This past weekend saw a slew of violent protests erupting across the United 
Kingdom after a stabbing rampage at a children’s dance class in Southport left 
three children dead and several seriously injured.
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Counterpoint Brief: Far-right Riots in the United Kingdom
(New York, N.Y.) – This past weekend saw a slew of violent protests erupting 
across the United Kingdom after a stabbing rampage at a children’s dance class 
in Southport left three children dead and several seriously injured.
Over the weekend, protests broke out across a dozen cities in the United 
Kingdom—mostly across England, with one protest in Belfast in Northern Ireland. 
The demonstrations ranged from unruly protests to all-out violent riots: in 
Rotherham, rioters set upon a hotel that had housed migrants; in Middlesbrough, 
far-right rioters set a car on fire; in Southport, bricks were thrown and 
police clashed with anti-Muslim rioters outside a mosque.
The riots broke out following a slew of rumors and misinformation online, 
claiming that the attacker in the Southport stabbing rampage was an 
undocumented Muslim migrant. In a rare move hoping to quell the riots, 
authorities identified the 17-year-old suspect as Axel Muganwa Rudakubana who 
was born to Rwandan parents in Cardiff, Wales, and moved to Lancashire at 13.
Expert Analysis: 
CEP Senior Advisor Ian Acheson:
“Much ink has been spilled over the past 48 hours about ‘right-wing thuggery,’ 
which has been rightly condemned by politicians and commentators alike. But the 
problems simmering under the surface of these riots are much deeper and will 
last long after the riots have been justly suppressed and punished.
Commentators in the wake of this weekend’s events have focused primarily on 
the online instigators who have promoted populism and fueled violence, 
especially through misinformation and conspiracy theories. Abuse of online 
platforms is certainly a factor to be dealt with here, but focusing only on 
these avenues can obscure a much more difficult reality on the ground.
We like to think of ourselves as a society that has achieved multicultural, 
multiethnic cohesion, and we are very lucky that to a large extent this is 
true. But there are parts of this country—largely those parts that are 
economically deprived—where social integration has not worked, and where 
parallel societies have become entrenched as a result. And these parallel 
societies are primed to erupt in a violently misguided response to the kind of 
atrocity we saw in Southport last week.
What is necessary, in addition to retribution for those inciting and carrying 
out violent acts, is a moderating conversation that works toward prevention as 
well as punishment."
CEP Resources:
To read CEP’s resource on Far-right extremism, click here 
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