By MalayMail
GLENGORMLEY, June 11 β Police used water cannon yesterday to disperse small crowds who had gathered for a second night in Northern Ireland as UK authorities blamed far-right activists for stoking anger on social media following a brutal Belfast stabbing.
Police boosted their presence on the city streets, but while the main flashpoints of 24 hours earlier appeared quiet, dozens of men confronted police in one area, throwing missiles like rocks and bottles and setting fires in the middle of the road.
βCrowds have gathered & missiles are being thrown at officers who have now deployed the water cannon in an attempt to maintain public order,β the police said in a statement.
The centre of Belfast was largely deserted by late afternoon, with restaurants and businesses shuttered, schools closed and public transport shut down amid fears of a repeat of Tuesday nightβs riots.
Earlier, a Sudanese man appeared in court charged with the knife attack that triggered the overnight unrest, which also spread to the Scottish city Glasgow.
In Belfast on Tuesday, masked rioters torched vehicles and buildings and forced families to flee their homes.
UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer condemned the scenes as βshocking and completely unacceptableβ.
The family of Stephen Ogilvie, the victim of Monday nightβs horrific stabbing appealed for calm and warned against using the βterrible tragedyβ to βdivide people or fuel hostilityβ.
The family said Ogilvie was in a stable condition despite losing an eye, adding: βWe have been left feeling disgusted by the scenes that unfolded yesterday across Northern Ireland in the wake of what happenedβ.
Tensions were already high across the UK. There were skirmishes in southern England last week over the police handling of the murder of a white student by a British Sikh man.
Anselme Shima, originally from the Democratic Republic of Congo, and who has lived in Northern Ireland since 2013, called the situation βterrifyingβ.
Another local resident, 28, who asked not to give her name said she had helped evacuate her neighbours. βItβs just sad, this is a really close knit community,β she told AFP.
Court appearance
At Belfast Magistratesβ Court yesterday morning, Hadi Alodid, a 30-year-old refugee from Sudan, appeared briefly to face attempted murder and other charges following Mondayβs stabbing.
He was remanded in custody and the case was adjourned to July 8.
Footage of the stabbingβwhich showed several people intervening, one wielding a hurling stickβsparked widespread condemnation alongside anger.
Numerous accounts linked to so-called βpatriotsβ shared the footage, urging people to βprotest against mass immigration into their communitiesβ.
In Glasgow, there were also three arrests as two police officers and three members of the public were injured, Scotlandβs police force said. Worshippers at Glasgowβs largest mosque were reportedly locked in as tensions flared.
As calls for more protests circulated yesterday, Northern Ireland police chief Jon Boutcher said his force was looking to add a further 200 officers to the streets.
Officers had to take a family that included a two-month-old baby to safety during Tuesdayβs violence, which he branded βa huge act of self-harm by mindless idiotsβ.
Twenty-seven people were made homeless βbecause people went door-to-door to try and target foreign nationalsβ, a UK minister Ruth Anderson said.
βBad faith actorsβ
Anna Turley, the chairwoman of Britainβs ruling Labour party, said online platforms were βplaying a role in drivingβ the unrest. She suggested X owner Elon Musk was one of the βbad faith actorsβ inflaming tensions.
Musk had retweeted a post by anti-immigration activist Stephen Yaxley-Lennonβalso known as Tommy Robinsonβadding: βOnly by protesting REPEATEDLY and LOUDLY will there be any change!!β
Alodid is a Sudanese refugee with a residence permit valid until 2028, according to the UK interior ministry.
Immigration is a hot-button issue in Britain, and has helped fuel the rise of the hard-right Reform UK party, led by Nigel Farage.
The country has seen frequent anti-immigration protests in recent years, some turning violent. β AFP
Source: police-deploy-water-cannon-as-northern-ireland-unrest-enters-second-night-after-belfast-stabbing
Disclaimer
The views and opinions expressed in this article are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the official stance of Kritik.com.my. As an open platform, we welcome diverse perspectives, but the accuracy and integrity of contributed content remain the responsibility of the individual writer. Readers are encouraged to critically evaluate the information presented.