BELFAST: Sunflower seeds and burnt tins of ghee spill out from the charred facade of an ethnic minority-owned grocery store in Belfast attacked during anti-immigrant riots this week in and around the Northern Irish capital Belfast. On Thursday Mohammad, the manager of the scorched Sham Supermarket, sat on the nearby curb dragging on a cigarette — a habit he has resumed amid the stress of recent days 11 years after quitting smoking. “It’s all burnt, there’s nothing left,” he said of the store that sold Syrian and other produce.

Fears grow about anti-immigration protests after asylum seeker charged with attempted murder in Northern Ireland

Belfast awoke to scenes of destruction on 10 June after anti immigration protests descended into violence across several parts of Northern Ireland, leaving homes damaged, vehicles…