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UK welcomes 'de-escalation' of far-right violence

Police officers stand by a cordoned off area in Leicester square, London. — AFP
Police officers stand by a cordoned off area in Leicester square, London. — AFP
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LONDON: The UK government welcomed on Monday the "de-escalation" of far-right inspired disorder and rioting following a knife attack that killed three children, but insisted officials remain on "high alert".


Prime Minister Keir Starmer's spokeswoman was speaking a day after hundreds of people gathered for the funeral of nine-year-old victim Alice da Silva Aguiar. Mourners wore white, a tradition for some in Portugal, where Alice's parents hail from.


The violence in English towns and cities, blamed on the far right, came after misinformation spread about the alleged perpetrator of the mass stabbing on July 29 at a Taylor Swift-themed dance class in Southport, northwestern England.


"We welcome that there has been a de-escalation this weekend. But we're certainly not complacent and remain on high alert," the prime minister's spokeswoman said.


The stabbings sparked a riot in Southport the following evening, on July 30, and violence in more than a dozen English towns and cities as well as in Northern Ireland over the ensuing week.


Starmer's spokeswoman added that authorities had acted decisively to quell the unrest but that there was no room for complacency.


"We also recognise that the job is not done until people feel safe in their communities, but thanks to the work of our police officers, prosecutor and judiciary, we have seen a swift response from the justice system," she said. "Within a matter of days, we've seen criminals involved arrested, charged, sentenced and behind bars."


Officials pointed the finger at far-right agitators and opportunist "thugs" accused of using the Southport tragedy to further their anti-immigration agenda.


Misinformation spread online in the immediate aftermath of the stabbing spree, claiming that the perpetrator was an immigrant.


One of those rioting was a 12-year-old boy who on Monday admitted throwing a missile at a police van in Manchester, also in the northwest.


District Judge Joanne Hirst said the boy had been more involved in the violence than any other accused person she had seen "coming through these courts, adult or child".


British-born Axel Rudakubana has been charged with murder and attempted murder over the mass stabbing. — AFP


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