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Sir Keir Starmer should have called out ‘racism’ of rioters earlier, says Thangam Debbonaire | Politics News

Sir Keir Starmer should have labelled the recent riots in England “racist” earlier than he did, Thangam Debbonaire has said.

The former Bristol Central MP said she was “distraught” to see the riots unfold across the UK at the start of this month.

Ms Debbonaire, who was shadow culture secretary in Sir Keir’s shadow cabinet before the election was called, said as a “mixed race woman” she wanted people to “name these riots as race riots”.

Speaking on Beth Rigby’s Electoral Dysfunction podcast, Ms Debbonaire said: “It felt like a different time had come back, and I wanted people to name these riots as race riots. They weren’t anti-immigration riots. They were racist riots by racists.”

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Far-right violence broke out in towns and cities across the UK in the wake of a stabbing attack that left three girls dead in Southport on Monday 29 July.

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False rumours were circulated online claiming the suspect was an asylum seeker who arrived in the UK by boat.

As the riots gained pace, Sir Keir labelled them “far right” while denouncing the “gang of thugs” who were taking part in the disorder.

In a TV address he said: “People in this country have a right to be safe, and yet we’ve seen Muslim communities targeted, attacks on mosques… Other minority communities singled out, Nazi salutes in the street, attacks on the police, wanton violence alongside racist rhetoric, so no, I won’t shy away from calling it what it is: far-right thuggery.”

Ms Debbonaire, who lost her seat to the Green Party after representing it in parliament since 2015, said while she understood why politicians had chosen to brand those involved as “thugs”, she did not agree with the label because it let people “off the hook”.

“One of the things that was troubling was the the label,” she said.

“I understand why it was chosen to call them mindless thugs, but I don’t think it’s helpful because it wasn’t mindless. People make choices.

“For me, I’m afraid to say – and I say this with respect to my colleagues who are using that language, I get where they are – but it lets them off the hook.”

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How a week of unrest unfolded

Put to her that this was the language used by the prime minister, Ms Debbonaire replied: “And I disagree with it. I understand why he used it.

“I think taking a law and order approach was right. I think he’s absolutely right. But I think two things can be true at the same time: take a law and order approach, but also name racism as racism because otherwise we’re treating a whole bundle of people who are not racist, but who do want to discuss migration in the same boat.”

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Describing the impact the riots had on her personally, Ms Debbonaire said that although she was in India at the time she still felt “scared”.

“I was so relieved to be in India and amongst brown people, and I was texting a lot of friends and the pain and fear of just seeing a group of angry white men very obviously targeting brown people because they are brown,” she said.

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“It is visceral… It’s also visceral how it makes you feel when white allies of yours you feel haven’t quite got it yet.”

She added: “I can’t get up in the morning and cry because there are racists, but seeing that was scary.

“And yes, I wanted him [Sir Keir] to say earlier, I really did.

“I wanted my prime minister to recognise what it was doing to us brown people who are patriots and who believe in law and order and believe in this country.”

To date, more than 1,000 arrests have been made in connection with the unrest, according to The National Police Chiefs’ Council. A total of 372 adults have been charged.

UK riots: Respect for police needs to be restored after ‘brazen abuse and contempt’ by rioters, Home Secretary Yvette Cooper says | Politics News

The home secretary has said respect for the police needs to be restored after the “brazen abuse and contempt” shown by rioters.

Yvette Cooper said there is “lots of rebuilding to be done” after a fortnight of rioting following the Southport stabbings on 29 July.

“Respect for the police, respect for the law, and respect for each other is where we must start,” she wrote in The Daily Telegraph.

She said too often people feel “crime has no consequences” and that “has to change” as she promised to restore confidence in policing and the criminal justice system.

Hundreds of people involved in the riots have been arrested and dozens have already been sentenced after the government pushed for them to be put through the justice system speedily.

The disorder was spurred on by false online claims the Southport stabbings suspect was an illegal immigrant. Axel Rudakubana, 17, born in Cardiff to Rwandan parents, has been charged with three murders and 10 attempted murders.

Rioting broke out in Southport after the fatal stabbing of three girls. Pic: PA
Image:
Rioting broke out in Southport after the fatal stabbing of three girls. Pic: PA

Ms Cooper said the country should have been talking about the deaths of three young girls and those who were injured.

