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Barbed wire and looking over your shoulder: Middlesbrough residents fearful after riots | UK News

Parliament Road in Middlesbrough feels a world away from the establishment it shares a name with, but for one Sunday in August, the terraced streets of central Middlesbrough were at the centre of national attention.

That afternoon, what was advertised as a peaceful protest, turned into a riot, with hundreds of people, many of them wearing masks, targeting livelihoods and businesses in one of the city’s most diverse areas.

They lit fires, smashed windows and clashed with the police.

Hundreds of arrests have been made and dozens of those people sentenced, but months on, the impact of that day can still be felt.

Not just in the cracked windows and debris still on the street, but in the deeper fabric of a community who are concerned about not just those events, but bigger issues they feel have blighted the area for far longer.

One of those people is Pervaz Akhtar, who has lived in Middlesbrough for more than three decades and runs a phone shop on Parliament Road.

After having his stock burgled on more than half a dozen occasions in two years, he decided to take matters into his own hands.

Mr Akhtar spends about 40 minutes a day unrolling the razor wire
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Mr Akhtar protects his shop with razor wire

Every evening he spends more than half an hour unrolling a ring of razor wire, to cover both the shop floor and the counters.

“I’ve got the police alarm, I’ve got the CCTV cameras, I’ve got the shutters, everything.”

“But I think this is the best thing to do,” he says, gesturing to the razor wire, which he has to fold into wooden crates every morning while wearing protective gloves.

That process, which has become a daily routine, takes him around 40 minutes.

‘I’m depressed’

Mr Akhtar's car being severely damaged by rioters
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Rioters jumping on Mr Akhtar’s car

Even with a deterrent in place however, he still feels unsafe and is now considering leaving the business altogether.

“I just put the shop up for sale now,” he says.

“I think, before I’m not giving up, but (now) I’m depressed, because all the time I never know when somebody will come and show me a knife and take the phones away.”

Mr Akhtar’s discontent only deepened this summer when his home and car were damaged by rioters.

In footage he shared with Sky News, a group of young men climbed on top of the vehicle, smashing the windscreen.

The shop owner says his whole family were impacted by what happened.

Read more from Sky News:
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UK riots: Asylum seekers still wary

His wife, who is a carer, needed to find another vehicle to get to work, while one of his two young sons has been left fearful about the prospect of more disorder.

“About one week later, he saw about 10, 12 people playing in the park, he ran back and said, ‘Dad, they’re coming again’,” recalls Mr Akhtar.

Another person living in the area and impacted by the disorder that day is John, who moved to Middlesbrough from Ghana and shares a house with three others from the West African country.

John's window is still boarded up
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John’s window is still boarded up

More than two months on, the front window of the property was still boarded up.

“I was quite surprised to see that there could be damage, because I was expecting a peaceful demonstration,” he says before sighing and looking at the front of the house.

“Whilst that is not in the original state, for sure that will frustrate me, but I have hope in the police department that once they said it is going to be fixed, it will be fixed,” he adds.

Once the damage is repaired, there are deeper community issues that will linger.

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Streets Ahead For Information are a charity who describe themselves as a “one stop shop” for people who live in the area, offering vital services for residents in one of Middlesbrough’s most diverse communities.

Twice a week, they organise a low-cost food shop, which is always in high demand.

Residents line up outside, before filling their baskets with items like eggs, fruit and vegetables, largely costing under £1 each.

The people the charity support are from a range of backgrounds. Some are asylum seekers, others have lived in the area for years.

Many of them still have concerns about the disorder that spilled onto Parliament Road.

One woman from Romania, called Diana, says she was away on holiday at the time, but watched the scenes on TikTok.

Now she has concerns about the place she and her children call home. “I look all the time on my back,” she says.

For Streets Ahead and the operations manager Kim May, the work in the coming weeks and months will be twofold.

The charity is still advising people who had their homes and livelihoods impacted by the riots, but she is hoping the uncomfortable spotlight placed on Middlesbrough will encourage more people to support a voluntary sector working to solve people’s day to day problems, many of which she sees first hand.

“It’s the community issues that are more important. We can fix windows, we can fix cars, we can do that. But fixing people’s state of mind is a completely different thing,” she says.

“We have a lot of mental health issues in our area. We need to get the hospital sorted out. We need to take care of poverty in these areas, we need to take care of health in these areas.

