The Irish flag, also known as the Irish tricolour Flickr/Anna Michal

The County Tyrone town of Strabane will not permit Irish flags at its St. Patrick's Day celebration this year. 

The Derry City and Strabane District Council (DCSDC), which is running the St. Patrick's Day celebration for the first time this year, confirmed that the Irish flag will be banned from the celebration, in an effort to make it a cross-community event. 

“Flags and emblems will not be included in the official parade which is planned for the enjoyment of everyone," a DCSDC spokeswoman stated. 

“The council is committed to promoting inclusion and integration within and between communities in all its activities, events and programmes.”

Read more: The Irish flag was flown for the first time in Waterford 170 years ago 

Flags and parades have long been a hot-button issue in Northern Ireland, and were among the topics US peace envoy Richard Haas attempted to mediate at Stormont in 2013 before the talks dissolved. 

Independent local councilor Paul Gallagher told the BBC that the decision was a break from previous St. Patrick's Day parades in Strabane, where flags were "very much welcome."

"As a councilor, I will be bringing it into the chamber, that we change the interpretation [of legislation] that council is using," he added.

People expressed outrage on Twitter, questioning if the DCSDC would do the same for the Orange Parades in July. 

While others had inventive workarounds: 

Read More: The Irish flag and the Ivory Coast flag - the two most confused flags in the world 

Sinn Fein councilors are planning to lodge a motion to see the decision overturned, Joe.ie reported. 

Do you think Irish flags should be flown at the St. Patrick's Day parade? Share your thoughts in the comment section.