Instead, she said, police officers had to “defend themselves against bricks, bottles, fireworks and other missiles, as they try to protect mosques, hotels and high streets against criminal violence and racist attacks”.

The home secretary said the attacks on communities and police have been “a disgraceful assault on the rule of law itself”.

“Those who try to suggest that this violence is about protest and grievance are making excuses for criminals and thugs,” she warned.

She said she is not prepared to “tolerate the brazen abuse and contempt” from a minority towards police.

And she said there has been a “disrespect for law and order that has been allowed to grow in recent years”.

“We must take action to restore respect for the police, and respect for the law,” she added.

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Those behind ‘violent thuggery’ will ‘pay the price’

Ms Cooper said the government planned to put thousands more neighbourhood police officers and police community support officers (PCSOs) “back on to our streets”.

In a dig at the former Conservative government, she said Labour wanted to reverse “the collapse in community policing” over the past 14 years and wants to rebuild the relationships between local communities and their police forces.

Ms Cooper promised to work with the police “rather than just blaming them from afar, to tackle problems and raise standards”.

Elsie Dot Stancombe, Alice Dasilva Aguiar and Bebe King.
Pic: Merseyside Police
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Elsie Dot Stancombe, Alice Dasilva Aguiar and Bebe King were killed in the stabbings. Pic: Merseyside Police

Another man, John O'Malley was sentenced to 32 months in prison over his role in the riot in Southport.
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Rioters in Liverpool set fire to a library. Pic: CPS

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Without naming anyone, she said there had been “shameful behaviour” from “some senior politicians and pundits who sought to undermine the legitimacy and authority of the police”.

Reform UK leader Nigel Farage and X owner Elon Musk are two of the most well-known people to have accused the UK of having “two-tier policing”.

Two-tier policing, flatly denied by the government and police chiefs, is the perception that some protests are treated more favourably than others.

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Sir Keir Starmer has cancelled his summer holiday plans as the government continues to deal with the fallout from the rioting.

He instructed police to remain on high alert over the weekend, but no widespread unrest materialised.

Anti-racism protesters gathered in London, Belfast and Edinburgh. Thousands demonstrated outside the headquarters of Reform UK.

Bristol ‘Kill the Bill’ rioters sentenced – as woman who urinated next to police walks free from court | UK News

A woman who urinated next to police and lashed out at officers during the “Kill the Bill” riot in Bristol has walked free from court.

Fleur Moody, 26, was sentenced to an eight-month prison term, suspended for 18 months, after admitting affray.

Moody, of Montpelier, Bristol, was also handed 80 hours of community service and must complete a rehabilitation order after getting involved in the unrest which engulfed central Bristol on 21 March last year.

The Kill the Bill protest against the Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts bill, proposing to give extended power to police to shut down demonstrations, was initially peaceful.

But violence broke out leaving 44 officers injured and causing at least £212,000 worth of damage to police property.

Two co-defendants were both given 21-month prison sentences after admitting a charge of violent disorder during the sentencing hearing at Bristol Crown Court on Friday.

Christopher Hind was jailed for 21 months Pic: Police Handout
Image:
Christopher Hind was jailed for 21 months
Tyler Overall was also jailed for 21 months Pic: Police Handout
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Tyler Overall was also jailed for 21 months

Christopher Hind, 38, of Eastville, Bristol, was caught on CCTV displaying aggressive behaviour, including pushing and kicking out at police, over a two-hour period.

Tyler Overall, 28, of Filton, South Gloucestershire, was seen to goad and attack officers, grabbing at their shields.

So far, 23 people have been jailed for offences committed during the riot for a combined total of 81 years and three months, Avon and Somerset Police said.

A “shameful night” of violence

Supt James Riccio said: “Three more people have been brought to justice for their actions on that shameful night.

“They all displayed criminal behaviour and admitted offences due to the significant amount of material, particularly moving footage, which has been gathered, reviewed and assessed, during the course of this ongoing investigation.”

Some 500 people are said to have descended on Bridewell police station during the riot, setting vehicles ablaze and smashing the windows.

Former Avon and Somerset Police chief superintendent Carolyn Belafonte described the riot as “nothing short of reprehensible”.