“It’s a much wider range of things than people actually imagined it could ever be. And for some people, it’s about having somebody to see them, to listen to them.”

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
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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.

Children to be taught how to spot fake news and ‘putrid’ conspiracy theories online in wake of riots | Politics News

Children will be taught how to spot extremist content and fake news online under proposed changes to the school curriculum, the education secretary has said.

Bridget Phillipson said she is launching a review of the curriculum in both primary and secondary schools to embed critical thinking across multiple subjects and arm children against “putrid conspiracy theories”.

It means schoolchildren may analyse articles in English lessons to help learn how to them weed out fabricated clickbait from accurate reporting.

Computer lessons could teach them how to spot fake news sites and maths lessons could include analysing statistics in context.

Phillipson: Scrapping two-child benefit cap will be 'considered'
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Education Secretary Bridget Phillipson said children need to learn how to spot fake news and disinformation

Ms Phillipson told The Telegraph: “It’s more important than ever that we give young people the knowledge and skills to be able to challenge what they see online.

“That’s why our curriculum review will develop plans to embed critical skills in lessons to arm our children against the disinformation, fake news and putrid conspiracy theories awash on social media.

“Our renewed curriculum will always put high and rising standards in core subjects – that’s non-negotiable.”

She said the curriculum will also aim to widen students access to cultural subjects and “give pupils the knowledge and skills they need to thrive at work and throughout life”.

 Pic:iStock
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Pic: iStock

Riots broke out across the UK after misinformation spread online that a Muslim asylum seeker was the suspect in the fatal stabbing of three girls in Southport.

The National Police Chiefs’ Council said on Saturday that a total of 779 people have been arrested over the riots. Of those, 349 have been charged.

On Friday, two men were given jail time for using social media to encourage disorder.

Jordan Parlour was sentenced to 20 months after pleading guilty to publishing written material intended to stir racial hatred.

Jordan Parlour.
Pic: West Yorkshire Police
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Jordan Parlour. Pic: West Yorkshire Police

Tyler Kay was jailed for 38 months after using social media to encourage people to torch hotels housing asylum seekers.

It is believed the pair are the first to be sent to prison over social media posts made in relation to the nationwide riots.

Pic: PA
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Tyler Kay. Pic: Northamptonshire Police

Lucy Connolly, the wife of a Tory councillor, is due to appear in court on Monday after she was charged with stirring up racial hatred over a post she made on X.

The moderation and regulation of social media has also come under scrutiny after the recent rioting.

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New regulation of social media platforms – the Online Safety Act – became law in the UK last year but has not yet fully come into effect.

The law aims to impose rules on companies to keep inappropriate and potentially dangerous content away from vulnerable eyes.

Sir Keir Starmer hinted on Friday that he would look at strengthening social media regulations further after London Mayor Sadiq Khan said the act was not “not fit for purpose”.

King ‘greatly encouraged by many examples of community spirit’ in the wake of UK riots | UK News

The King has spoken of how he has been “greatly encouraged by the many examples of community spirit that had countered the aggression and criminality from a few” – as he reflected on the recent violent disorder seen across the country.

This evening the monarch held a phone audience with the Prime minister and leading police chiefs after the palace confirmed earlier in the week that he has been receiving daily updates on the situation.

A Buckingham Palace spokesperson said that the King spoke to Sir Keir Starmer, along with holding a joint call with the chair of the National Police Chiefs’ Council, Chief Constable Gavin Stephens, and UK Gold Commander Ben Harrington, chief constable of Essex.

UK riots latest: Belfast city centre at ‘complete standstill’

King Charles III welcomes Sir Keir Starmer during an audience at Buckingham Palace, London, where he invited the leader of the Labour Party to become Prime Minister and form a new government following the landslide General Election victory for the Labour Party. Picture date: Friday July 5, 2024.
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King Charles and Sir Keir Starmer during an audience at Buckingham Palace last month. Pic: PA

This was said to be in addition to private calls he had made throughout the week concerning the events and “in particular” the impacts they had had on affected communities.

“In these calls, His Majesty was updated on the current situation and expressed his heartfelt thanks to the police and emergency services for all they are doing to restore peace in those areas that have been affected by violent disorder,” the spokesperson continued.

