Britain’s most senior police officer has apologised for grabbing a journalist’s microphone and dropping it to the ground as he rushed out of yesterday’s Cobra meeting.
Scotland Yard commissioner Sir Mark Rowley was asked by Sky News reporter Rob Catherall if he was ‘going to end two-tier policing’ but didn’t break his stride as he removed the mic and dropped it.
A Met Police spokesman said he was ‘in a hurry’ as he walked through a small group of photographers and journalists to get to his car in Whitehall yesterday afternoon.
Sir Mark said: ‘In an effort to move a microphone out of my path I’m sorry that I knocked it to the floor.
‘That was never my intention. We remain focused on the critical and urgent matters at hand.’
In the astonishing footage, Sir Mark was shown taking part of the microphone before throwing it to the floor as he headed towards a waiting car.
The bizarre incident came amid intense pressure on police chiefs to get a grip on the violent disorder causing chaos in the wake of last week’s Southport stabbing attack – with further disruption unfolding in Plymouth and Birmingham tonight.
Scotland Yard earlier defended Sir Mark for being ‘in a hurry’ to return to his office ‘to take action on the agreed next steps’ after an emergency Cobra meeting with top ministers.
A fuming Met Police boss Sir Mark Rowley grabbed a reporter’s microphone and chucked it on the ground this morning as he left emergency talks over Britain’s riots crisis
As he exited the Cabinet Office, the visibly angry Scotland Yard chief was filmed being asked by a Sky News journalist: ‘Are we going to end two-tier policing sir?’
The Met Police said Sir Mark had been ‘in a hurry to return to New Scotland Yard’ after this morning’s Cobra meeting
Sir Keir Starmer is scrambling to put a lid on tensions and end the rioting in the first big test of his premiership since entering Downing Street a month ago.
After chairing the Cobra meeting this morning, the Prime Minister pledged a ‘standing army’ of specialist police officers to tackle what he has condemned as ‘far-right thuggery’.
He and other senior ministers met with police chiefs and prison bosses in response to the continuing violence being waged by far-right thugs.
They updated on efforts to deploy officers to trouble hotspots, boost court capacity and tackle online criminality and misinformation as social media is used to whip up rioters.
Police have made 378 arrests so far since disorder broke out last week, the National Police Chiefs’ Council said as it promised a ‘united and robust policing response’.
‘Two-tier policing’ is a phrase used to described an impression that some protests and demonstrations are dealt with more harshly than others.
Reform UK leader Nigel Farage earlier claimed the Black Lives Matter protests in 2020 had left feelings of ‘two-tier policing’, although his remarks were dismissed by Tory former home secretary Dame Priti Patel.
A narrative of ‘politicised’ or ‘two-tier policing’ has also been pushed by far-right figures, including England Defence League founder Tommy Robinson.
The PM’s official spokesman said Sir Keir ‘wouldn’t recognise that characterisation of policing’.
‘The job of the police is to keep everyone safe, to tackle violence and disorder no matter the origination,’ the spokesman added.
‘There is no justification at all for the scenes we have seen. There is no justification for any sorts of criminal activity.
‘The police will always will always carry out their job without fear or favour.’
Speaking after this morning’s Cobra meeting, the PM revealed a ‘standing army’ of specialist police officers would be set up to deal with unrest.
‘There are a number of actions that came out of the meeting,’ he said.
‘The first is we will have a standing army of specialist public duty officers so that we will have enough officers to deal with this where we need them.
‘The second is we will ramp up criminal justice. There have already been hundreds of arrests, some have appeared in court this morning.
‘I have asked for early consideration of the earliest naming and identification of those involved in the process who will feel the full force of the law.
‘Thirdly, I have been absolutely clear that the criminal law applies online as well as offline. I am assured that that is the approach that is being taken.
‘Whatever the apparent motivation, this is not protest, it is pure violence and we will not tolerate attacks on mosques or our Muslim communities.
‘So the full force of the law will be visited on all those who are identified as having taken part in these activities.’
BIRMINGHAM: Men gesture to the camera as they stand on a roundabout amid rumours of a far-right gathering
PLYMOUTH: Police detain a protester as earlier clashes began to turn ugly
The PM insisted the Government will ‘make this work’ when asked if there was enough room in prisons to deal with rioters.
He told broadcasters: ‘On the question of prisons, firstly we are monitoring it on a daily basis.
‘I am appalled that we have been put in this position by the previous government, that it is even a discussion, that it is even a question that you have to ask me.
