has on record.
Universal Credit is a means-tested benefit intended to assist those on a low income, those out of employment, or those unable to work with their everyday living costs.
The benefit has now superseded six legacy benefits, including Working Tax Credit, Child Tax Credit, Income Support, income-based Jobseeker’s Allowance, income-related Employment and Support Allowance and Housing Benefit for the majority of working-age claimants.
Those submitting a new claim can begin the process via GOV.UK, where they will be prompted to set up an account and confirm their identity before supplying details regarding their income, savings, housing costs and household situation.
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The DWP has released comprehensive guidance on GOV.UK outlining the documents that can be used to verify identity, along with alternative options for those who are unable to complete the process online.
The industrial metal finishing company has been operating since 1979.
A Staffordshire-based metal finishing firm that has served British industry for over four decades has collapsed into administration.
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Pym & Wildsmith (Metal Finishers) Limited, which dates back to 1979 and is based at Bramshall Industrial Estate near Uttoxeter, appointed administrators on June 3, according to a notice published in the London Gazette.
The firm, which specialises in metal treatment and coating, appointed Mark Blackman and James Saunders of KR8 Advisory as joint administrators.
Pym & Wildsmith has established itself as one of the Midlands’ foremost industrial finishing businesses, offering services including e-coating, powder coating, paint spraying, shot blasting, and pre-treatment. The company has provided services to clients across numerous sectors, including automotive, construction and engineering, defence, energy, rail, architecture, transport and water.
Having been in operation for 47 years, the industrial metal finishing company was originally founded in 1979 by Stephen Pym and Tony Wildsmith.
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The business transitioned from family ownership to 100% employee ownership in 2022, reports the Express.
On its website, the company describes itself as “one of the Midlands’ leading specialist industrial finishing companies”, supplying “high-quality services to a range of blue-chip customers”.
They added: “Pym & Wildsmith has over 45 years’ experience in the provision of high quality industrial finishes to UK industry. Our work can be seen in a variety of contexts, from heavy earth moving equipment to highly specialised small batches.
“We are based at our headquarters in Bramshall, Staffordshire. Therefore, we have access to the UK’s major motorway networks and road system. Our extensive office and manufacturing facilities include an EPD facility, box ovens, spray booths and pickling tanks,as well as a technical department.
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“Over the past 5 years a programme of investment in processes, equipment and technology, has resulted in new products and services, as well as a growth in sales and customers.”
The firm has garnered numerous positive reviews on Google.
One states: “The BEST experience with any finisher. Fantastic customer service. Responsive, organised, never have to chase for an answer and they do what they say they will do. They could not have been better.”
Another added: “Longstanding and successful company. Very professional and quality service.”
This summer’s World Cup will have a very different feel.
Not just because it has expanded to 48 teams, but also because there are a number of rule changes coming into force at the tournament.
Those regulations have been confirmed by FIFA, and many of them concern the way that Video Assistant Referees (VAR) will be used in the United States, Canada and Mexico.
The tournament is set to get underway this week, with the first game kicking off on Thursday when Mexico take on South Africa at the Estadio Banorte.
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Here, Standard Sport outlines all the new rules that will be on show at the tournament.
There are three key decisions that VAR currently preside over: goals, penalties and straight red cards.
Now, there will be new scenarios that video assistants can review.
The first is an incorrectly awarded corner, and a check will be made but only if it doesn’t slow down the game’s restart.
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An example would be if a corner is awarded but replays indicate that the final touch came off the attacking player.
The next is fouls that happen before play is started, such as if an attacking player was to bring down his marker before a set piece is taken.
VAR can also review incorrectly given red cards that stem from second yellows, and they can also intervene when a card has been brandished to the wrong player, such as at Stamford Bridge back in 2014 when Arsenal’s Kieran Gibbs was wrongfully dismissed after Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain’s deliberate goalline handball.
New rules: VAR will oversee more incidents this summer
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Players can’t cover their mouths
Away from the VAR booth, there will be strict punishment for players covering their mouths when they communicate on the field.
It is often seen when team-mates and opponents converse, but that will not be allowed to happen at this World Cup, after Gianluca Prestianni’s alleged racial abuse of Vinicius Junior in the Champions League earlier this season.
