Tuesday, August 09, 2011

UK police arrest 100 after riots in British capital

Aug. 8, 2011 Reuters


LONDON - British police arrested more than 100 people overnight
in London after shops were looted and officers attacked in a second night
of violence that followed some of the worst disorder seen in the capital
for years.

Nine police were injured in what police called "copycat criminality" in
several parts of London Sunday night, although the damage appeared to be
on a much smaller scale than Saturday's rioting in Tottenham, in the north
of the capital.

London's Deputy Mayor Kit Malthouse blamed the violence on a relatively
small number of criminals motivated by greed rather than worries about the
conduct of the police or wider social problems caused by Britain's
sluggish economic recovery.

"This is quite a small group of people within our community in London who
... are frankly looking for stuff to nick (steal). They are picking
particular kinds of stores, whether it's because they want a new set of
trainers or whatever," he told Sky News.

Police Commander Christine Jones said there had been "sporadic disorder"
in a number of boroughs through the night, with more than 100 people
detained, on top of the 61 arrested on Saturday night and Sunday morning.

The first night of rioting began after a vigil for a 29-year-old man shot
dead by police as they tried to arrest him in Tottenham Thursday.
Britain's police watchdog is investigating the incident.

Sunday night, police said there was more looting in north, east and south
London. Around 50 youths damaged shops in Oxford Street, one of the main
shopping districts in central London. In Brixton, south London, several
shops were looted and police kept the area cordoned off Monday morning.

Politicians and police blamed the first night of violence on criminal
thugs but residents attributed it to local tensions and anger over
hardship.

Residents said they had to flee their homes as mounted police and riot
officers on foot charged the crowd to push rioters back.

The Metropolitan Police, which will handle next year's London Olympic
Games in what is expected to be Britain's biggest peacetime police
operation, faced questions about how the trouble had been allowed to
escalate.

APPEAL FOR CALM

Police and community leaders said local people had been horrified by what
happened and appealed for calm.

Local member of parliament David Lammy said many of those arrested had
come in from outside the area and organized the disorder on social
messaging sites.

"The weekend's violence was not a race riot, it was an attack on the whole
of the Tottenham community, organized on Twitter," he wrote in the Times
newspaper Monday. "The grief of one family must never be hijacked to
inflict grief on others."

The riots come amid deepening gloom in Britain, with the economy
struggling to grow while the government is imposing deep public spending
cuts and tax rises brought in to help eliminate a budget deficit that
peaked at more than 10 percent of GDP.

"Tottenham is a deprived area. Unemployment is very, very high ... they
are frustrated," said Uzodinma Wigwe, 49, who was made redundant from his
job as a cleaner recently.

Tottenham includes areas with the highest unemployment rates in London. It
also has a history of racial tension with local young people, especially
blacks, resenting police behavior including the use of stop and search
powers.

The disorder was close to where one of Britain's most notorious race riots
occurred in 1985, when police officer Keith Blakelock was hacked to death
on the deprived Broadwater Farm housing estate during widespread
disturbances.

Locals said there had been growing anger recently about police behavior.
"I've lived in Broadwater Farm for 20 odd years and from day one, police
always pre-judge Turks and black people," said a 23-year-old community
worker of Turkish origin who would not give his name.

Fingers were also pointed at the police for failing to anticipate the
trouble, although Commander Hanstock said there had been no hint of what
was coming.

The London force has been heavily criticized for its handling of recent
large protests against austerity measures, while its chief and the top
counter-terrorism officer have quit over the handling of the News Corp
phone-hacking scandal.

(Additional reporting by Stephen Mangan and Stefan Wermuth; Editing by
Gareth Jones)

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