‘But we will make this work and ensure that we have got the places that are needed to bring the perpetrators swiftly to justice.’
Sir Keir denied that ‘two-tier policing’ was being carried out in the UK, saying: ‘There is no two-tier policing.
‘There is policing without fear or favour – exactly as it should be, exactly what I would expect and require. So that is a non-issue.’
In response to the incident involving Sir Mark and the Sky News reporter, a Met Police spokesperson said: ‘The Commissioner had a positive and constructive meeting with the PM and partners across Government and policing.
‘He was in a hurry to return to New Scotland Yard to take action on the agreed next steps.’
During the Cobra meeting, the PM ‘paid tribute to the hard work of police officers over the past week and sent best wishes to those who have been injured protecting our streets’, Downing Street said.
The talks were attended by Sir Keir, Deputy PM Angela Rayner, Home Secretary Yvette Cooper, Justice Secretary Shabana Mahmood, Technology Secretary Peter Kyle, Attorney General Richard Hermer, and Darren Jones, the Chief Secretary to the Treasury.
They met with senior police and prison service leaders, bosses from the National Crime Agency (NCA), and other top officials.
The PM’s official spokesman told reporters: ‘There have been hundreds of arrests and people are already being charged, and police will continue to update on the specifics in relation to progress or arrests and charging.
‘The police are continuing to deploy additional resource around the country at strategic locations where necessary.
‘The police, Home Office, DSIT (Department for Science, Innovation and Technology) and NCA are working to tackle criminality online, to ensure people are prosecuted for online criminal activity. And they are working to tackle misinformation and bot activity.’
Downing Street warned that anyone whipping up violence online could face prison.
‘I should be very clear that anyone who stokes this violence, whether on the internet or in person, can be prosecuted and face prison,’ Sir Keir’s official spokesman said.
Hundreds of far-right thugs have been arrested during six days of escalating disorder, which have seen attacks on police and buildings set alight.
Sir Keir vowed rioters would ‘regret’ engaging in ‘far-right thuggery’ and promised those involved in unrest would ‘face the full force of the law’ as he addressed the nation on Sunday.
Tory leadership contender James Cleverly, the shadow former secretary, has criticised the Labour Government’s ‘slow’ response to the crisis.
Riots have broken out across the country fuelled by misinformation on social media since three little girls were stabbed to death at a Taylor Swift themed dance class in Southport on Monday.
Hundreds of police officers have been injured in clashes with thugs, as far-right activists led the way in attacking police officers, mosques and hotels thought to house asylum seekers this week.
Islamophobic chants were heard and in some areas of the country rioters were filmed stopping cars and interrogating drivers about whether they were ‘white and English’.
Speaking ahead of the Cobra meeting, the Home Secretary said the Government is not recalling Parliament ‘right now’.
‘That’s not what we’re doing right now. What we’re doing right now is keeping in close contact with MPs,’ Ms Cooper said.
Communities are now coming together to begin the massive clean-up operation in towns including Rotherham, Middlesbrough and Tamworth.
Scenes after last night’s riots in Middlesbrough saw burnt out cars and debris scattered across the town
Fires in Middlesbrough caused serious damage to homes and businesses over the weekend
Racist graffiti was pictured in Tamworth this morning with phrases ‘Get out England’ and ‘F*** P****’
Hundreds of police officers have been injured in clashes with thugs, as far-right activists led the way in attacking police officers, mosques and hotels thought to house asylum seekers this week
Islamophobic chants were heard and in some areas of the country rioters were filmed stopping cars and interrogating drivers about whether they were ‘white and English’
Far-right protests spread across much of England and into Northern Ireland after the deaths of three little girls, fuelled by false information on social media (Pictured: Attendees confront police in Belfast)
Outside hotels in the north of England, thugs tried to force their way inside and threw chairs, bins and bricks
Shadow Home Secretary James Cleverly condemned arson attacks on hotels on Sky News this morning
Hundreds of arrests have been made and many officers injured, with some having t be taken to hospital
Riots spread from Southport across the country last week in horror scenes that have terrified communities
In response to the violence, the Home Office announced on Sunday that mosques would be offered greater protection under a new ‘rapid response process’ designed to quickly tackle the threat of further attacks on places of worship.
A large crowd gathered outside a mosque in Middlesbrough on Sunday night and others have also been targeted.
On Saturday night Spellow Lane Library in Liverpool was torched while in Sunderland local travel agents Hays Travel, known for its commitment to raising money for charity, had its storefront smashed.
