Day after the nightmare earlier than for Sunderland waking as much as carnage
Sunderland is waking up to carnage after riots tore through the city, setting a police station on fire and injuring officers in a night of ‘unforgivable thuggery’.
Two police officers remain in hospital, with eight suspects arrested for a range of offences, including violent disorder and burglary.
But the devastating riots are not over, as Britain is bracing itself for further chaos today.
In preparation, jail cells have been cleared and lawyers put on standby as widespread chaos tears through the country in the wake of the Southport stabbings.
More than 35 rallies are planned in towns and cities across the UK, raising fears that scenes already seen this week of police being attacked and vehicles set alight could be repeated.
Extra lawyers have been hauled in for weekend duty in preparation for a mass crackdown on miscreants, while some plans suggest shuffling prisoners around the country free up more cells in the at risk areas.
Those waking up in Sunderland will be confronted with the wreckage after it was besieged last night, when rioting yobs torched a police station and looted shops, as riot police were attacked with bricks and missiles by hooligans.
Sunderland is waking up to carnage after riots tore through the city, as the clean up work begins with local residents and police starting to restore order. The burnt-out shell of a car that was torched in the riots last night is pictured
A smashed window is seen in Sunderland after the violent night of protests
Police and residents are seen in Sunderland today, with damage seen in the background
A police car is parked near a cordon in Sunderland this morning after the riots
In the wake of the Southport stabbings, riots broke out across Britain, including in Sunderland, where a police station was torched yesterday
An Enough is Enough protest in Sunderland saw scenes of carnage in the city yesterday
More than 35 rallies are planned in towns and cities across the UK today, after more riots broke out in Sunderland last night
Police officers form a wall across a road as protests erupted in Sunderland on Friday night
Axel Rudakubana (pictured as a child) is charged with murdering three little girls and harming 10 others at a Taylor Swift-themed dance class in Southport with a ‘curved kitchen knife’
Southport’s MP slammed thugs for their actions, and branded them as ‘disgusting extremists hijacking grief’, following the killing of three young girls at a Taylor Swift-themed dance party on Monday.
The riots this week are thought to be triggered by misinformation spread online as to the identity of the teenager suspected of killing Bebe King, six, Elsie Dot Stancombe, seven, and Alice Dasilva Aguiar, nine.
Axel Rudakubana, 17, who was born in Cardiff to Rwandan parents, was eventually named.
Misinformation about a migrant on an MI6 watch list being the culprit was spread online – thought to have originated from a Russian-linked website – before the legal restrictions stopping the real suspect from being named were lifted.
Yeaterday evening, hundreds of people gathered in Keel Square in Sunderland, many of them draped in England flags.
Members of the crowd chanted in support of Tommy Robinson, while others shouted insults about Islam.
Mounted police followed the march, along with officers in vans who battled their way through traffic to keep up.
However, some protesters descended into violence, setting an overturned car on fire, while others targeted a mosque.
Videos posted on social media appeared to show a fire at a city centre police office, which was marked permanently closed on Google Maps and was no longer listed on a police station finder on Northumbria Police’s website.
Police in protective gear came under sustained attack as rioters set off fire extinguishers on them on High West Street.
Elsie Dot Stancombe, aged seven, was also fatally wounded in the attack which shocked the nation on Monday, as misinformation online triggered riots after the tragedy
Bebe King, aged six, was also killed in the attack by the teenager in Southport
Alice Dasilva Aguiar, aged nine, was one of three children killed by a knifeman at a Taylor-Swift themed dance class in Southport
There was also a standoff between police and protesters outside a mosque on Sunderland’s St Mark’s Road, as officers in riot gear came under attack with stones and beer cans thrown.
Some protesters argued about ‘two-tier policing’ as the police threw a protective ring around the mosque.
Mounted police pushed back demonstrators, some of whom were in masks.
Home Secretary Yvette Cooper said those stoking the scenes of disorder ‘do not represent Britain’.
She posted on X: ‘Criminals attacking the police & stoking disorder on our streets will pay the price for their violence & thuggery.
‘The police have the full backing of Government to take the strongest possible action & ensure they face the full force of the law.’
Sunderland AFC said the city ‘will forever be for all’.
‘Tonight’s shameful scenes do not represent our culture, our history, or our people,’ a post by the team’s X account said.
‘Our great city is built on togetherness and acceptance, and Sunderland will forever be for all. We are stronger as one community. Now. Then. Always.’
