BSS
  01 Aug 2024, 19:53

'Southport was just the spark': What's behind UK unrest?

  LONDON, Aug 1, 2024 (BSS/AFP) - The UK has been rocked in recent days by
violent disorder following a knife attack targeting children, with already
ascendant anti-immigration far-right elements accused of hijacking the
response to the tragedy.

Here are some of the key questions around this week's events.

- What has happened?

Violence first flared on Tuesday night in Southport, northwest England, where
Monday's stabbing spree allegedly carried out by 17-year-old suspect Axel
Rudakubana occurred.

A crowd numbering in the hundreds gathered in the seaside town near Liverpool
after a vigil, and attacked police and vehicles, lit fires and threw missiles
at a mosque.

The disturbances lasted late into the night and injured dozens of police
officers.

Several other English towns and cities then saw unrest on Wednesday night,
including in London where police arrested 111 people and more officers were
hurt.

Hundreds had gathered on Whitehall, outside the prime minister's Downing
Street office and residence, with officers "subjected to assault, abuse and
violent disorder", according to the capital's Metropolitan Police.

"It is shameful that some have sought to exploit this tragedy as
justification for their own violence and criminality," said Met Assistant
Commissioner Matt Twist.

- Who's been blamed?

Police have pointed to people from outside Southport for orchestrating
Tuesday's riot there, in particular supporters of the English Defence League
(EDL).

High-profile far-right agitator Tommy Robinson helped establish the
Islamophobic organisation, whose supporters have been linked to football
hooliganism, 15 years ago.

Robinson, whose real name is Stephen Yaxley Lennon, has maintained a stream
of social media posts about the Southport stabbings and subsequent unrest.

"As disorder spreads... don't say I didn't warn you," he said on X late
Wednesday.

Rioters in Hartlepool, northeast England, and other flashpoints Wednesday
night have chanted Robinson's name during disturbances.

Other far-right figures and social media handles have been similarly active
online posting about the recent events.

Actor-turned-"anti-woke" activist Laurence Fox shared with his more than
525,000 X followers details of the Whitehall demonstration that turned
violent.

It comes less than a month after the general election, when Nigel Farage's
anti-immigrant Reform UK party captured 14 percent of the vote -- one of the
largest vote shares for a far-right British party.

The Brexit architect has rallied support in typically Eurosceptic communities
by decrying the levels of immigration to the UK, in particular the continued
arrivals of migrants on small boats across the Channel.

- How have political leaders responded?

Farage, elected to parliament for the first time last month, has faced
criticism of helping to fuel the disorder after he posted a video questioning
"whether the truth is being withheld from us" over the Southport attack.

Deputy Prime Minister Angela Rayner accused him of stoking "conspiracy
theories".

Former counter-terror police chief Neil Basu said Farage was giving the EDL
"succour" and "a false basis for the attacks on the police".

Prime Minister Keir Starmer -- in power for less than a month -- has warned
rioters they will "face the full force of the law" as he seeks to quell the
growing unrest.

He will host police chiefs from across the country Thursday to discuss the
situation.

- What about social media?

Sites like X have been heavily criticised for spreading misinformation about
the Southport stabbings suspect.

Online speculation and unverified information about his identity, faith and
background, including claims he was Muslim or an immigrant, have helped fuel
anger around the attack, according to experts.

"What happened in Southport was just the spark that then ignited what has
been months and months of this diffusion of anti-Muslim, anti-immigrant
disinformation," hate speech researcher Marc Owen Jones told AFP.

Loughborough University misinformation expert Andrew Chadwick said the events
have underlined the need for technology firms to adopt a "better approach" to
handling "blatant disinformation".

"With levels of distrust as high as they are in British society of both media
and governments and politicians, then it creates this environment which is
really, really difficult to manage," he noted.