In Rotherham, anti-immigration rioters smashed the windows of the Holiday Inn Express before starting fires in an apparent attempt to set the building alight while dozens of people were inside it.
At least 10 officers were injured there, including one who was knocked unconscious, South Yorkshire Police confirmed later, saying one person had already been arrested and others involved should ‘expect us to be at their doors very soon’.
Masked men hurled lengths of wood, chairs and bottles, and sprayed fire extinguishers at officers outside after some 700 people gathered.
Islamophobic and racist chants were heard at multiple riots across the country, with images appearing to show some members of the mobs performing Nazi salutes.
A similar incident played out at a Holiday Inn hotel in Tamworth into Sunday evening, where reports suggested asylum seekers were also being housed.
People threw projectiles, smashed windows, started fires and targeted officers, Staffordshire Police said.
A group of rioters in Middlesbrough smashed the windows of houses and cars and threw objects at officers on Sunday afternoon, with one seen shouting a racial slur and another telling police: ‘It’s our f****** country.’
Video footage showed groups of youths and young men running from house to house and smashing windows and cars parked outside, throwing bricks, traffic cones and other objects.
Youths also appeared to loot a branch of Iceland, with one teenager running out triumphantly while holding a bottle of Friji.
And footage from a local park appeared to show a group of white men and boys with faces covered surrounding and attacking a group, with violence erupting before they fled the scene.
Nearby, a Muslim leader at a mosque told community members who had turned out to protect their place of worship to ‘show the world what Muslims are really like’.
Addressing far-right violence in the town, he said: ‘They are doing all the wrong things. We don’t want to be part of it.’
Other local Muslims were seen carrying tea and coffee to police officers on the front line of the town amid fierce violence from the far-right.
There were 43 arrests, and significant damage was caused to the Crown Court and the University, Cleveland Police said.
Greater Manchester Police issued a Section 60AA order amid disturbances in Bolton, requiring people to ‘remove face coverings used to disguise or conceal their appearance’.
And in Weymouth, police said three people were arrested and dispersal orders put in place for several teenagers.
A 42-year-old man from Yeovil was arrested on suspicion of a public order offence, a 62-year-old man from Yeovil was arrested for being drunk and disorderly and a 27-year-old man from Weymouth was arrested for assault.
Assistant Chief Constable Mark Callaghan said two officers were injured – one when a bottle his them in the face and a second who was punched in the head.
He said: ‘There were rumours circulating that asylum seekers currently housed on the Bibby Stockholm would be moved to Portland, Weymouth or the wider Dorset Council area but the Home Office have confirmed this is not the case.
‘In addition, there are no asylum seekers housed in hotels in the Weymouth area.’
Hundreds of people came together in Middlesbrough on Monday to begin a huge clean-up operation
Local people in Middlesbrough clear broken glass and other hazards from the scene
Home Secretary Yvette Cooper appeared on the media round this morning as she condemned far-right violence
Riot police officers push back violent far-right activists outside the Holiday Inn Express Hotel after attempts were made to set fire to it – with dozens thought to be inside at the time
Rioters attacked police officers in Rotherham on Sunday as far-right thugs led unrest
Thugs in balaclavas hurled chairs, wood and bricks at hotels on Sunday, causing thousands of pounds of damage
At one of the hotels attacked on Sunday the damage was clear to see once far-right thugs had left the scene
Serious damage has been done to buildings including hotels, libraries, local shops and homes since disorder started last week
A police dog handler during the far-right demonstration outside the Holiday Inn Express in Rotherham
The widespread unrest poses the biggest challenge yet to Sir Keir’s premiership, with MPs including Ian Byrne and Dame Priti Patel saying Parliament should be recalled as it was in 2011 so the Commons could debate the riots.
The race riots have spread from Southport to cities including London, Leeds, Rotherham, Manchester, Blackbool, Belfast and Aldershot.
It comes after Home Secretary Yvette Cooper said there would be a ‘reckoning’ following unrest across England, as she pledged that anyone involved in the riots will ‘pay the price’.
She told Sky News: ‘It’s a total disgrace and there has to be a reckoning. Those individuals who are involved in the disorder need to know that they will pay a price.’
‘I’ve made clear to the police they have my full support in going after the full range of offenders, from those who turned up at the last minute and joined in the looting, to some of the most serious offenders who were pursuing really dangerous arson, really dangerous damage and criminal violence, because we simply cannot stand for this.
