
Every violent protest has its own reasons but sunny weather doesn’t help.
In any season police will tell you that “PC Rain” is the most effective officer keeping trouble off the streets. On warm days and nights in summer more people are out and about rubbing up against each other. Tempers of the hot and bothered fray more easily.
Tensions are high this sultry weekend after rallying calls were identified online calling for protests – with mosques or hotels housing asylum seekers the preferred rallying points for many protesters.
Rioters clashed with police on Saturday in several towns and cities across the UK.
Protests latest:
The weekend’s unrest so far
When asked if he feared a “summer of riots” this week the prime minister dodged the question by concentrating on recent specific events.
After the protests which have flared in Southport, London, Leeds and elsewhere following the killing of three little girls, Sir Keir warned he has to deal with “a group of individuals who are absolutely hell-bent on violence”. That was why he had decided “to pull together senior police officers” to ensure that “this is met with the most robust response, not just in the coming days but all the time”.
An effective response to rioting requires appropriate powers for the police and swift justice for offenders.
In the longer term, though, there are two more complex tasks – to try to counter external forces, such as the internet, which may have facilitated trouble-making and, most difficult of all, to decide how to respond to the grievances of those causing the mayhem.
Starmer is an expert after London riots experience
Sir Keir is an expert on the judicial side of dealing with disturbances. He was Director of Public Prosecutions when the so-called “London riots” broke out in August 2011.
After Mark Duggan, a black man, was shot dead by police, rioting spread over the next few days across much of London and into other inner cities including Bristol, Birmingham, Coventry, Leicester, Liverpool, Derby and Nottingham. Around 3,000 people were arrested with more than 2,000 going on to face criminal charges and prison sentences.
The disturbances this year are not on the scale of 2011.
If there is more trouble Starmer will make sure the authorities do what he did then.
He kept the courts open 24/7 to process offenders and allowed magistrates to pass longer and tougher sentences.
“For me it was the speed [of processing cases] that I think may have played some small part in bringing the situation back under control,” he said afterwards. He added: “I don’t think people gamble on the length of sentence, particularly. They gamble on: ‘Am I going to get caught? Am I going to get sentenced and sent to prison?’ And if the answer is: ‘I’m now watching on the television some other people who had been caught 24 hours or 48 hours after they were on the streets with us’ – I think that’s a very powerful message.”
How this would sit with courts and prisons which are considerably more overcrowded than they were then remains to be seen.
Source link
Best Electronic Deals.
Discover the Best Electronic Deals on Amazon Today. Grab Hot Discounts on Top Tech! Don't Miss Out! 🔥 Save Big Now!