At this time of year, due to summer holidays, there is not a regular weekly audience between the Prime minister and the monarch, not least because by convention these would always happen in person, so this phone call specifically took place so they could discuss in detail the recent riots and the issues they have raised.

Sharing the King’s response to recent events the spokesperson added: “The King shared how he had been greatly encouraged by the many examples of community spirit that had countered the aggression and criminality from a few with the compassion and resilience of the many.

“It remains His Majesty’s hope that shared values of mutual respect and understanding will continue to strengthen and unite the nation.”

Throughout his time as heir and monarch, a cornerstone of his official work has revolved around community cohesion and celebrating Britain’s diverse communities.

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Sky News understands that it remains the hope and aspiration that once the circumstances are right the King wants to be able to show his concern and support in a more direct way.

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This would likely to be in some form of visit, but the Royal Family are ever conscious of putting additional burden on frontline services with any form of visit.

Humza Yousaf questions family’s future in UK after violent riots | UK News

Humza Yousaf, the former first minister of Scotland, has revealed the recent days of violent riots have left him unsure whether his family has a future in the UK.

Mr Yousaf – the first ethnic minority leader of a devolved government and the first Muslim to lead a major UK party when he became SNP leader and Scotland’s first minister in March 2023 – described the past week of unrest as “utterly horrendous”.

Violent disorder has taken place in cities across England and in Northern Ireland following the killings of three young girls in Southport last week.

The unrest has been fuelled by misinformation online relating to the attacker.

Police forces across the country are braced for further disturbances, with reports of at least 30 more gatherings due to take place on Wednesday evening.

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Thousands of extra police mobilised ahead of 30 far-right protests

Belfast, yesterday evening.
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Disorder in Belfast. Pic: Sky News

A car after it was set on fire by rioters in Middlesbrough on Sunday 4 August. Pic: PA
Image:
A car after it was set on fire by rioters in Middlesbrough on Sunday. Pic: PA

Speaking to The News Agents podcast, Mr Yousaf said: “I’m about as Scottish as they come.

“Born in Scotland, raised in Scotland, educated in Scotland, just welcomed my third child here in Scotland, was the leader of the Scottish government for just over a year, leader of the Scottish National Party.

“You cut me open, I’m as about as Scottish as you come.

“But the truth of the matter is, I don’t know whether the future for me and my wife and my three children is going to be here in Scotland or the United Kingdom, or indeed in Europe and the West, because I have for some time really worried about the rise of Islamophobia.”

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Mr Yousaf, who resigned as first minister in May, said the rise of the far-right was “driven by Islamophobia in Europe, the UK and the West”.

He said rioters were “going after people who are black, who are Asian, who are Muslim, and that, again, comes back to some of the language that’s been used far too often in our politics about people not adopting our values”.

Mr Yousaf, the MSP for Glasgow Pollok, said he has no idea where his family would go, adding that “Scotland is the country I love”.

He said: “I don’t want to go, let me just make that abundantly clear.”

Mr Yousaf said Scotland is not immune from racism or Islamophobia, but added the UK has a “pretty positive story to tell on multiculturalism”.

He cited his own turn as first minister, as well as Rishi Sunak – a British Hindu prime minister, and Sadiq Khan – Muslim mayor of London.

Mr Yousaf added: “So, we actually have a strong history and heritage of multiculturalism over the years, but that is quite literally, actually in some parts of the UK, going up in flames.”

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Police braced for more unrest

Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer has condemned the violence and has vowed to do “whatever it takes to bring these thugs to justice”.

First Minister John Swinney met with members of Scotland’s Muslim community at Edinburgh Central Mosque earlier this week.

He branded the violence across other parts of the UK as “completely unacceptable” and said it would not be tolerated in Scotland.

The first minister added: “There is no place in Scotland for hatred of any kind, and each of us has a responsibility to confront racism and religious prejudice wherever and whenever it appears.

“People will always try to divide us – and it is imperative in these moments that we come together even stronger to stand defiant.”

Read more:
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Snapshot of people in court over UK riots

First Minister John Swinney meets with Imam Habib Rauf (centre left) and members of the Muslim community at Edinburgh Central Mosque, to provide reassurances following the incidents of unrest seen in towns and cities in other parts of the UK over the weekend. Picture date: Monday August 5, 2024.
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First Minister John Swinney at Edinburgh Central Mosque on Monday. Pic: PA

Police Scotland said it is providing reassurance to communities through enhanced patrols and direct engagement.

