AI Brief
- Unrest erupted across several UK towns and cities, with violence targeting mosques and asylum-seeker accommodations, after false social media claims blamed an Islamist migrant for the murder of three girls at a Taylor Swift-themed event.
- PM Keir Starmer assured the public of safety, with increased police presence and additional prison capacity for over 400 arrests.
- The violence, driven by misinformation and far-right agitators, led to international travel warnings and fears among minority communities in Britain.
Riots across a number of towns and cities have erupted following the murder of three girls at a Taylor Swift-themed event in Southport, a seaside town in northwest England, after false messaging on social media wrongly identified the suspected killer as an Islamist migrant.
Unrest has spread, with rioters targeting mosques and smashing windows of hotels housing asylum-seekers from Africa and the Middle East, chanting "get them out", in the first widespread outbreak of violence in Britain for 13 years.
Messages online said immigration centres and law firms aiding migrants would be targeted on Wednesday, prompting anti-fascist groups to say they would counter any demonstration.
Speaking after an emergency meeting with ministers and police chiefs on Tuesday, Starmer said police would be in place to cope with any further disorder.
"Our first duty is to ensure our communities are safe," he told broadcasters.
"They will be safe. We are doing everything we can to ensure that where a police response is needed, it is in place, where support is needed for particular places, that is in place."
He said the fact that protests were being held in multiple locations made it difficult, but he had received the assurance he needed that police could cope with any disorder.
The government has increased prison capacity to cope with the large number of arrests made during the riots, which have prompted a growing number of countries to warn their citizens about the dangers of travelling in Britain.
Starmer said more than 400 people had been arrested, 100 had been charged, and he was expecting sentencing to start soon.
"Anybody involving themselves in this disorder is going to feel the full force of the law," he said.
Three people will be sentenced on Wednesday in Liverpool, northwest England, after pleading guilty to violent disorder, the Crown Prosecution Service said.
The justice department, which is due to release some prisoners early as it battles a jail overcrowding crisis, said nearly 600 prison places had been secured to accommodate those engaged in violence.
The unrest has prompted India, Australia, Nigeria and other countries to warn their citizens to stay vigilant.
Saminata Bangura, a 52-year-old support worker in a care home in Liverpool said she had felt so welcome in Britain after she moved from Sierra Leone. But she was now scared and largely staying at home.
"I'm so scared, even when I'm walking now, because everywhere, we're scared, especially, we Blacks," she said, describing how a library was vandalised near where she lives.
RACIAL HATRED
Starmer has vowed a reckoning for those who have engaged in rioting, hurling bricks at the police and counter protesters, and looting shops and burning cars.
Police on Tuesday charged a 28-year-old man with stirring up racial hatred over Facebook posts linked to the disorder. A 14-year-old pleaded guilty to violent disorder.
On Monday night, trouble flared in Plymouth, southern England, and again in Belfast in Northern Ireland, where hundreds of rioters threw petrol bombs and heavy masonry at officers and set a police vehicle on fire.
Police have blamed online disinformation, amplified by high-profile figures, for driving the violence.
At the end of December 2023, there were 111,132 individuals in receipt of asylum support in Britain, with 45,768 people in hotels. During that year, the government's statistics office estimates that net migration to the country was 685,000.
Experts on extremism and social cohesion say far right agitators have used the Southport killings to spark violence.
Sunder Katwala, director of the think tank British Future, which focuses on migration and identity, said the killings had been used "to mobilize against, particularly asylum seekers and Muslims, and that has continued, after the evidence which is that the person is neither an asylum seeker, nor a Muslim."
The police have said the attack was not terrorism-related and that the suspect was born in Britain. Media reports have said the suspect's parents moved to Britain from Rwanda, a majority-Christian country.
In a YouGov poll on Tuesday, three quarters of respondents said the rioters did not represent the views of Britain as a whole, with 7% saying they supported the violence.