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The only exception is that if a conversation happens with covered mouths that is deemed to be a friendly interaction, then no action will be taken. Any sense of aggression could see a player shown a red card.
Restarts, substitutions and leaving the field
There will be a five-second countdown for every restart at this summer’s tournament, encompassing goal kicks, free kicks and throw-ins.
Referees will raise their arms to start the count, and if the ball is not back in play at zero, the ball will be turned over. From a goal kick, that would give the attacking team a corner.
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As for substitutions, there is a maximum 10 seconds for a player to exit the pitch and for his replacement to enter the fray.
That enforces substituted players leaving the field by the nearest point of exit.
If that doesn’t happen, then a player will be forced to wait 60 seconds before being able to come on.
Countdown: Referees will limit restart times this summer
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There is continuity with injured players who have treatment on the pitch will be forced to wait a minute before re-entering the field, although there are exceptions for goalkeepers or those that suffer serious injuries or head collisions, with concussion protocols in place.
Goalkeepers will also be penalised for going down for tactical reasons, with that a hot topic over the recent campaign.
No1s are often instructed by managers to feign injuries so coaches can communicate instructions to their outfielders, but that will be cracked down on at the World Cup.
Outfield players will be told to stay where they are on the pitch, although there are no punishments for players that do move.
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Players who storm off the pitch in protest will also be shown a straight red, and the same will happen to team-mates who encourage it. Should an entire team leave the field of play, the game will be abandoned and the guilty party will forfeit the match.
Cooling breaks: Thomas Tuchel took advantage of the three-minute cooling break in England’s World Cup warm-up match
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As seen in the warm-up friendlies, three-minute water breaks will happen once in each half.
That will be much-needed with the temperatures set to reach record highs in North America.
The officers were injured while carrying out public order duties as disorder broke out
on Tuesday night,
21:34, 10 Jun 2026Updated 21:48, 10 Jun 2026
Police say an 18-year-old man has been arrested on suspicion of riot after two police officers were injured when a petrol bomb was thrown at them.
The officers were injured while carrying out public order duties as disorder broke out i n Carrickfergus on Tuesday night, June 9. One officer was treated at the scene and the other was treated at hospital for their injuries.
The man was arrested at an address in Carrickfergus this afternoon, Wednesday, June 10. He remains in custody at this time.
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PSNI Chief Superintendent Stephen Murray said: “Our officers were working to keep communities safe during disorder and were savagely targeted by a petrol bomb. It was fortunate they weren’t more seriously hurt. No one should be injured for doing their job – particularly when that job is working all hours to keep people from harm. “Our investigation is picking up pace and we will be making more arrests in the days ahead.” Anyone with information should contact police on 101 or 999 in an emergency. A report can be submitted online using the non-emergency reporting form via www.psni.police.uk/makeareport/ or you can contact Crimestoppers anonymously on 0800 555 111 or online at www.crimestoppers-uk.org/. Photos and footage – including CCTV, mobile phone or dashcam footage – can be shared with police through the Major Incident Public Portal at www.mipp.police.uk/operation/PSNI26W14-PO1.
England’s final pre-WorldCup friendly against Costa Rica has been delayed after a heavy thunderstorm hit Orlando.
A thunderstorm descended at around 1pm local time and battered the Florida city relentlessly, with torrential rain and lightning filling the skies.
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Thomas Tuchel’s side were due to face the Central American outfit at 4pm eastern time (9pm BST) but the pitch at the Inter&Co Stadium was heavily waterlogged an hour-and-a-half before the start.
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Although the pitch drained quickly, kick-off was still put back by one hour as rain and inclement weather remained in the area.
There will be another delay of 30 minutes if there is a lightning strike within an eight-mile radius of the stadium, though the weather had appeared to clear by 3.30pm local time (8.30pm BST).
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A Football Association statement read: “Following a pitch inspection at the stadium, today’s match against Costa Rica will now kick off at 5pm ET (10pm UK time) – subject to there being no further lightning strikes in the area.”
England fans in the area took shelter where they could, including some going inside a local library, while others had to risk the elements.
