logo
'Government needs to get a grip': Southport residents say they STILL fear anti-migrant riots one year on from violence... and they aren't alone

'Government needs to get a grip': Southport residents say they STILL fear anti-migrant riots one year on from violence... and they aren't alone

Daily Mail​a day ago
Tearful Southport locals are living in fear there could be a repeat of the anti-migrant riots and have told Labour to get a grip on immigration.
Violent scenes that shamed Britain last year were sparked by misinformation on social media following the triple stabbing murders of Bebe King, 6, Elsie Dot Stancombe, 7, and Alice Dasilva Aguiar, 9.
Now, more than 12 months later, terrified residents are pointing the finger at Sir Keir Starmer for being too weak and have told the Daily Mail the PM has not done enough to prevent further disorder.
One elderly lady, standing just yards from the mosque on Sussex Road where most of the violence occurred, broke down when asked what she remembers.
'I'm sorry,' she says, 'I'm sorry. It's just too painful.'
She is not the only one still feeling the effects of the July 30 disorder last year which left many local people fearing for their lives as a large crowd gathered on the street.
Janet McCormick, 62, remembers the riot well, living just doors away from the centre of it. Like many people interviewed, her eyes glaze over as she recalls the events of that night.
'It was a terrible time,' she says. 'The rioters were right outside my home, lighting fires and throwing bricks.
'It was terrifying for people living around here. No-one was sure what was going to happen and the police appeared to be outnumbered.
'It was a horrible thing to witness. I was angry last year at people for being so stupid that they believed every rumour they heard.
'I kept telling them they were being racist, that they should think for themselves but you could see what was driving them on.
'Sadly I do not think the Government has done enough to prevent another riot, not here but I can see it happening in other parts of the country.
'I think people think we should have someone waiting on the shore for the boats to arrive and have the power to send them straight back.
'People can't understand why that is not happening. It's no use telling us about human rights because this is affecting everyone.
'Illegal immigration is killing this country. It is putting a vast strain on the NHS and welfare and schools because too many people are coming into the country and we can't cope.
'I keep reading about how much money we are paying the French to stop asylum seekers crossing the Channel but the boats are still coming.
'Somebody has to address the problem. I don't want to see or read about another riot like we had in Southport but the Government must get a grip.'
Businesswoman Kimberley Parker, 37, runs pet groomers Glad Wags just down from the mosque.
Liberal in her views, she blamed the riot on 'bigotry and ignorance' and was particularly upset that the rioters targeted a hard-working Asian family who run a local shop doors away from her own.
'The thugs who raided their shop went for the alcohol and cigarettes and got away with more than £10,000,' she says.
'I was just very disappointed in my fellow human beings. The only good thing is that the riot brought his all closer together in Southport, especially around here.
'That was the one big positive to come out of it all.
'But the hard truth is that people will read and accept lies as the truth and I suppose that is because they want to.
'And we have to accept that people are now angry for all sorts of reasons and one of them I think is because they don't see the Government as very strong. It bends too easily.
'On the one hand we are getting misinformation from social media about the dangers of illegal immigration and on the other we are not getting enough information from the Government over how many immigrants are arriving here and what they intend to do about it.
'I don't think Starmer is being proactive enough.
'We need to sort out what is going on. For example, a lot of the people coming across on boats are losing their passports so they cannot be deported because no-one knows where they came from.
'That should be sorted immediately. If you don't have a passport you should be unable to claim asylum and that should be the hard and fast rule.
'The Government need to work with us to calm our fears. Of course people here are frightened of those from different cultures with backgrounds they don't know about.
'Starmer has to understand that and he has got to have a policy that we understand.
'I do hold liberal views but I do realise you cannot have uncontrolled immigration without it having a knock on effect on every part of out lives.
'I do fear there could be further riots in the country but I hope that there isn't.
'I think that since the riot last year we have become closer in Southport but I think what is going on in the rest of the country is a shambles.
'It appears to me that the Government is spending all its time papering over the cracks instead of facing up to problems and doing something about them.'
Roofer Craig Johnson, 37, witnessed the riot at first hand with most of it happening outside his front door.