‘So we should be clear, there will be people who were thinking they were going on their summer holidays this week, and instead they will face a knock on the door from the police.
‘They will face arrest and… a police cell, while they wait for trial in order to make sure that they do pay the price for what they have done,’ she added.
Ms Cooper claimed that social media has put ‘rocket boosters’ under far-right organisations.
But she said the courts are on ‘stand-by’ to ensure ‘swift justice’: ‘We have made sure that the courts are on stand-by. We’ve made sure that there are additional prosecutors in place this weekend, and hundreds of arrests have already taken place. So we do expect swift justice to take place.’
Scenes in Middlesbrough on Monday morning after residents wake up to the after-effects of rioting
Residents saw their car windows smashed and businesses suffered attacks including arson
Asked if the Army would be called upon, Ms Cooper said: ‘So, the police have the expertise and also the powers in terms of dealing with public order and crime, because this is crime.
‘There are also significant additional numbers of public order-trained police, who were not deployed this weekend, so there are considerable additional policing resources that forces can call upon.’
Pressed on whether the Government will take action against Tommy Robinson, who has been accused of stoking tensions from afar, Ms Cooper said: ‘If it’s a crime offline, it’s a crime online.’
‘You can’t just have the the armchair thuggery or the people being able to incite and organise violence and also not face consequences for this,’ she added.
Shadow Secretary James Cleverly said: ‘The things that we have seen are completely unjustified. These are the actions of people who are clearly responding to disinformation online but are obviously motivated by racism.
‘We’ve seen people with Swastika tattoos and making the Nazi salute… attacking people who have no link at all to the terrible incidents that we saw in Southport last week and it is absolutely right that the government is taking firm action.
‘When you’ve people giving Nazi salutes with Swastika tattoos that is clearly far-right extremism.
‘It’s clearly these attacks on mosques on hotels these are clearly driven by racism and should be unequivocally condemned.’
But he also criticised Starmer’s new government for not reacting quickly enough: ‘They could and should have been quicker, it’s worrying that it’s only today that cobra is meeting.
A masked thug faces off with police officers at the Holiday Inn in Rotherham while fire rages in the background
Members of the public with bin bags, dustpans and brushes took to the streets today
Volunteers pick up rubbish and debris from outside the Holiday Inn Express in Rotherham
Racist graffiti was daubed on the side of the hotel in Tamworth and windows and doors were smashed before thugs attempted to set the building on fire with people still inside
One man was filmed threatening to slit the throats of those inside the hotel
‘We want to support the government taking firm action against this violence but they have to move much more quickly and they have to be more agile, more decisive. Had I still be Home Secretary I would have called a Cobra much earlier than this.’
He continued: ‘I’m really uncomfortable with the idea that somehow this violence reflects a wider national move. This is a group of extreme people.
‘People committing arson, attacking mosques, targeting asylum hotels, they are not reflective of the country. This is a generous and open hearted country. The people in this country are not represented by the thugs that are attacking people, committing arson and targeting places of worship.’
The former first minister of Scotland Humza Yousaf said the army should be called in to stop ‘thugs’ causing disorder on the streets.
Ministers have so far insisted police have the resources required to respond and have rejected calls to bring in the army.
Sir Keir said he wanted those who ‘feel targeted because of the colour of their skin’ to know ‘this violent mob do not represent our country’.
In his message to rioters, the Prime Minister said: ‘I guarantee you will regret taking part in this disorder, whether directly or those whipping up this action online and then running away themselves.’
Dame Sara Khan, who was Rishi Sunak‘s independent adviser for social cohesion and resilience until May, blamed the Conservative government for leaving the country open to far-right violence.
‘The writing was clearly on the wall for some time,’ she told the Guardian.
Writing in The Times, Home Secretary Yvette Cooper said ‘there will be reckoning’ for people who took part in the unrest and those who ‘whipped them up on social media and in online chat forums’.
‘Whatever they and some of their political supporters may tell us, these are not patriots standing up for their communities,’ she said.
‘They are thugs, criminals and extremists who betray the values our country is built on.’
She said those responsible would be ‘paying the price for years to come’.
Ms Cooper slammed actions taken by rioters this week after more than 420 people were arrested, as she warned ‘many more will follow’ as authorities scour CCTV footage to identify all those involved.
Clashes, sparked by the murder of three little girls in Southport last Monday, deteriorated further yesterday when a second migrant hotel was set ablaze in Tamworth, while hundreds cheered and clinked beers outside.
