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About 250 bonfires took place around ทดลองเล่นสล็อตฟรีไม่ต้องฝาก the Eleventh Night across Northern Ireland this year, with the vast majority passing off without any problems.
But incidents at a small number - including a 17-year-old boy suffering burns to his face and body at a bonfire at Silverstream Crescent, Ballysillan - revived a debate about safety and regulation.
Some politicians have called for new rules, while others have argued that a legislative framework already exists and just needs to be implemented.
According to Dr Jonny Byrne, senior lecturer at Ulster University, rules are already in place that empower different public bodies.
While there no specific laws aimed directly at bonfires, legislation about things such as the environment, pollution, blocking roads and fly-tipping do apply.
Local authorities, the Department for Infrastructure, the police, the Northern Ireland Environment Agency and the Northern Ireland Fire and Rescue Service all have different powers they can use to regulate bonfires.