'I was speechless at first,' he says. 'It was horrific to watch.
'The rioters were pulling down the garden walls and using the bricks to throw at the mosque and at police.
'I was one of those who came out the next day and help re-build the walls around here.
'But I don't think the Government is doing enough to stop another riot happening somewhere else. They are not facing up to the immigration problem.
'If you ask me, the sooner Farage gets in the better.
'What do I think Starmer should do? I think the best thing he could do is resign.'
Meanwhile, in Tamworth a year ago a rioting mob descended on the old historic town where they tried to set fire to a Holiday Inn which was housing migrants.
Hundreds of people gathered as a group of masked thugs threw a burning bush inside the side entrance, while onlookers filmed, cheered and clinked their beer bottles
Adam Goodfellow, 39, a surveyor who stood in Tamworth at last year's General Election for the Workers Party, said: 'I came down here when I heard there was a protest being planned, just to say that these people don't speak for all of Tamworth.
'There were a gang of people shouting at the police and it had been going for a good hour when they started throwing fireworks and it got scary.
'Personally I believe uncontrolled immigration is damaging to working peoples' interests. I also believe that when things aren't going so well, people look for scapegoats and there is a lot of hearsay on social media.
'If there is lawlessness then you need more police whoever is committing the crime.
'A year on and nothing has changed under Labour, people are still massively concerned which is why Reform won every seat at the recent elections.
'The only change at the hotel seems to be permanent security guards on reception which shows there is still a high level of threat and concern.'
Claire Mitchell, 51, a Tamworth local and a regular gym-goer, said: 'What happened a year ago was horrific to see. I was ashamed and surprised. I did not think Tamworth was that sort of place.
'I don't believe everything I read on social media. There are people with agendas seeking to sew division.
'I have seen people from the hotel sitting around the lake and passing the time of day like anyone else might. It is not something I get concerned about.
'Fake news is a terrible thing and the riots we saw last year were prompted by that.
'Tamworth is a great place. I was brought up here and it has so much more to offer than the terrible behaviour of a minority. I find it sad that its reputation has been tarnished in this way.
'A year on, I do not think it matters which political party is in power.
'For me, anyone who risks their life getting on a dinghy to cross the sea has got something to run from.
'There will always be some who take advantage of a humanitarian situation but we must not let that blind us.'
Retired IT guy and gym-goer Alex Freeman, 72, said: 'Whatever your opinion of the immigration situation, there is no excuse for threatening people's welfare and damaging property and that's what happened last year.
'I don't mind peaceful protest but that was threatening harm to other human beings and that is just wrong.
'I am anti the boats, I think immigration should be controlled and if you do something illegal then you shouldn't end up being given free stuff in a hotel.
'It's difficult. These are obviously desperate people but this country is not so big.
'It annoys me when I see homeless people in this country and then I think these people in the hotels have travelled across multiple countries to get to the UK.
'Why are they doing this? I know France and Germany take a lot in but I don't think they are treated as nicely as we treat them.
'We have limited resources – we have a broken NHS, potholes everywhere and we're constantly being told there is not enough money, so of course people are going to be angry.
'This is a terrible situation.
'I don't have any reason to think the people in the hotel are any different or worse than anyone else.
'I see them doing things we all do – going to the lake, looking at the ducks. If some do naughty stuff then that is rare just as it is rare when one of us commits a crime.
'And I know they are a tiny fraction of overall immigration. They get a lot of attention but they are not the ones breaking our system.'
A 36-year-old mother of three, and regular gym goer, said: 'I do feel a little bit unsafe in the dark evenings. I park a bit closer to the entrance because the hotel is full of males and they hang around with nothing to do and it does make you feel on edge.
'I did not agree with the protests. Violence is never the answer but people don't feel listened to so it is difficult.
'Yes, you feel unsafe but I also feel a bit sorry for them. Where are they meant to go?
'I saw more police around now than I did before last year's trouble but I don't know whether that is to keep everyone safe or because something has happened.
'There is a lot of hearsay, a lot of rumours. I hear about women being cat-called but I have never have anything like that happen to me personally so it is a difficult one to judge.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