In Middlesbrough far-right yobs were filmed stopping traffic to interrogate the passengers to check they were ‘white and English’.
Keir Starmer also waded in to warn far-Right rioters ‘you’ll regret taking part’ as he tried to stamp his authority over the first major test of his Premiership.
He blasted ‘far-Right thuggery’, for which he promised swift justice as he is expected to call a COBRA meeting today.
Meanwhile, the Tories were forced to reprimanded Shadow Wales Secretary Lord Davies of Gower after The Mail on Sunday columnist Dan Hodges said there was ‘no political justification’ for the riots and Lord Davies retorted: ‘Labour blocked the Rwanda Bill 130+ times, of course it’s politically justified!’
This comes as:
ROTHERHAM: Police defend themselves as far-right thugs launch planks of wood on Sunday
ROTHERHAM: Violent thugs yesterday attacked a hotel reported to be housing asylum seekers
ROTHERHAM: A rioter throws blocks of concrete towards a hotel on Sunday
This came after Tommy Robinson posted a video of a confrontation in Stoke and falsely claimed two ‘protesters’ had been stabbed ‘by Muslims’. The post was viewed two million times on X.
Two hours later, Staffordshire Police confirmed the information was false. Those injured were hit by something thrown by their own side.
Actor Laurence Fox has also shared a string of false claims. On Friday night, he posted a list of dozens of acts of violence he alleged had been committed by immigrants under the caption: ‘Anyone else had enough?’
Among them was the claim that a ‘woman [was] beaten to death by two Somalis while walking her dog’ – understood to have been a reference to last month’s murder of Anita Rose, 57, in Brantham, Suffolk.
Three people have been arrested in connection with the murder, but Suffolk Police last night confirmed Fox’s tweet was not correct.
Hundreds of people gathered as a group of masked thugs threw a burning bush inside the side entrance of the Hotel Inn Express, Leisure Island, in Tamworth yesterday evening.
‘Get out England’ was graffitied on the side of the building, as police worked to extinguish the fire inside the hotel’s stairwell.
Some people could be heard chanting ‘England, England, England,’ while others threw objects at police and set off flares and fireworks. One man could be seen running towards police with what appeared to be a large speaker.
Officers clad in riot gear were seen standing in a line guarding the entrance to the hotel. One police officer has suffered a suspected broken arm.
Police have said the violent disorder has been ‘successfully dispersed’ as they appeal to anyone with information to help identify those responsible.
A group of protesters were kept apart from counter protesters in Bolton this afternoon
A fire extinguisher is sprayed at riot police in Rotherham
Property is vandalised as far-right activists in Middlesbrough
Thugs try to cram into the migrant hotel through a damaged fire exit in Rotherham
ROTHERHAM: Police have been trying to fend off agitators outside the hotel yesterday
Yvette Cooper slammed actions taken by rioters this week, as more than 420 people have been arrested, warning ‘many more will follow’ as authorities scour CCTV footage for criminals
Starmer blasted ‘far-Right thuggery’, for which he promised swift justice amid another day of violent scenes nationwide.
He is today expected to hold an emergency COBRA Cabinet meeting, attended by police chiefs, in a bid to ensure the crisis does not spiral further out of control.
He also opened the door yesterday to tougher sentences to act as a ‘deterrent’, saying he will do ‘whatever it takes’ to crack down on the violence. He said the sentences would mirror action taken to deal with thuggery during the 2011 riots, when he was Director of Public Prosecutions.
An asylum seeker who was staying at the Holiday Inn in Tamworth when it was set alight, told the Times of his terror as he was beaten up by the mob when they broke in.
‘They came onto this floor and hit me until the police drove them down the corridor.’
While another 55-year-old Palestinian said his window was pelted with rocks thrown at his window.
‘I was taking some tea when they ran down shouting f***, f***, f***. A shirtless man was shouting and making so much noise. They broke the windows. There were eight on my floor.’
While John Woodcock, a former Labour MP, called for MI6, MI5 and GCHQ to be given additional powers that would allow them to ask social media firms to take down accounts that try to ‘fan the flames of British extreme actors’.
Malaysia has become the first country to warn its citizens about the dangers of visiting Britain at the moment.
The statement released by Malaysia’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs said: ‘Malaysians residing in or travelling to the United Kingdom are urged to stay away from protest areas, remain vigilant and follow the latest updates and guidance provided by local authorities.’