Assistant Chief Constable Gary Ritchie added: “We will continue to monitor the situation to ensure any potential for violence or disorder in Scotland is identified quickly and responded to immediately.

“We are aware of a number of planned protests, and counter-protests, over the coming weeks, which will be policed appropriately.”

UK riots: People who are racist to NHS staff ‘can and should’ be refused care, health secretary says | UK News

People who are racist to NHS staff “can and should” be turned away, the health secretary has said.

Wes Streeting condemned “mindless thuggery” seen across Britain in the aftermath of the Southport stabbings over the past week.

As far-right violence spread between towns and cities, Filipino nurses were attacked on Friday night as they travelled to work for emergency cover during unrest in Sunderland.

UK riots latest: Starmer warns rioters will be sentenced ‘within a week’

Speaking to the PA news agency, Mr Streeting said the people who attacked them “brought enormous shame on our country”.

According to reports, the taxi they were travelling in was pelted with rocks and they were left “terrified”, the Mirror reported, though they were physically unharmed.

“I will not tolerate, under any circumstances, NHS or social care staff in any health or care setting being subjected to intimidation, harassment or racist abuse,” Mr Streeting said.

“We have a zero-tolerance policy in the NHS and we’ll take a zero-tolerance approach in social care too.

“People who are abusing NHS staff can be turned away, and should be turned away, if that is the way that they are treating our staff.”

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How a week of unrest unfolded

He added the country is “lucky” to have people in the NHS who “come from around the world to provide great, compassionate care”.

“I am proud that we have those people in Britain. I think the vast majority of Brits are too,” he said.

“And those people that have hijacked our flag for their mindless, racist thuggery – they have no idea about this country’s history or heritage, and they have brought enormous shame on our country by attacking NHS staff in this way.”

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Professor Nicola Ranger, general secretary and chief executive of the Royal College of Nursing, said guidance on when and how patients can be refused care has been updated.

It comes after GP leaders issued a warning to family doctors amid reports staff had been “targeted” during attacks.

Family doctors and their teams have been urged to “remain vigilant, particularly when travelling to and from work”.

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More people in court over unrest – including teen with mum

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The Royal College of GPs (RCGP) highlighted “horrific and unacceptable” abuse and violence towards healthcare workers, “especially those from ethnic minorities”.

The RCGP urged staff to travel in groups “where possible” and to try to avoid areas where there is known unrest.

Meanwhile, two GP surgeries in northeast London have said they are planning to shut early on Wednesday because of potential unrest in the area.

UK riots: Sir Keir Starmer makes ‘guarantee’ for ‘thugs’ and announces ’emergency security’ for mosques | UK News

The prime minister has vowed to do “whatever it takes to bring these thugs to justice” as he addressed the nation amid rioting in UK streets.

“I guarantee you will regret taking part in this disorder, either directly or those whipping up this disorder online,” Sir Keir Starmer said in a televised address.

Referring to a violent attack on a hotel in Rotherham thought to have housed migrants, he said: “There is no justification for taking this action.”

UK rioting – follow latest

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Middlesbrough: Protesters clash with police

Masked men had launched pieces of wood and let off fire extinguishers at police officers outside the Holiday Inn Express, and some stormed into the hotel.

“People in this country have a right to be safe, and yet we have seen Muslim communities targeted and attacks on mosques,” the prime minister said.

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Sky report from Middlesbrough riot

Sir Keir said Muslims had been targeted along with other minority communities, adding there were “Nazi salutes in the streets”.

The Home Office on Sunday announced mosques will be offered greater protection with new emergency security.

It said mosques at risk of violent targeting can be provided with additional security personnel as part of a rapid security response to boost the work being done by local police.

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Moment rioters surround police in Rotherham

Violent scenes have broken out across the country following false reports that the suspect in the death of three young girls in a knife attack at a Taylor Swift-themed dance class was an asylum seeker.

Speaking on the fifth day of unrest, Sir Keir said he would not “shy away from calling it what it is” and branded the violence “far-right thuggery”.

“To those who feel targeted because of the colour of your skin or your faith: I know how frightening this must be,” he said.

“I want you to know this violent mob do not represent this country, and we will bring them to justice.”

