Over 100 protestors in London were arrested on Thursday while demonstrating against the fatal stabbing of three young girls by a migration-background teenager in Southport, England. A total of 111 people were arrested for assaulting police officers, breaching protest conditions, and other offenses. Additionally, 60 others were arrested under the Public Order Act 1986 for failing to comply with protest conditions but not taken into custody.
Demonstrators gathered for the ‘Enough is Enough’ protest clashed with police in Whitehall, which hosts many government departments. London’s Metropolitan Police reported that one officer was punched in the chest, and another was kicked multiple times. However, video footage also shows officers attacking demonstrators, seemingly without provocation.
Generally, the police response to the mass stabbing protestors seems to have been far more aggressive than the response to ethnic minority riots in Leeds recently, or the surrounding of a Rochdale police station by Muslims angry over a fight between officers and their co-religionists at Manchester Airport.
Prior to being arrested, the guy appeared to just be standing there and not attacking any officers. He then receives several punches in the face by a Met Police officer.
Although in this case, I doubt a Labour MP will be visiting him or his family since he’s a soft target. pic.twitter.com/lNSlioabPo
— Chris Rose (@ArchRose90) August 1, 2024
Protests also took place in Hartlepool, Manchester, and Aldershot, where several more arrests were made.
The protests come in the wake of the fatal stabbing of three young girls aged six, seven, and nine, who were attending a Taylor Swift-themed dance class in Southport, England. Several other girls, two female dance teachers, and a man in his sixties who tried to intervene were also stabbed, with many left in critical condition.
Seventeen-year-old Axel Muganwa Rudakubana, born in Wales to Rwandan migrants, has been arrested and charged with multiple murder and attempted murder counts.
Following the protests, Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer promised to crack down on those protesting against the mass stabbing, branding them “far-right.”