Police declare bonfire site a major incident
The police have declared a major incident over a bonfire in south Belfast that is due to be lit on Friday as part of annual Twelfth events across Northern Ireland.
Belfast City Council have requested the police assist contractors to dismantle the bonfire before it is lit.
There are concerns that the power supply to Belfast City Hospital and the Royal Victoria Hospital would be put at risk because the bonfire lies near a major electricity substation.
On Thursday afternoon, bonfire builders voluntarily removed tiers of pallets from the top of the bonfire and told BBC News NI the action was an "olive branch" to those concerned.

The Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) said no decision had been taken on assisting the removal of the bonfire and they continue to work with agencies and community representatives on this matter.
Bonfires are lit as of Eleventh night celebrations in some unionist areas of Northern Ireland, which ushers in the Twelfth of July, the main date in the parading season.
The Twelfth commemorates the Battle of the Boyne in 1690 when the Protestant King William III - also known as King Billy and William of Orange - defeated Catholic King James II.
Bonfires were lit on 11 July to welcome - and guide - William.
There are separate concerns about the presence of asbestos at the bonfire site which is between the Donegall Road and the Westlink and the council voted to write to the environment minister to act immediately to have it removed.
Sinn Féin MLA Pat Sheehan told BBC's Good Morning Ulster programme on Thursday that the police "have a responsibility" in this situation.
He said the issue had only been brought into the public domain because it is "the first time a bonfire has been held in this site".
He also called on action from the landowner and NIEA regarding the asbestos.
Sheehan also called on unionist politicians to "show leadership" and said the Deputy First Minister, Emma Little Pengelly, "should be out today calling for that bonfire to be dismantled. Where is her leadership?"
Tensions are escalated

The PSNI appears to have been put between a rock and a hard place here by a political decision at the 11th hour.
One of its considerations is most certainly: Would any operation trigger disorder which could spread to other areas?
Just 36 hours ago, the PSNI felt the mood music going into the 12th of July was pretty positive.
Now we have a significant bonfire row which has escalated tensions.
We saw evidence last night of how the local community has reacted to the prospect of a police operation.
Site entrances were blocked, a protest took place on the road, people were in an around the bonfire, and there is also a risk it could be lit early if any operation is mobilised.

Loyalist activist Jamie Bryson has said he plans to bring legal action to stop the bonfire being dismantled and has questioned the decision making process behind the vote.
TUV councillor Ron McDowell said he was supporting Mr Bryson's plan and claimed that the process of the Belfast City council (BCC) meeting was "procedurally improper".
However, the council rejected claims that the decision to dismantle the bonfire breached legal guidelines and said the move was part of its "emergency" decision-making processes.
It also said it was in line with the rules of council, those cases on which an "inability to immediately implement a decision would result in a breach of statutory or contractual duty".
Power for hospitals
Belfast Health Trust said the bonfire is near a substation that supplies both hospitals.
The Northern Ireland Environment Agency (NIEA) said it was first alerted to the issues around the bonfire on 16 May and had been engaging with the landowner and the city council regularly since then.
"An inspection of the site was carried out, an enforcement investigation was initiated and the agency engaged the landowner to ascertain how the asbestos material could be removed from the site and, if that could not be done by July 11, on the mitigating measures that needed to be put in place," it said.
Northern Ireland Electricity (NIE) said it had expressed concerns over the bonfire's "proximity to the substation causing potential risk to critical infrastructure and power outages".
The trust said it had contingency measures including back-up generators and it was confident there was no need to cancel any planned treatments or procedures.
Who owns the site?
The landowners, Boron Developments, bought the site in the summer of 2017 and were made aware of asbestos at that time.
Boron Developments have said it engaged a waste management company to remove the asbestos but the company needed "no personnel" on the site in order to complete the removal of asbestos.
Due to people "bringing in materials and building the bonfire" the company told the landowners it could not complete its work.
Belfast City Council said while the lands at the site remained "the responsibility of the landowner" the council and the Northern Ireland Environment Agency (NIEA) were "working together in relation to this site".
The Department of Agriculture, Environment and Rural Affairs said it had put in place mitigations "over the past week including the further covering of the asbestos containing material, the use of fire-retardant material and the erection of additional fencing".