The PM’s approach is clear – but comes with risks

Rob Powell Political reporter

Rob Powell

Political correspondent

@robpowellnews

This was a clear, muscular and unequivocal statement from the prime minister.

Sir Keir Starmer did not broaden his language.

He singled out the perpetrators – the far right.

The evidence clearly backs this up, but the fact the prime minister is saying it so strongly is still significant.

It’s the polar opposite of the ‘good and bad people on both sides’ approach perhaps most notoriously adopted by President Trump in the wake of a deadly white supremacist rally in Charlottesville in 2017.

The prime minister also refused to enter into a policy debate or acknowledge any of the issues that those propelling these riots say lie behind their actions.

The government is trying to draw a clear line between violent disorder and civil debate, and prevent the political discussion being led or influenced by law breaking.

This approach doesn’t come without risks though.

Singling out the actors behind this violence in such a combative way could inflame the situation further.

There’ll also be a deterrent effect though and ministers will hope that will cut through more clearly.

In such a tense situation, the language coming from government matters deeply.

Sir Keir Starmer hasn’t hedged his bets with this approach – an early test for this new prime minister.

Ministers seek to replicate response to 2011 riots

The prime minister suggested the response to the violence could mirror elements of how the 2011 riots were handled, at which time he was director of public prosecutions.

“We do have standing arrangements for law enforcement which means that we can get arrests, charge remanded in custody and convictions done very quickly,” he said.

Over the weekend, ministers suggested courts could sit 24 hours a day to fast-track prosecutions, while police forces have the ability to draft in extra officers to tackle disorder.

He added: “We will do whatever it takes to bring these thugs to justice as quickly as possible.”

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However, his pledge will run up against a legal system already creaking under existing pressures.

Sky News’s political correspondent Liz Bates said: “The problem for the PM of course is that what he needs right now is a criminal justice system with plenty of extra capacity so that rioters can be fast tracked through it.

“But instead he has the exact opposite.”

Police unit to be set up to tackle violence across UK in wake of riots after Southport stabbings | Politics News

A police unit will be set up to tackle violent disorder across the country after rioting by far-right groups in the wake of the Southport stabbings, the prime minister has announced.

Sir Keir Starmer said he would not allow a “breakdown of law and order on our streets” following violent scenes in Southport, Hartlepool and London in the aftermath of the attack ,which killed three young girls who attended a Taylor Swift-themed dance class.

Holding a press conference inside Downing Street, the prime minister criticised a “tiny, mindless minority in our society” who had forced a “grieving” community to “suffer twice” when they staged a demonstration in the aftermath of the stabbings.

“A gang of thugs got on trains and buses, went to a community that is not their own,” Sir Keir said.

“[They] then proceeded to throw bricks at police officers. Police officers who just 24 hours earlier had been having to deal with an attack on children in their community. Their community.

Announcing the unit to tackle rioting, he said the government would establish “national capability” across police forces to tackle “violent disorder”.

“These thugs are mobile,” he explained.

“They move from community to community. And we must have a policing response that can do the same.”

Bebe King, six, Elsie Dot Stancombe, seven, and Alice Dasilva Aguiar, nine, died as a result of the attack at The Hart Space community centre in Southport, near Liverpool, on Monday.

Eight other children suffered stab wounds, with five now stable after being in a critical condition and two discharged from hospital. Two adults remain in a critical condition.

The violence started on Tuesday night outside a Southport mosque, where demonstrators attacked officers and set a police van on fire.

The disorder then spread to other locations in the UK, including London and Hartlepool on Wednesday night.

The Metropolitan Police said 111 people were arrested in London yesterday evening as flares were thrown towards Downing Street’s gates, while some threw cans and glass bottles as riot police were deployed.

Demonstrators wearing England flags waved banners saying “Stop the boats” after social media posts wrongly claimed the killing of the three girls was carried out by a Muslim asylum seeker.

The Metropolitan Police said some officers sustained minor injuries and those arrested were detained for offences including violent disorder, assault on an emergency worker and breach of protest conditions.

In Hartlepool, eight people were arrested for various offences, with more expected, after protesters threw missiles, glass bottles and eggs at police.

Several officers there sustained minor injuries and a police car was set on fire.

Sir Keir addressed journalists after a meeting with police chiefs today where he said he supported them being given the appropriate powers to stop future riots.

