Immigration concerns endure in UK town hit by riot

By AFP
|
August 16, 2024
A person walks along on the footpath by a row of houses in the Eastwood area of Rotherham, northern England on August 13, 2024. — AFP

ROTHERHAM, United Kingdom: Ten days after the riots, the scars of violence are still visible outside the hotel housing asylum seekers in Rotherham, northern England, where many residents remain shellshocked and still worried about immigration.

“It was terrifying,” Clive Wingate, who lives near the now-infamous Holiday Inn Express, told AFP.

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“When they were lighting the bins to push into the building, where there were people inside, what were their intentions?” the 66-year-old pensioner asked.

The images from Rotherham were among the most striking of the recent riots across England and Northern Ireland.

Hundreds of men, some draped in the English flag, gathered outside the hotel, chanting “kick them out” while outnumbered police came under fire from bricks and burning objects.

The nationwide riots -- the worst in the country since 2011 -- began after a knife attack that killed three girls during a dance class on July 29 in Southport, another northern town.

False rumours that the suspect was a Muslim asylum seeker spread on social media, and although police corrected the record, anti-immigration riots erupted for more than a week, leading to more than 1,000 arrests.

At the Holiday Day Inn in Rotherham, an economically deprived town in South Yorkshire, a police cordon still marked it as a “crime scene” this week.

Signs of fire damage and plywood covering doors and windows remained as indicators of the violence.

The leafy area several kilometres from the town centre is usually peaceful, residents said, adding that the asylum seekers housed there while their applications are processed were not a major problem.

The rioters “deserve jail, they are morons”, said Charlotte Bedford, who was out walking her dog.

“If you want to protest, protest peacefully”, added the 34-year-old.

Several rioters received heavy sentences. They included three years in prison for a 19-year-old who threw bricks at police officers and two years and eight months for a 60-year-old man who pulled an officer to the ground.

Phil Fletcher, a 65-year-old who worked in property maintenance, criticised the violence, but was not surprised by the riots.

“There are millions of people fed up with immigration. It´s not our country anymore,” said the pensioner, who voted for the anti-immigration Reform UK party in the general election in early July, won by Labour.

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