Police naming Liverpool parade suspect's ethnicity may cause future ‘challenges'
Merseyside police said they arrested a 53-year-old white British man from the Liverpool area about two hours after the incident that left dozens of people, including four children, injured.
Dal Babu, who was a senior Met officer, told the Guardian's First Edition that the decision was 'unprecedented', but he could envisage pressure being applied to forces in future to release details on the racial background of suspects.
'It doesn't take rocket science to predict what will happen: the far right will twist this and say, 'right, you've named [the race] because it's a white person. Why aren't you naming [the race of] the next person?' And it will present some difficulties and challenges to the police', he said.
Babu stressed the decision had been 'correct' to share the information on this occasion to combat 'racist and Islamophobic misinformation' on social media, while warning that every decision should be taken on a case by case basis.
'You could imagine a situation where the far right will say, 'Oh, you haven't named the ethnicity of this person and that's because they are a person of colour',' he said.
'It's really important that people don't see it as a precedent because every incident will be different. People may feel in a future incident that they're entitled to know the ethnicity and race, and it may not be appropriate to release it,' he said.
A senior legal source said there could be circumstances where naming the ethnicity of a suspect could cause riots rather than quell them.
'What will a force do if they arrest someone in similar circumstances who is recently arrived on a small boat or who has a clearly Muslim name? They will now be under huge pressure to name them,' the source said.
Far-right extremists used social media within minutes of the Liverpool tragedy to exploit the scenes of horror, the Guardian has been told.
One account claimed the incident was a terrorist attack.
Another account also made false claims including that the man arrested by police at the scene was really a Muslim, despite what police had said.
Merseyside police were criticised after the Southport murders last summer for not releasing more information after false rumours were started online that the killer was a Muslim asylum seeker.
For Merseyside police, Monday night's decision to release details about the suspect's race and nationality was not a precedent.
'They believe in this case it was right, with detectives convinced the suspect detained was the only person they were looking for. It might not be right in a case where the identity of a suspect was unclear and where identity could be an issue at trial,' a source said.
In March, chief constable Serena Kennedy told MPs she wanted to dispel disinformation in the immediate aftermath of the Southport murders by releasing information about attacker Axel Rudakubana's religion, because he came from a Christian family, but was told not to by local crown prosecutors.
Police did disclose that the suspect was a 17-year-old male from Banks in Lancashire, who was born in Cardiff.
Widespread rioting followed the murders, with some disorder targeting mosques and hotels housing asylum seekers.
Jonathan Hall KC, the government's official reviewer of terrorism legislation, told the Guardian that Merseyside's decision on Monday evening should set a precedent for future incidents.
'The authorities seemed to have learned the lessons of Southport.
'It should be a precedent, while recognising there will be the odd case where you need to say little or nothing. Transparency is the right precedent.'
Hall said if a suspect in a high-profile case was a Muslim asylum seeker: 'You have to do that as well.'
Nick Lowles, of Hope Not Hate, a leading group monitoring the far right, said: 'Police have learned lessons after Southport. What they did this time was to fill the void, putting information out as soon as possible.
'If it had been a terrorist attack, I'm not sure anything would have calmed tensions down.'
The decision to release details was an operational matter and therefore separate from government, Whitehall sources said.
Asked if he would like to see similar details released in the future in similar cases, the prime minister, Keir Starmer, said: 'That is a matter for the police and the investigation is ongoing so I think we need to leave that to them.
'I think today is a day really for thinking about all those impacted by this and being absolutely clear that we stand with them.'

