BURNING BRITAIN Trouble as protests breaks out AGAIN with man arrested in Manchester as UK braces for weekend of violence

 PROTESTS have broken out in Manchester today with a man arrested as Britain braces for a weekend of violence.

Far-right thugs marched through Piccadilly Gardens this morning and quickly clashed with counter-protests by anti-racism groups.

Far-right activists take part in a protest at Piccadilly Gardens, Manchester
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Far-right activists take part in a protest at Piccadilly Gardens, ManchesterCredit: Getty
Police detain a man as far-right activists and anti-fascists clashed in Manchester
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Police detain a man as far-right activists and anti-fascists clashed in ManchesterCredit: LNP
Police on horse back disperse protesters at Piccadilly Gardens
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Police on horse back disperse protesters at Piccadilly GardensCredit: Getty
People take part in an anti-racism counter protest
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People take part in an anti-racism counter protestCredit: Getty
Police form a divide between people taking part in protests
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Police form a divide between people taking part in protestsCredit: Getty

More demonstrations are expected following a wave of violent disturbances stirred by fake news online claiming the alleged teen knife murderer of three young girls was a Muslim asylum seeker.

Greater Manchester Police issued a Section 34 dispersal notice across the city centre giving officers extra powers until 7pm on Saturday.


Do you know more? Contact: Jonathan.Rose@thesun.co.uk


Cops formed a divide between hundreds of protesters in an effort to prevent violence as mayhem swept through the northern city.Chief Inspector Natasha Evans said: "These powers have been authorised to make sure we can continue to provide and facilitate the right to any peaceful protests that have been organised.

"Our officers will be able to instruct and advise anyone who is causing, or very likely to cause harassment, alarm or distress to leave an area immediately."

More than 30 protests have reportedly been planned across the UK over the next two days.

The knife attack at a Taylor Swift-themed dance class on Monday which left three girls dead sparked violent disorder in some cities and towns in England.Thousands of people turned out to pay their respects to the victims at a vigil in Southport on Tuesday evening.

But violence later erupted outside a mosque in the town with 53 police officers and three police dogs injuredAn eighth person has been arrested over the disorder in Southport on Tuesday evening.

Merseyside Police said a 32-year-old man, from Wigan, was arrested on Friday on suspicion of violent disorder and remains in custody for questioning.

On Wednesday evening, more than 100 protesters were arrested on Whitehall, where bottles and cans were thrown at police.

Violence also broke out in Hartlepool, County Durham, and in Manchester outside the Holiday Inn on Oldham Road.

A car was flipped and set alight as crowds of thugs ran riot in Sunderland last night
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A car was flipped and set alight as crowds of thugs ran riot in Sunderland last nightCredit: NNP
Crowds watched on as thugs looted a burning police station in Sunderland
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Crowds watched on as thugs looted a burning police station in SunderlandCredit: jordy_NUFC / X
The burnt wreckage of a car this morning after a night of violent protests by right wing mobs
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The burnt wreckage of a car this morning after a night of violent protests by right wing mobsCredit: NNP
Riot police wrestled a protester to the ground in Sunderland last night
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Riot police wrestled a protester to the ground in Sunderland last nightCredit: BackGrid
Thugs targeted a mosque in Southport after false rumours claimed a Muslim was behind the killing of three young girls
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Thugs targeted a mosque in Southport after false rumours claimed a Muslim was behind the killing of three young girlsCredit: PP.
Cops were sprayed with a fire extinguisher as they battled against a volley of attacks in Sunderland
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Cops were sprayed with a fire extinguisher as they battled against a volley of attacks in SunderlandCredit: NNP
The burnt out shell of Sunderland Central Police Station this morning
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The burnt out shell of Sunderland Central Police Station this morningCredit: NNP

On Thursday, Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer announced a new "national" response to the disorder linking police forces across the country.

And on Friday evening rioters battled police in the streets of Sunderland city centre following a planned protest linked to the Southport knife attack.

Hundreds of people gathered in Keel Square, many of them draped in England flags, and members of the crowd chanted in support of Tommy Robinson, while others shouted insults about Islam.

Some protesters were involved in violence, setting an overturned car on fire, while others targeted a mosque.

Videos posted on social media appeared to show a fire at a city centre police office, which was marked permanently closed on Google Maps.

It was no longer listed on a police station finder on Northumbria Police's website.

