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Clean-up as England riots spread

Wednesday, August 10th, 2011
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Police try to tackle masked ths in Manchester

A clean-up has begun after violence broke out in several cities around England.

London stayed largely quiet overnight but there was unrest in cities including Manchester, Salford, Liverpool, Nottingham and Birmingham, with shops being looted and set alight.

Three men died when they were hit by a car in Birmingham – locals claimed they were protecting their neighbourhood.

Greater Manchester Police said officers had faced “unprecedented violence”.

London Mayor Boris Johnson urged the government to reconsider its plans to cut police numbers, saying the argument had been “substantially weakened” by the riots.

GMP’s Assistant Chief Constable Garry Shewan said he had seen “the most sickening scenes” of his career, and said the force had been overwhelmed.

Speaking at a press conference on Wednesday morning, he said force was “absolutely intent” on bringing the rioters to justice and officers were already studying CCTV.

“Hundreds and hundreds of people, we have r image, we have r face, we have r acts of wanton criminality on film. We are coming for , from today and no matter how long it takes, we will arrest those people responsible,” he said.

Some 113 people have been arrested so far over the trouble in Manchester and Salford, where hundreds of ths looted shops and set fire to cars and buildings.

Three dead

In the West Midlands, 109 have been arrested and 23 charged following scenes of disorder in Birmingham, Wolverhampton and West Bromwich – where vehicles were set on fire.

Meanwhile, West Midlands Police have started a murder inquiry after the deaths of the three pedestrians hit by a car.

In Birmingham, riot police surrounded the Mailbox, the city’s upmarket shopping centre, following the disturbances seen in the area on Monday night.

In other developments:

  • Canning Circus police station in central Nottingham was firebombed by a male gang on Tuesday evening. Nottinghamshire Police said 90 people had been arrested
  • In Liverpool, Merseyside Police have arrested 50 people in relation to disorder in the city
  • Nine people have been arrested in Gloucester after police officers came under attack from ths throwing stones and bottles from 23:00 BST
  • In Leicester, a group of up to 100 ths attacked shops and threw items at police, with 13 arrests
  • In Bristol, police arrested 19 people following a second night of trouble
  • Thames Valley Police made 15 arrests linked to trouble overnight
  • Metropolitan Police have arrested 768 people and charged 105 in connection with the violence in the capital, including a 21-year-old man who was arrested on suspicion of arson with intent to endanger life following a fire which took hold of the Reeves Furniture store in Croydon on Monday night
  • Officers from all eight Scottish Police forces are being sent to help colleagues in the Midlands and North of England deal with rioting and looting
  • A 26-year-old man found shot in a car in Croydon, amid rioting in the south London town, has died in hospital
  • Government minister Michael Gove has praised the Met’s response to the riots, saying bringing in an extra 10,000 officers helped to prevent further riots from taking place in London
  • Meanwhile, two 18-year-olds in Folkestone, Kent, and a 19-year-old woman in Wakefield have been arrested. A 16-year-old boy in Glasgow was charged with breach of the peace while another man, aged 18, has been arrested. All relate to allegations of inciting violence through internet social networking s
  • The Independent Police Complaints Commission (IPCC) said on Tuesday that ballistic tests presented “no evidence” that a handgun found at the scene where Mark Duggan, 29, was killed in Tottenham had been fired at officers

Wounded officers

Scotland Yard drafted in special constables and community support officers in London to ensure five times the usual number of officers for a Tuesday – 16,000 – were on duty. They made 81 arrests.

UK riots: How the Monday’s night of violence unfolded

Downing Street said the increased level of policing would remain in place “as long as necessary” to prevent a repeat of the violence.

It said while there was “no complacency,” police tactics in London had “clearly worked”.

It followed three nights of rioting in the city which saw shops looted, property set alight and police attacked, with some 111 Met officers suffered injuries including serious head and eye wounds, cuts and fractured bones after being attacked by rioters wielding bottles, planks, bricks and even driving cars at them. Five police dogs have also been hurt.

The Met’s Deputy Assistant Commissioner, Stephen Kavanagh said London deserved “some resilience and sustainability from police”.

‘Stand together’

David Cameron, who is chairing a meeting of the cabinet’s emergency committee Cobra for the second day running, met officers in the Met Police’s Gold command in Lambeth on Tuesday afternoon, before speaking to emergency service personnel in Croydon.

He condemned the “sickening scenes of people looting, vandalising, thieving, robbing”.

He told rioters: “ will feel the full force of the law. And if are old enough to commit these crimes, are old enough to face the punishment.”

Parliament was being recalled on Thursday, which would allow MPs to “stand together in condemnation of these crimes and to stand together in determination to rebuild these communities”, he said.

The prime minister returned early from his holiday in Tuscany to discuss the unrest, which first flared on Saturday after a peaceful protest in Tottenham over the fatal shooting of Mark Duggan, 29, by police.

DAC Kavanagh said the use of plastic bullets – never before fired to deal with riots in England – would be “considered carefully” in the event of further disorder.

But he added: “That does not mean we are scared of using any tactic.”

Acting Commissioner Tim Godwin had earlier ruled out calling in the Army.

Officers believe some rioters have used Blackberry Messenger – a service allowing users to send free real-time messages – to organise violence.

Referring to proposed police cuts, London Mayor Boris Johnson said: “That case was pretty frail and it’s been substantially weakened. This is not a time to think about making substantial cuts in police numbers.”

Labour leader Ed Miliband called for a “rapid response” from the government to help affected communities.

He urged the government to work with the insurance industry “to put in place fast-track procedures with immediate effect so that individuals and businesses making claims do not have to wait for the money they need to start putting things right”.

The Association of British Insurers says the damage is likely to cost insurers “tens of millions of pounds”.

— ’re ’s , . : A ‘Malign Intellectual Subculture’ – George Monbiot Smears Chomsky, Herman, Peterson, Pilger And Media Lens.

Source : http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/uk-14474393
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