Jude Bellingham was named in Tuchel’s starting XI for the game in the No.10 position as he gets a chance to stake his place for a shirt in next week’s opener against Croatia.
Harry Kane again led the line with Anthony Gordon and Noni Madueke supporting him, while Declan Rice started alongside Elliot Anderson in midfield.
Bricks, wheelie bins and traffic cones are being launched towards police to the north of Belfast by masked rioters.
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Footage showed rioters wearing face coverings and all-black outfits, advancing towards police on Antrim Road in Newtownabbey, Co Antrim, and attempting to hit officers with bricks and other projectiles.
Some rioters could be seen kicking police vehicles although the demonstrators retreated after a water cannon was deployed by riot police.
Police have deployed water cannons on protesters in Co Antrim after they were pelted with bricks in the latest disorder following the Belfast knife attack.
A large vehicle was in flames as demonstrators confronted the police after they gathered near the Sandyknowes roundabout in Newtownabbey to the north of Belfast.
Footage showed dozens of men dressed all in black and wearing face coverings gathering on Antrim Road and throwing objects at a line of eight police vehicles.
Videos shared on social media showed protesters attempting to march to the Chimney Corner Hotel, with riot police and several vans being deployed to manage the demonstrations.
The Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) said officers deployed water cannons to maintain public order after missiles were thrown at police.
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In Derry, police reported items having been set alight on the Ardmore Road.
Additional police officers are on the streets in the region following significant unrest on Tuesday night following the brutal attack on Monday.
Public transport was suspended and some schools closed early on Wednesday with fears of a second night of violence.
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Earlier, Hadi Alodid, 30, appeared in court charged with attempted murder over Monday’s knife attack in which victim Stephen Ogilvie lost an eye.
Mr Ogilvie, who is aged in his 40s, remains in a serious condition in hospital in Belfast. It is understood he is in an induced coma.
The reaction to the incident saw mobs set homes, a bus and cars on fire on Tuesday, with people targeted based on their race.
Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer vowed to “crack down on anyone who is fuelling this division”.
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Alodid appeared before Belfast Magistrates’ Court on Wednesday morning charged with the attempted murder of Mr Ogilvie, with threats to kill an NHS radiographer and with possession of a knife.
The court heard Mr Ogilvie lost his left eye and suffered deep cuts to his head, face and back.
District Judge Stephen Keown refused bail after hearing police concerns there could be “significant public disorder” if he was released due to “strong public feeling” about the incident.
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The judge warned that anyone who plans to take part in further disorder in Northern Ireland should “be prepared to go to prison”.
In Westminster, security minister Dan Jarvis said: “Reports that ethnic minorities were targeted are sickening.”
The Prime Minister said the rioting in Belfast was “shocking and completely unacceptable”.
“It is clear that people were targeted last night because of their background and I will not tolerate it,” he said.
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“Those responsible will feel the full force of the law.”
Police Service of Northern Ireland Chief Constable Jon Boutcher said 200 more officers would be on the streets on Wednesday night.
“We will deal with this,” he said.
“We will be on the streets tonight in numbers even more than we were last night, and we have got arrangements in hand to get mutual aid that will be arriving here tomorrow.”
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The force said that following the recent disorder, “some social media users are posting address details online”.
“We have received phone calls from a number of families, house owners, neighbours and members of the wider community who are extremely distressed as a result of this reckless activity,” a spokesperson for the PSNI said.
“This is unacceptable. It is putting lives at risk and has to stop.
“Anyone who shares personal information online with the intention to endanger others may be committing a criminal offence.”
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Mr Jarvis told MPs there had been three arrests “but more will surely follow”.
Mr Ogilvie’s family said in a statement they were “devastated by the horrific attack” but pleaded for calm.
“We are aware of the tensions and talk of protests following this incident,” the statement said.
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“We want to make it absolutely clear that overnight unrest is not welcome, and peaceful protest is the only way forward.
“We have many migrants who make a deeply valuable contribution to our country, including in our healthcare system and hospitality sector and we depend on them to make our country work.
“We do not want this terrible tragedy to be used to divide people or fuel hostility.”
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