US immigration to hold 1,000 detainees in Indiana after deal with prison system
US immigration to hold 1,000 detainees in Indiana after deal with prison system

The Guardian

time24 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

US immigration to hold 1,000 detainees in Indiana after deal with prison system

US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (Ice) is expanding its detention capacity by 1,000 beds in Indiana through a partnership with the midwest state's prison system, federal officials announced on Tuesday. Ice will be housing detainees at the Miami correctional center, a prison run by the Indiana department of corrections. The move is part of the US government's rapid expansion of immigration jails after Donald Trump's sweeping spending bill allotted roughly $170bn to Ice, an extraordinary sum making the agency the most heavily funded law enforcement department within the federal government. Kristi Noem, Department of Homeland Security (DHS) secretary, said the Indiana facility would be called the 'Speedway Slammer', following last month's opening of the so-called 'Alligator Alcatraz' immigration jail in Florida, in collaboration with Ron DeSantis, the state's Republican governor. Noem claimed Tuesday that the Indiana prison would house 'some of the worst of the worst' of undocumented people, echoing DHS' repeated claims about the targets of its enforcement. But records from the jail in the remote Florida Everglades, which critics have called a concentration camp, cast doubts on those assertions. Reporting from the Miami Herald and Tampa Bay Times last month found more than 250 people detained at the jail who have no criminal convictions or pending charges in the US, despite state and federal officials saying the jail was for 'vicious' and 'deranged psychopaths' facing deportation. Those newspapers also recently reported that a 15-year-old boy with no criminal record was sent to the jail, which is not supposed to house youths – a mistake the jail claimed was due to the boy 'misrepresenting' his age. Florida advocates have alleged that the conditions at the Everglades jail were appalling, with detainees forced to sleep in overcrowded pods where sewage backups led to cages flooded with feces. While officials have denied claims of inhumane treatment, the Trump administration has also promoted the brutality of the facility, including with the widely criticized decision to name the jail 'Alligator Alcatraz, a reference to the remote location in a wetland surrounded by crocodiles, alligators, pythons and mosquitoes. DHS appears to be using a similar tactic with the 'Speedway Slammer' name in Indiana, which Noem promoted with a social media post, saying, 'If you are in America illegally, you could find yourself in Indiana's Speedway Slammer. Avoid arrest and self deport now.' DHS did not immediately respond to questions about the timeline of the Indiana expansion and how the facility would be run. The Miami correctional facility is a maximum-security prison at a former air force base, roughly 70 miles north of Indianapolis, and has capacity for around 3,100 people, according to the IndyStar newspaper. The Florida jail is run by that state's division of emergency management, an arrangement that has raised alarm among advocates, as journalists found many detainees were housed in the facility even though they were not listed in Ice's database. Mike Braun, Indiana's governor, said in a statement the state was 'taking a comprehensive and collaborative approach to combating illegal immigration' and was 'proud to work with President Trump and Secretary Noem as they remove the worst of the worst'. The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) in Indiana has previously raised alarms about Miami correctional center conditions. In cases filed in 2021, the ACLU said some incarcerated people in segregated housing were forced to live in prolonged darkness, in cells with live electrical wires hanging from fixtures that in some cases shocked the residents. 'We wouldn't tolerate animals being held in such horrifying conditions, how can we tolerate them for people?' the ACLU said in 2021. Corrections officials declined to comment at the time. Annie Goeller, a spokesperson for the Indiana department of correction (IDOC), did not respond to questions about conditions on Tuesday, but said in an email her department was working with the governor to 'partner with federal authorities to enforce immigration laws', adding: 'Details about the partnership and how IDOC can best support those efforts are being determined.' The Indiana move comes as the Trump administration has increasingly sent immigration detainees to federal prisons that house criminal defendants. Those partnerships have reportedly caused chaos behind bars, with immigrants and their lawyers reporting horrific conditions and overcrowding, exacerbating problems for the longterm residents serving sentences. Also on Tuesday, the Associated Press reported that the DeSantis administration in Florida is planning to build a second immigration detention center. Noem has said the Everglades jail in Florida would be a model for state-run immigration detention centers. And DHS has said that Trump's bill will provide funding for 80,000 new beds for Ice.

Minister denies migrant returns deal leaves open human rights loophole
Minister denies migrant returns deal leaves open human rights loophole

Glasgow Times

timean hour ago

  • Glasgow Times

Minister denies migrant returns deal leaves open human rights loophole

Dame Angela Eagle denied the agreement with France would allow for spurious claims to be used to avoid deportation after shadow home secretary Chris Philp questioned the wording of the document. The 'one-in, one out' deal coming into effect on Wednesday will see migrants ineligible to stay in the UK sent back across the Channel, in exchange for taking those who have links to Britain. Dame Angela said the deal had been worded to ensure 'unfounded' claims could not be used to avoid deportation (Richard Townshend/UK Parliament) The agreement contains a clause that says in order for people to be returned to France, the UK must confirm they do not have an 'outstanding human rights claim'. Critics have argued this could risk bogus applications being made to frustrate the deportation process and cause delays. Mr Philp said on Tuesday this section offered 'an easy loophole for lawyers', adding that 'France will not give us any data on the people they are sending our way… so we have no idea who they really are'. Borders minister Dame Angela said he was wrong, and that the clause was included 'precisely to ensure no-one can use 'clearly unfounded' human rights claims to avoid being returned'. She added: 'And we will do full security checks on any applicants, and reject anyone who poses a risk.' Home Secretary Yvette Cooper conceded earlier that the accord is not a 'silver bullet' to stop small boat crossings, but marked a step change as migrants will be sent back across the Channel for the first time. Speaking to the BBC, she declined to put a number on how many people would be returned under the agreement ahead of time, saying that she believed it could aid criminal gangs. She added: 'We will provide regular updates, people will be able to see how many people are being detained, how many people are being returned, and it is right that we should be transparent around that.' Speaking to reporters earlier, Tory leader Kemi Badenoch said the deal would likely result in only small numbers of migrants being swapped with France and is 'not going to make any difference whatsoever'. Asked whether the Conservatives were partly to blame for the immigration and asylum situation, she told reporters: 'No I don't accept that at all, because what Labour are doing is just rubber-stamping all of the applications and saying they're processing.' It has been reported that about 50 a week could be sent to France. This would be a stark contrast to the more than 800 people every week who on average have arrived in the UK via small boats this year. Bruno Retailleau, France's interior minister, said the agreement 'establishes an experimental mechanism whose goal is clear: to smash the gangs'. The initial agreement will be in place until June 2026.