He told journalists that the meeting this afternoon was not about “pointing the finger of blame” but to “pull together our response both to the immediate challenge, which is clearly driven by far right hatred, but also all violent disorder that flares up”.

He said the government would make greater use of shared intelligence, facial recognition technology and “preventative action” such as criminal behaviour orders which restrict people’s movements before they attempt to take part in another demonstration.

The prime minister also said he was clear that riots that have taken place over the three locations were not “protest”.

“It’s not legitimate,” he said.

“It’s crime. Violent disorder. An assault on the rule of law and the execution of justice. And so, on behalf of the British people who expect their values and their security to be upheld, we will put a stop to it.”

On Wednesday night a 17-year-old boy was charged with the murders of the three girls in Southport and the attempted murders of 10 others, as well as possession of a knife.

After not initially being named due to his age, this morning he was identified by a judge as Axel Rudakubana.

Rudakubana is from the nearby village of Banks and was born in Cardiff, Wales.

Sir Keir also had strict words for social media companies after the violent disorder following the stabbings was “clearly whipped up online”.

“That is also a crime,” he said. “It’s happening on your premises. And the law must be upheld everywhere.”

King Charles and Queen Camilla arrive in France for state visit months after it was rescheduled due to riots | UK News

The King and Queen have arrived in France to a guard of honour as they begin a three-day state visit to the country.

The royal couple are visiting Paris and Bordeaux six months after the trip had to be rescheduled because of widespread rioting across the country.

The King and Queen were greeted by the French prime minister, Elisabeth Borne, and other diplomats after they arrived at Paris’s Orly airport on Wednesday afternoon.

An officer and 20 guardsmen of the Republican Guard, which is part of the French National Gendarmerie, were lined up to greet them.

French President Emmanuel Macron issued a poignant welcome ahead of the King’s arrival, writing on social media: “You visited as a Prince, you return as a King. Your Majesty, welcome.”

The King and Queen met up with Mr Macron, 45, and his wife Brigitte, 70, for a ceremony of remembrance and wreath laying at the Arc de Triomphe, in the capital’s centre.

As part of the ceremony, King Charles was invited by the president to symbolically light the monument’s eternal flame which burns in memory of those who died in the First and Second World Wars.

Afterwards, the foursome were due to process down the Champs Elysees by car towards the Elysee Palace, the president’s official residence, where the King and Mr Macron are sitting down for talks.

French Prime Minister Elisabeth Borne greets Britain's King Charles and Britain's Queen Camilla upon arrival at the Orly Airport on September 20, 2023, on the first day of a state visit to France. Britain's King Charles III and his wife Queen Camilla are on a three-day state visit to France. MIGUEL MEDINA/Pool via REUTERS

In the evening, the King and Queen will be guests of honour at a grand black-tie state banquet hosted by Mr and Mrs Macron in the Palace of Versailles’ Hall of Mirrors.

Both the King and Mr Macron will address the 160 guests, who will include high-profile figures chosen for their contribution to UK-France relations.

The majority of the original royal programme has been retained but a few new elements have been added, including the Queen and Mrs Macron launching a new Franco-British literary prize at the Bibliotheque Nationale de France.

Britain's King Charles and Britain's Queen Camilla disembark their aircraft upon arrival at the Orly Airport on September 20, 2023, on the first day of a state visit to France. Britain's King Charles III and his wife Queen Camilla are on a three-day state visit to France. MIGUEL MEDINA/Pool via REUTERS

The King will become the first British monarch to give a speech from France’s senate chamber to senators and national assembly members on Thursday.

Other highlights include the royal couple meeting sports stars as France hosts the Rugby World Cup.

When the couple travel to Bordeaux, home to 39,000 Britons, they will meet UK and French military personnel to hear about how the two nations are collaborating on defence.

Britain's King Charles and Britain's Queen Camilla travel in a royal vehicle upon their arrival at the Orly Airport on September 20, 2023, on the first day of a state visit to France. Britain's King Charles III and his wife Queen Camilla are on a three-day state visit to France. MIGUEL MEDINA/Pool via REUTERS

The King and Queen’s planned tour in March was to be their first state visit, but it was postponed at the last minute after violent nationwide demonstrations.

Bordeaux’s town hall was set on fire by protesters just a few days before the trip was due to begin.

Germany – the second leg of the overseas tour – became the historic first state visit destination for the royal couple instead.