In short:
Police officers have been injured in anti-immigration protests that have swept across cities in the UK.
Riots involving hundreds of protesters have erupted in English towns and cities following false information about a knife attack at a children’s dance class spreading rapidly on social media.
What’s next?
Extra police have been deployed across cities while mosques across the country have been advised to strengthen security.
Violent disorder has swept across several UK cities, injuring police and damaging property in the most widespread rioting in the kingdom for 13 years, following the murder of three young girls in north-west England.
The riots, involving hundreds of anti-immigration protesters, erupted after false information that the suspect in Monday’s knife attack at a children’s dance class in Southport was a radical Muslim migrant spread rapidly on social media.
Police have said the suspect, Axel Rudakubana, 17, was born in Britain but protests by anti-immigration and anti-Muslim demonstrators have continued, descending into violence, arson and looting.
Violent disorder erupted in cities across the UK, including Manchester, Liverpool, Bristol, Hull, Blackpool, Nottingham, Leeds and Belfast, with scuffles breaking out and bricks and bottles thrown as anti-immigration protesters faced groups opposed to racism.
Many police officers suffered injuries as they tried to keep several hundred rival protesters — largely young men who were chanting slogans — from clashing.
In Liverpool, two officers were in hospital with suspected facial fractures, while another was pushed from his motorbike and assaulted in the disorder involving some 750 protesters and a similar number of rival protesters, Merseyside Police said.
At least two shops in Liverpool were vandalised and looted, police said.
Similar scenes were witnessed in the south-western city of Bristol although anti-racist protesters outnumbered anti-immigration groups, with TV footage showing them facing off with police in riot gear.
In Belfast, some businesses reported damage to property while at least one was set on fire, according to police.
“I have no reason why they attacked us,” said Rahmi Akyol, standing outside the shattered glass doors of his cafe in Belfast, which he said was attacked by dozens of people with bottles and chairs.
“I’ve lived here 35 years. My kids, my wife is from here. I don’t know what to say, it’s terrible,” he said.
Across Britain, police have arrested dozens for offences ranging from violent disorder to burglary and criminal damage.
Extra police have been deployed across cities while mosques across the country have been advised to strengthen security following an attack on a mosque in Southport on Tuesday.
‘Unforgivable violence’ at protests
Prime Minister Keir Starmer, facing his first big test since his election a month ago, has condemned the “far-right” for the wave of violence and backed police to take strong action.
He discussed the disorder with senior ministers on Saturday, his office said.
The last time riots erupted in Britain was in 2011 when a much larger outbreak of violence took hold, with thousands of people taking to the streets for five nights after police shot dead a Black man in London.
On Friday night, hundreds of anti-immigration demonstrators in Sunderland threw stones at police in riot gear near a mosque, before overturning vehicles, setting a car alight and starting a fire near a police station.
“This was not a protest. This was unforgivable violence and disorder,” Mark Hall, chief police superintendent of the Sunderland area, told reporters on Saturday.
Some further protests were planned for Sunday.
Reuters
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