Police in Northern Ireland have prepared for a possible fourth night of disturbances in north Belfast.
Political leaders have also condemned "without reservation" the violence of recent nights that left more than 60 police officers injured.
Meanwhile, a 15-year-old boy has been charged with rioting and is due to appear at Belfast Juvenile Court tomorrow.
Two 23-year-old men, two men aged 18, and a 19-year-old man have been released on bail pending further police inquiries.
Earlier a senior PSNI chief called for "all those with influence" to help bring an end to the violence in Belfast, after officers came under attack during a third night of disturbances last night.
Police were pelted with fireworks and bricks in the Carlisle Circus area in the north of the city last night.
One officer was slightly injured and six people were arrested.
However, the trouble was not on the scale of rioting that left over 60 officers injured over the two previous evenings.
With a major loyalist parade planned for 29 September, PSNI Assistant Chief Constable Will Kerr said: "Northern Ireland cannot afford an 11th-hour solution.
"I urge all those with influence to urgently use it to bring a resolution to the violence and work towards a longer-term solution for the issues affecting this area."
Police used water cannon and baton rounds during serious violence on Sunday and Monday, sparked by fresh tension over parades.
Politicians have been urged to do more to calm the sectarian disturbances, which loyalist paramilitaries have been accused of orchestrating.
The tension in Belfast began to build last month after an Orange band behaved in what was seen as a provocative way outside a Catholic church in the north of the city.