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New York Post
an hour ago
- New York Post
Metropolitan Opera's Peter Gelb blames President Trump for sales slump — but needs to look in the mirror
Blaming the president is a popular pastime these days, but one of America's cultural leaders has come up with something really novel in the genre. 'Metropolitan Opera season attendance dropped slightly following the Trump administration's immigration crackdown that coincided with a decrease in tourists to New York.' Who knew rounding up hardened illegal-immigrant criminals would hit the hallowed halls of the country's most prestigious opera house hard? Advertisement 6 President Trump and First Lady Melania Trump attend a performance at the newly de-woked Kennedy Center in DC. REUTERS That line is the first sentence of a June 13 Associated Press news report that takes as fact Metropolitan Opera general director Peter Gelb's explanation for a slump in sales. With the Met's season over, Gelb has been making the rounds, pushing this narrative repeatedly in interviews and podcasts. He even ripped the American president last week from a Kyiv stage, telling Ukrainians his government 'no longer stands for some of democracy's most basic principles.' Advertisement 6 Metropolitan Opera general director Peter Gelb savaged Trump from this Kyiv stage last week. Ukrinform/Shutterstock The Met matched its 2023-24 sales, at 72% of capacity — but had projected 75%. 'We were on track to continue to improve,' Gelb said. 'I attribute the fact that we didn't achieve our sales goals to a significant drop in tourism.' That's 'a direct consequence' of Trump policy, Gelb told German outlet BackstageClassical. Advertisement He said New York saw 17% fewer tourists after President Trump took office, sighing to AP about 'the times in which we live.' Gelb's international Blame Trump tour might make him more popular at Upper West Side cocktail parties (which he's been attending for life: His father was New York Times managing editor Arthur Gelb). But he should look closer to home to understand why he's not seeing success at the storied institution he's run for 18 years. 6 Gelb joined star Anna Netrebko on a Met 2007 red carpet. WireImage Advertisement The impresario can't help putting the political into his productions, even though audiences are anything but enamored of these new, woke operas. And he needlessly canceled the company's biggest star, Anna Netrebko — to make a political point he still crows about even as his decisions have been disastrous for the Met. 'Mediocre or even bad.' 'Flop after flop of terrible productions.' 'Just bad.' Those are some of the judgments I can print in a family newspaper about Gelb's recent runs from Reddit's opera lovers. 'Gelb has had contempt for opera and his own artform since he started,' one declared in a thread with almost nothing positive to say about the manager. 'Grounded' opened this past Met season after a heavy revision from its 2023 Washington, DC, premiere. 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It was a bit rich coming from the guy who brags of having personally 'dismissed' the company's biggest star, Netrebko, after Putin's 2022 full-scale invasion of Ukraine. He was gloating about the move just last week to Ukrainian journalists. 'When I arrived at the Met, Netrebko was just getting launched and I immediately saw that she was someone on whose career the Met could hang its hat,' Gelb has said. Advertisement Indeed, she headlined the moneymaking New Year's Eve gala more than once; her Met performances frequently sold out. The Russian soprano denounced Putin's war, but Gelb didn't care. He's never seen an opportunity to grandstand politically he hasn't grabbed. And he's allowed on stage plenty of less-famous Russians who haven't said as much as she has — sometimes even nothing — against the Ukraine war. (Netrebko notes in her lawsuit against Gelb and the Met that the company's continued to feature male singers who, unlike her, have appeared in Russia at Putin- and war-supporting events since the full-scale invasion.) 6 Ex-Met star Netrebko still sells out European opera houses. It's opera lovers in New York and beyond who pay the price — along with the Met's sliding sales. Netrebko is still selling out European houses. WQXR finally broadcast her work last month, with a production from Milan's La Scala. Listeners took to the comments in celebration and complaint. Joe Pearce from Brooklyn — who happens to be the Vocal Record Collectors Society's president — mourned 'the remainder of her best years totally denied to us by a Met Opera manager who doesn't seem to understand that he is running an opera company and not for political office.' What will Peter Gelb do once Trump's second term is over, having lost his raison d'être?


New York Post
an hour ago
- New York Post
Russia ramps up offensives on 2 fronts in Ukraine as both sides seek advantage before fall
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Chicago Tribune
2 hours ago
- Chicago Tribune
Today in History: White mobs attacked Black residents in East St. Louis riots
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