The force said in a post on X that its officers had been "subjected to serious violence", and added that three officers were taken to hospital.

Eight people have so far been arrested for a range of offences, including violent disorder and burglary, the force added.Axel Rudakubana, 17, was born in Cardiff and living in Lancashire.

he has been remanded in youth custody charged with three counts of murder, ten of attempted murder and one of possessing a bladed article.

This week’s riots are reprehensible but UK’s liberal elite have driven people into arms of far-right

BY ROSS CLARK

THIS week’s riots in Southport and elsewhere were, of course, reprehensible.

To attack a mosque where ordinary Muslims go to pray would have been wrong even if it had been in response to an attack by Islamic terrorists.

That those lobbing bricks at the police and setting their vehicles alight were acting on disinformation makes them look foolish as well as disgraceful.

But if Britain’s liberal elite had been deliberately trying to drive people into the arms of the rabble-rousers they could not have done a better job if it.

They have done everything they can to fuel the underlying sense that the white working class is being treated very differently from the rest of the population.

On Thursday, the Prime Minister held a press conference in which he lost no time in asserting that the Southport riots were “clearly driven by far-right hatred”.

might have been motivated by reasonable concerns about the safety of children.

No, each and every one of them were just “far-right” thugs trying to spread hate.

Nor, by the way, did Keir Starmer mention in his press conference other recent cases of public disorder which had nothing to do with the far right, such as the machete fight in Southend on Tuesday night, the attack on police at Manchester Airport last week nor the riots in the Harehills area of Leeds.

Those equally concerning events don’t seem to feature even nearly as prominently on the radar of the liberal left because they don’t feed its preferred narrative that Britain is a happy, diverse community spoiled only by hate mongering on the part of the far right.

Starmer, to be fair, did condemn the Leeds riots at the time they happened two weeks ago, but he studiously avoided blaming any group.

On the contrary, a Downing Street statement demanded that people did not rush to speculate on the reasons behind the riots — which seem to have started after social workers removed children from a Roma family.

We know what to expect, because it has happened many times before.

Riots in neighbourhoods with high ethnic populations tend to be followed by inquiries which seek to settle the grievances which lie behind them — after the Brixton and Toxteth riots in 1981, for example, we had the Scarman report, while Michael Heseltine was dispatched to Liverpool to shower the poorer parts of the city with money.

Those efforts were warmly praised across the political spectrum.

Yet how has the Government responded to the Southport riots?

Not by calling an inquiry into what lies behind them, only by announcing stronger powers for police to track down perpetrators — all stick and no carrot, in other words.

The same seems to have happened on multiple occasions when working-class communities have protested, whether it be against low-traffic neighbourhoods, London’s Ultra Low Emissions Zone or Covid lockdowns.

All have been dismissed as being incited by “far-right” conspiracy theorists.

Think what you like about councils erecting bollards and installing cameras to stop people driving to the shops, but those who oppose such measures hardly deserve to be treated like Nazis.

I haven’t heard anyone in power admit it, but there is an unfortunate backstory which may explain why people reacted to the killing of three girls (not to mention the injuries and mental trauma inflicted on many others) by seeking out a mosque.

For years, police, social services and other agencies failed properly to investigate gangs of men of Pakistani heritage who had been raping and sexually exploiting girls in Rotherham, Rochdale and elsewhere.

Again, it cannot be emphasised strongly enough that it is very wrong to project the crimes of the rapists on to Britain’s Pakistani population as a whole — that is the point at which legitimate demand for justice spills over into racism.

But when these gangs were eventually brought to justice, it became clear from their trials that police and social services had been doing the opposite — they had been influenced by what the then Home Secretary Theresa May called “institutional political correctness” in failing to take the victims’ allegations seriously enough.

As the former Labour minister Denis MacShane put it “there was a culture of not wanting to rock the multicultural community boat”.

But it is that sort of attitude which hands over the issue of violence and sexual exploitation of children to the far right.

If people feel they cannot trust what the police and other authorities do and say they will end up gravitating towards other voices who do appear to be representing their interests.

Racists are to be condemned, and it is quite right that the Prime Minister should want police to have the power to tackle thugs, whoever they are and wherever they come from.

But the Government needs to recognise that the Southport riots did not happen in a vacuum.

We could do with a latter-day Lord Scarman to investigate what lies behind the riots and how best this can be addressed.

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