British police admit Birmingham, England’s second city, was essentially abandoned to a violent Muslim mob on Monday because “community leaders” told them in advance that their demonstration would be “policed within themselves.”
“[W]e have really strong business and community relations, and… we had the opportunity to meet with community leaders [before the demonstration] to kind of understand the style of policing that we needed to deliver,” said Superintendent Emlyn Richards, for West Midlands Police.
Journalists who were chased from the area by aggressive, armed Muslims “for miles” described the “style of policing” on the day as officers simply surrendering the streets to the mob, which besieged a pub and violently assaulted a customer seemingly for no other reason than that he was a white person in Birmingham.
“[W]e knew that there was going to be a lot of people out on that counter-protest, we knew who the vast majority of those people were,” claimed Superintendent Richards, revealing the “policing response was commensurate to that intelligence and the information that we’d held [sic] with our partners and communities prior to that event taking place.”
SELF-POLICING.
Pressed on the fact “so many” of the mob were “clearly armed” and asked whether white anti-mass migration protestors would be treated the same way, Richards groveled that “the vast majority of people that attended that protest… did so law-abidingly, and they did it with the right intentions.”
“What we saw was a response from our communities where they were trying to kind of make sure that that was policed within themselves,” he added.
Richards’s admission that Muslims are allowed to self-police will do little to dispel accusations of “two-tier policing,” with allegedly “far-right” demonstrators protesting against mass migration in the wake of a mass stabbing by a migration-background teenager tackled by aggressive riot police while Muslim counter-demonstrators are allowed to run amok.
West Midlands Police discuss disorder that kicked off after misinformation spread online. The Sky News crew covering the unrest in Birmingham were followed by a man holding a knife and wearing a balaclava after broadcasting live. https://t.co/IRxFEabbZ6 pic.twitter.com/uiYkVX1TS5
— Sky News (@SkyNews) August 6, 2024