Fighting erupts on streets of European cities: ‘They will pay for it’

Police warned of further violence in England

Dozens of people have been arrested in violent clashes across the UK, with the government warning that rioters will “pay the price”. Riots engulfed several UK cities on Saturday, with police warning that further violence is likely in the coming days.

Rioters will “pay their price” for a wave of violent clashes that spread across the UK, British ministers warned on Saturday, after police battled rival groups of demonstrators throughout the day in what was the worst outbreak of civil unrest in Britain in more than a decade.

Dozens of arrests have been made in the wake of the riots, The Observer writes, and police have warned that further violence is possible in the coming days.

Clashes between anti-immigration demonstrators and counter-protesters have erupted in many cities, leaving police officers attacked and injured, and many more arrests have been promised.

Home Secretary Yvette Cooper said police would have the full support of the government to take the strongest possible action. “Criminal violence and disorder have no place on the streets of the UK,” she threatened. – Anyone involved in criminal disorder and gang violence on our streets will have to pay the price and should expect arrests, prosecutions, fines and the full force of the law, including imprisonment and travel bans. There are consequences for breaking the law.”

The widespread clashes represent the first major challenge to the new government of Keir Starmer, which is facing demands to introduce emergency powers to stop further violence and recall parliament.

Bricks were hurled at police officers in Stoke-on-Trent on Saturday, fireworks were set off amid tense clashes between an anti-Islam group and an anti-racism rally in Belfast, and windows of a hotel used to house migrants were smashed in Hull, injuring three police officers and injuring two others. Four people have been arrested. Videos later emerged on social media showing shops on fire.

Several police officers were also injured during “serious disorder” in Liverpool city centre when bricks, bottles and flares were thrown at them, two officers required hospitalisation and six arrests were made.

Greater Manchester Police said a dispersal notice had been issued in the city centre. When the opposing groups confronted each other in Nottingham’s Old Market Square, bottles and other objects flew at them from both sides.

About 150 people carrying St George’s Cross flags shouting “You are no longer English” in Leeds were vastly outnumbered by hundreds of counter-protesters shouting “Nazi scum off our streets”, The Observer noted. In Blackpool, clashes broke out between protesters and punks travelling to the town for a festival, involving bottles and chairs.

In Bristol, police separated protesters and counter-protesters before the group marched towards a hotel housing asylum seekers.

Lord Walney, the government’s independent adviser on political violence and disorder, emphasised the need for urgent political intervention, telling The Observer that new emergency powers may be needed. “The system is not equipped to deal with this mass mob incitement fuelled by extreme right-wing figures,” he said. – “I think home ministers may want to urgently consider new emergency measures – perhaps temporary in nature – that would allow the police to use full arrest powers to prevent people from congregating where there is a clear intention to incite violent riots.

On Saturday, Prime Minister Keir Starmer held a meeting of senior ministers where he said police had been given full support in tackling extremists who were trying to “sow hatred by intimidating communities”. He made clear that the right to freedom of expression and the violent scenes in recent days were “two very different things”.

The riots, which broke out last week, followed the murder of three little girls at a Taylor Swift-style dance class in Southport on Monday. A 17-year-old dark-skinned lad, Axel Rudakubana, from Lancashire, has been charged with the attack, but claims were circulated online that the suspect was allegedly an asylum seeker who had travelled to the UK illegally by boat. Following these reports, far-right protesters centred on social media rallied in cities across the country.

A key factor in the spread of online misinformation was Elon Musk’s decision to allow right-wing activists such as Tommy Robinson to return to his social media platform X, according to Joe Mulhall, director of research at anti-fascist organisation Hope Not Hate. “The initial misinformation and anger was driven, for example, by Twitter users who had previously been deplatformed,” he said. – And now they’ve been re-platformed.”

Tommy Robinson was permanently blocked from the platform (then called Twitter) in March 2018, then reinstated last November after Elon Musk bought it. “We haven’t seen any significant demonstrations since 2018”, Mulhall added.

An example of the dangers posed by the misuse of social media was highlighted in Stoke-on-Trent, where police were forced to deny a stabbing incident, refuting claims made on social media. “There is growing speculation that a massacre has taken place as a result of today’s disorder. We can confirm that this information is false and there have been no reports of a stabbing to the police or emergency services, despite the videos that are fuelling rumours on social media,” the police said.

The dangers of such interference were emphasised by Ben-Julian “BJ” Harrington, head of the National Police Chiefs’ Council for Policing, who condemned misinformation on social media as the cause of last week’s riots.

He said: “We have received reports today that Muslims stabbed two people in Stoke – this is simply not true. There are people, not even in our country, who are spreading and fuelling hatred, division and anxiety in communities they don’t care about, don’t know and don’t understand.”

Harrington, who was also NPCC gold commander and was responsible for the national strategy for dealing with Saturday’s riots, said “hooligans and criminals” were responsible. “This is not about protests,” he said. – This is about violent riots. This is about people who are infiltrating communities and causing damage – throwing bricks, bottles and other objects at police officers who work in those communities.”

Military forces across England have brought officers back from leave to deploy an extra 130 police support units – around 2,000 officers, he said: ‘Of course, the number of officers is limited and every one of them taken from the local community is not dedicated to solving burglaries’.

Echoing concerns about the dangers of social media, shadow Home Secretary James Cleverly called for tech companies to be brought into Downing Street to make sure they are taking action to stop misinformation being spread on their platforms. However, he was criticised for issuing a statement saying that Starmer’s knee-jerk bowing sent the protesters “completely the wrong message”, adding that “there was never any justification for such riots”.

There was also further condemnation of right-wing politician Nigel Farage’s role in inciting violence over his comments about the Southport killings, in which he questioned whether “the truth is being hidden from us” following Monday’s attack. Robert Jenrick, one of the Tory election favourites, said the reform leader’s comments had “not improved the situation”.

Last week’s clashes continued four days ago when more than 100 protesters were arrested in Whitehall where bottles and cans were thrown at police, while violence also erupted in Hartlepool and Manchester.

On Thursday, Prime Minister Starmer announced a new “national” response to the riots, uniting police forces across the country through intelligence sharing and increased use of facial recognition.

Then, on Friday, around 500 people, including several parents with children, gathered in Sunderland city centre, responding to far-right messages on social media to come to the demonstration. The gathering quickly turned violent as masked boys and men threw objects including bricks, stones, beer barrels and scaffolding at riot police.

Ten people were arrested, four police officers were taken to hospital and one was seriously injured. A police station was looted and a civil counselling office was set on fire. By Saturday morning, the acrid smell of burning was still in the air. Shoppers stopped to express their shock at what had happened and hundreds of residents of all ages gathered on the streets with brushes, dustpans, buckets, bin bags and dust trays.

Labour MP Lewis Atkinson said a link could be made between the riots and the fall of the English Defence League (EDL), founded by Robinson, whose real name is Stephen Yaxley-Lennon. The EDL has disintegrated but its supporters remain active and Atkinson said there was evidence that a neo-Nazi offshoot of the group was involved in Friday’s violence.

A priest at Sunderland Cathedral said hooligans had tried to smash a headstone to use it as a missile during the riots that engulfed the city. “It’s sacrilege to touch someone’s headstone,” said the Rev Jackie Tyson. – It’s also strikingly lacking in common sense – have you ever tried to lift a headstone?”