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UK Vows Action Against Violent Anti-Immigration Protesters

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UK Vows Action Against Violent Anti-Immigration Protesters
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Prime Minister Keir Starmer has issued a stern warning to those involved in violent anti-immigration protests, promising that they will face the full force of the law.

In a Sunday address, Starmer condemned the protests as “organized violent thuggery” and vowed that arrests would be made.

The demonstrations, which erupted in several UK cities over the weekend, were sparked by a knife attack at a dance school event in Southport on July 29 that left three young girls dead and eight other children injured.

The attack occurred during a Taylor Swift-themed event at the school, and misinformation quickly spread that the suspect was an immigrant and a radical Islamist. This false narrative fueled anti-immigrant and anti-Muslim sentiment, leading to violent riots.

READ ALSO: 14-Year-Old Nigeria killed in London sword attack

Riots first broke out the day after the attack, with large crowds gathering outside a mosque and throwing bottles and bricks at police vans. Despite police clarification that the 17-year-old suspect was born in Britain and came from a Christian family, the unrest continued to escalate.

By Saturday, the violence had spread to Liverpool, Bristol, and Manchester, resulting in dozens of arrests. Shops and businesses were vandalized and looted, and several police officers were injured.

In the latest wave of violence, rioters attacked a hotel in Rotherham that houses asylum seekers, throwing objects, spraying fire extinguishers at police officers, and smashing windows.

Starmer denounced the attacks, stating that there was no justification for such violence and urging all right-minded individuals to condemn the disorder. “I guarantee you will regret taking part in this disorder, whether directly or by whipping up this action online and then running away,” he warned.

Earlier, Starmer pledged the government’s full support to police forces to take decisive action against “extremists” attempting to “sow hate.”

Home Secretary Yvette Cooper also issued a strong warning, stating that those engaging in “unacceptable disorder” would face imprisonment, travel bans, and other severe punishments. “Criminal violence and disorder have no place on Britain’s streets,” Cooper said, adding that “sufficient” prison spaces had been made available to detain those arrested.

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