Waterworld where four-year-old girl died 'had strongest wave pool I've felt', says mother who was there on tragic day
Waterworld where four-year-old girl died 'had strongest wave pool I've felt', says mother who was there on tragic day

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

Waterworld where four-year-old girl died 'had strongest wave pool I've felt', says mother who was there on tragic day

The waterpark where a four-year-old girl died had the 'strongest wave pool' swimmers had ever felt, according to a mother there on the day. Staffordshire Police were called to Waterworld in Stoke-on-Trent on Monday to reports of a girl in a critical condition. The child was rushed to hospital for further treatment but sadly passed away a short while later. Parents of children who had been at the 'lagoon area of the aqua park' where the tragic event took place have since spoken out, sharing their 'heartbreak'. A mother, who took her three children to the waterpark that day told the Telegraph she had never been to one with such a strong wave pool. The parent, who did not wish to be named, had attended with her husband and three children, aged 11, five and three. She described 'struggling to remain' on her feet due to the 'strength' of the current, adding she had used wave pools before but 'never experienced one that forceful'. 'As an adult, I did not feel confident keeping my younger children safe there, and made the decision to remove them. My husband remained with our 11-year-old, who is a strong swimmer, but even he was struggling to stay above water. 'Although lifeguards were positioned at key points, I found it very difficult to maintain visibility of my children in the children's area,' she added. The mother went on to say there had been a 'number of slides and structures' blocking sight lines and that she lost sight of her five-year-old 'several times' while managing her 'three-year-old'. She said her daughter had wandered towards the wave pool on more than one occasion and she had to remind her not to enter the water alone and to stay near the orange and green slides and wait if she could not see her. Another woman described the moment she saw the little girl on the floor and recalled having to leave as her own girl did not want to see it and as her children were 'afraid'. And a different local said the venue had been 'crowded' on the day, adding she thought there were 'not enough lifeguards'. The attendee said they were not sure exactly what had happened but was aware of wave machines that are 'quite choppy' and the need to be a 'strong swimmer'. They added it was a 'complete tragedy'. Another resident said it was 'heartbreaking' while customer Heather Neville, 33, of Stone, Staffordshire, described finding the site closed following the girl's death after she arrived with her two sons. She said it was 'absolutely dreadful' and said she was unsure as to whether she could bring her boys back when the waterpark reopens. The typhoon lagoon wave pool is indicated on a map of the water park - where artificial waves reach heights of 1.4 metres. Toddlers are permitted to go in but only 'strong swimmers' can use the deep end. Non-swimmers are instructed to remain in shallow water, according the company's website. A Waterworld spokesman said: 'It is with great sadness that we learned of this little girl's passing. All our thoughts are with her family and loved ones during these extremely difficult times. Waterworld is working closely with the authorities. 'All other visitors were asked to quietly leave the pool out of respect for the rescue operation under way, and we would like to thank them for their support and collaboration.' West Midlands Ambulance Service stated it received a number of 999 calls to 'Waterworld at 4.20pm on Monday. Two ambulances, a paramedic officer and the Midlands Air Ambulance from Cosford attended the scene. A spokesman for the service said: 'Crews arrived to find Waterworld staff and bystanders performing CPR on a girl who was in a critical condition. 'The ambulance team quickly took over resuscitation efforts to commence advanced life support before conveying the girl by air ambulance to Royal Stoke University Hospital whilst life-saving treatment continued en route. 'Tragically, despite the best efforts of everyone, nothing could be done to save the little girl, and she was confirmed deceased in hospital a short time later. 'Our thoughts are with the family and friends at this truly awful time.' Stoke-on-Trent city council said in a statement on Tuesday: 'The council's environmental health team are working with the police and the privately run venue to undertake a full health and safety investigation.' Steve Watkins, the Mayor of Stoke-on-Trent, said: 'This is a terrible tragedy, and our thoughts are with her family and loved ones.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store