Police in riot gear stand on a street as far-right activists held an Enough is Enough protest in Sunderland yesterday
Police separated two protests outside a mosque in Liverpool last night amid rioting
Mounted police pushed back demonstrators in Sunderland last night
Bridget Phillipson called it ‘unforgivable violence and thuggery’
Patrick Hurley, the MP for Southport brutally hit out at the rioters as he told the Times: ‘And the police who were being attacked on Tuesday night, in many instances, were the exact same police officers who a day earlier had probably had the single most traumatic day of their professional lives, attending the scene in the immediate aftermath of the atrocity.
‘Then 24 hours later, they’re having bricks thrown at them. It’s absolutely disgusting. And it needs to be called out for the extremism it is.
‘It’s hijacking the raw emotions of a town in turmoil. It was hijacking the grief of the families.’
In Sunderland, thugs firebombed one of the town’s police stations – with thugs then seen charging through halls, smashing windows and breaking tables.
Flames engulfed the central police office on Waterloo Place as rioters ransacked the HQ, while a mob of hundreds of people marched through the streets of the northern town – as Britain’s summer of discontent rages on.
Violent blows were dealt between officers and yobs, as bricks and beer cans were flung through the air, and cars were flipped and set alight.
Details of the planned demonstrations for this weekend have been spread by far-right social media accounts and groups on encrypted messaging apps as they seek to whip up crowds.
Former business and trade secretary Kemi Badenoch speaking to the Telegraph warned that ‘you can’t just ignore the tension.’
‘They should be saying that we need a clearer strategy on integration, which we don’t have at the moment.
‘Instead, we just pretend that everything is fine and it’s a few bad apples, which is sometimes the case. But if you want to have a successful multi-racial country, you need to make an effort to do that. You can’t just pretend that there are no tensions.’
Riots have ignited in Sunderland in the aftermath of the stabbing in Southport
A yob sprays fire extinguisher foam at armed police in Sunderland city centre on Friday
Firefighters tackle damage from the blaze following violence in Sunderland
10 Downing Street, London, lit up in pink yesterday in remembrance of those killed
Liverpool Town Hall lit up in pink last night in tribute to those killed
The action in Sunderland last night is the latest following the stabbing in Southport in which three young children were killed and eight others suffered knife wounds.
Violence erupted after a remembrance vigil for Bebe King, six, Elsie Dot Stancombe, seven, and Alice Dasilva Aguiar, nine, on Tuesday after thugs travelled into the seaside town and centred a riot around the local mosque – whose windows were smashed in a brutal attack.
Merseyside Police said a 32-year-old man, from Wigan, was arrested on Friday on suspicion of violent disorder and remains in custody for questioning.
On Wednesday evening, more than 100 protesters were arrested on Whitehall, where bottles and cans were thrown at police, and violence broke out in Hartlepool, County Durham, and in Manchester outside the Holiday Inn on Oldham Road.
On Thursday, Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer announced a new ‘national’ response to the disorder linking police forces across the country.
And on Friday evening rioters battled police in the streets of Sunderland city centre following a planned protest linked to the Southport knife attack.
Hundreds of people gathered in Keel Square, many of them draped in England flags, and members of the crowd chanted in support of Tommy Robinson, while others shouted insults about Islam.
Some protesters were involved in violence, setting an overturned car on fire, while others targeted a mosque.
Among the hundreds taking to the street in the besieged town in the north east included a shirtless man with a nazi tattoo emblazoned across his chest.
Protesters draped in England flags let off flares in Sunderland town centre yesterday
Protesters hurl bricks at police on horseback near an Aldi store yesterday in Sunderland
The topless man was filmed launching into a racist tirade, saying: ‘This time in your own f***ing country if you’re ashamed to be f***ing white and be an Englishman… f*** off.’
Videos posted on social media appeared to show a fire at a city centre police office, which was marked permanently closed on Google Maps and was no longer listed on a police station finder on Northumbria Police’s website.
Since then Championship football club Sunderland have issued a statement condemning the ‘shameful scenes’ that took place in the Wearside city on Friday night.
It said: ‘Tonight’s shameful scenes do not represent our culture, our history, or our people.
‘Our great city is built on togetherness and acceptance, and Sunderland will forever be for all. We are stronger as one community. Now. Then. Always.’
Northumbria Police said in a post on X that its officers had been ‘subjected to serious violence’, and added that three officers were taken to hospital.