The seaside town of Southport, still reeling from the recent tragedy, witnessed a descent of hundreds of rioters last Tuesday, barely 36 hours after the brutal stabbings. The riots culminated near a local mosque, resulting in injuries to more than 50 police officers.
By the next day, violence had spread beyond Southport, with disturbances erupting in London, Manchester, Hartlepool, and Aldershot.
The weekend was marked by more clashes in Liverpool, Blackpool, Hull, Stoke-on-Trent, Leeds, Nottingham, Bristol, and Belfast.
On Sunday, rioters in Rotherham attempted to set fire to a hotel housing asylum seekers and attacked police officers, a scene replicated later that day at a Holiday Inn Express in Tamworth.
In Middlesbrough, rioters shattered the windows of homes and cars. Protesters were seen carrying English flags, yelling ‘It’s our f*cking country’ alongside racial slurs, while throwing objects at law enforcement.
The scale and ferocity of the violence prompted a strong response from Prime Minister Kier Starmer, who condemned the riots as ‘far-right thuggery’ and vowed that those inciting violence would face the ‘full force of the law.’
So far, over 420 individuals have been arrested across England and Northern Ireland. Reports suggest each faces ‘charges for various public order offences and assaults’.
Home Secretary Yvette Cooper revealed that police are actively reviewing footage to identify and apprehend individuals involved in missile-throwing, arson, looting, and attacks on motorists and passersby.
Tonight, authorities are bracing for more than 100 protests as a widely-circulated list on social media suggests far-right groups are planning to attack immigration services.
The list features the addresses of 39 immigration law offices, asylum support charities, and immigration support services, raising alarms about potential violence.
The list was accompanied by calls to ‘mask up’ alongside flame emojis, hinting at the planned nature of the attacks. More than 30 counter-protests are also anticipated, with 6,000 riot officers deployed in preparation for another night of potential disorder.
In response to the escalating unrest, several countries, including Nigeria, Malaysia, and Indonesia, have issued safety warnings to their citizens residing in the UK.
‘Let’s call it what it is’
In a call for clarity and accountability, numerous journalists and anti-fascist groups are urging officials to recognise the riots for what they truly are: racially motivated acts of violence, destruction, and terrorism.
Footage has revealed Muslim and ethnic minority-owned shops being destroyed and looted, homes with shattered windows, and hotels housing asylum seekers set ablaze and defaced with Islamophobic graffiti.
Other videos show racist gangs patrolling the streets, chanting slurs and performing Nazi salutes, with documented assaults on individuals from ethnic minorities in Hull and Manchester.
Judging by these acts, these incidents are not mere ‘thuggery’ or ‘pockets of violence.’ They are clear manifestations of racist and predominantly Islamophobic terrorism in British society.
Ultimately, the failure of politicians to explicitly label these actions as such inadvertently legitimises the rhetoric of the far-right, who persistently deny the existence of such issues.
Sure, Prime Minister Starmer’s strong condemnation of the violence on Sunday was necessary, but it fell short by failing to address the Islamophobic nature of the attacks on mosques and individuals. Accurately identifying and addressing racism is not an extremist position – it is a moral imperative.
The events of the past week underscore the urgent need to confront and dismantle far-right extremism. Conceding political ground to extremists will only exacerbate the nation’s existing problems.
Rather than calling for an end to senseless violence against innocent people, the terror-inducing riots in the UK have shown that a decisive and unequivocal stand against racism in all its forms is long overdue.