More than 300 started marching through Middlesbrough after gathering at the city’s Cenotaph.
The thugs chanted ‘We want our country back’ as they made their way through the city centre, before at least two people were taken away in handcuffs.
Police officers stand near the broken windows of the hotel during an anti-immigration riot
ROTHERHAM: Police try to control the deplorable violence after a mob attacked a hotel
A thug throws a brick at a parked car during an anti-immigration riot in Middlesbrough
Police have said that there was a ‘staggering’ surge of violence which led to 35 people being arrested in Middlesbrough on Sunday.
Rioters smashed the windows of houses and cars and hurled objects at officers, with one seen shouting a racial slur and another telling police: ‘It’s our f****** country.’
There was significant damage to the crown court, the university and a number of properties in the Parliament Road area.
Cleveland Police said it has now arrested 55 people because of the violence that has swept across Teesside as 20 suspects were also arrested after rioting in Hartlepool on Wednesday.
Assistant Chief Constable David Felton said: ‘The level of violence we have seen today is staggering.
‘We know the shocking scenes across Middlesbrough today will have caused alarm amongst communities.
‘I want to reassure the people of Teesside that we will continue to identify those involved in these acts of violence and arrest them and put them before the courts.’
At one point police used dogs to keep the group back and stop them breaking through and running ahead of the officers patrolling the march. Several pieces of slate were also thrown, along with vapes and full plastic bottles.
Some people kicked bollards into the road so that police vehicles driving ahead of the group could not get through, and one man sat on the bonnet of a police car to stop it moving.
In Bolton, Greater Manchester, violent clashes between rioters and police broke out, with footage showing the activists pushing against officers who had formed a human barricade.
There was also an counter protest in Bolton, where it was reported that large groups of Asian men could be heard shouting ‘Allahu Akbar’ as they clashed with the far-right.
Last night experts condemned the ‘dangerous’ behaviour and also called for stricter action against those spreading misinformation.
Festus Akinbusoye, a former police and crime commissioner, said: ‘Of course there are discussions to be had about the level of immigration, the type of immigration and issues like integration.
‘But misinformation and xenophobic narratives are wrong, irresponsible and dangerous. These actions are having real world consequences and the people spreading dangerous lies need to be brought to book.’
MIDDLESBROUGH: A car burns on Parliament Road after it was set alight by far-right thugs
MIDDLESBROUGH: Police raced off with far-right agitators on Parliament Road yesterday
A man is detained as Far-right activists hold a demonstration in Middlesbrough
An thug wearing a Union Jack mask outside of the Holiday Inn Express
An aerial view of the rioters gathering outside of the Holiday Inn Express
Counter-protesters shout at police officers as they push against a cordon in Bolton
Objects thrown at the hotel as trouble flares during an anti-immigration attack outside the Holiday Inn Express
LIVERPOOL: Police officers attend to a shell-shocked colleague after a face-off with thugs on Saturday
Mr Akinbusoye, who was Britain’s first black PCC, added: ‘Our entire criminal justice system is going to have to be revisited in terms of how the authorities are going to be able to legitimately counter and pre-empt these narratives.
‘I understand that police forces need to be careful about what they put into the public domain but they need to… publish safe information whenever possible.’
Tory leadership hopeful Mel Stride said the scrapping of pilots of rapid-response police units, introduced by the Tories last March, may make it harder to tackle the current disorder.
It comes after an angry far-right mob stormed into a hotel in Rotherham yesterday, hurling chairs and spraying fire extinguishers at riot police, while setting bins, a generator and furniture alight.
Around 700 violent thugs clad in balaclavas and draped in St George’s flags clashed with officers trying to protect the Holiday Inn Express in Rotherham, South Yorkshire since around 2pm this afternoon.
At least 10 officers have been injured in the chaos outside the hotel on the northern outskirts of the post-industrial town. One was left unconscious following a head injury, another suffered a suspected fractured elbow and other suspected broken bones.
It marks yet another day of violent riots of Britain’s streets, with crowds in Middlesbrough setting fire to a car and pushing burning wheelie bins at police, while thugs in Rotherham smash windows and doors as riot police use shields to push them back.
South Yorkshire Police said one person has been arrested on suspicion of public order offences.
Similar scenes could be seen in Weymouth, as around 400 protesters from opposing sides gathered on the seafront to chant at each other. One side could be heard chanting ‘Nazis go home’, while the other shouted ‘Tommy Robinson’.