Riots Highlight Need for Deeper Understanding of Underlying Causes

Michael Okonkwo, Middle East Correspondent
3 Min Read
⏱️ 2 min read

In the aftermath of a tragic stabbing attack in Southport that claimed the lives of three young girls, a wave of riots erupted, fuelled by the spread of misinformation about the identity of the perpetrator. However, a new report by the Institute of Race Relations (IRR) suggests that the government’s response has failed to address the root causes of the unrest, instead reducing it to “mindless thuggery.”

The report, authored by criminologist Dr. Jon Burnett, examines a sample of court cases related to the riots. It found that the Conservative government’s “stop the boat” slogan and associated policy framework, which were continued by the subsequent Labour administration, were repeatedly echoed by the defendants or the broader mobilisations they were part of.

“While the forces underpinning the riots are complex, in multiple cases the ideological positions embedded in people’s justifications for violence echoed the ideological positions of government policies over time, politicians or media narratives more generally,” Burnett wrote.

Liz Fekete, the IRR director, warned that unless society confronts the deeper causes of anti-migrant, Islamophobic and racist violence, the cycle of events will continue, with the prospect of “ugly protests and riots forming an infinite loop.”

The report also challenges the “two-tier justice” narrative that quickly developed, identifying dozens of cases where Muslim and other Black and minority ethnic people who mobilised to protect their communities from a far-right-inspired presence were subjected to a “punitive approach and harsh sentences.”

Andrea Coomber KC, the chief executive of the Howard League for Penal Reform, said the report showed the causes were “more complex and nuanced than has hitherto been understood, particularly by the government.”

The government spokesperson acknowledged the need for a longer-term strategy to bring communities together and build common ground, and highlighted the £5 billion investment through the “Pride in Place” programme to respond to the frustrations that fester by improving people’s lives and the places in which they live.

However, the report suggests that the government’s failure to consider whether state policies over time have contributed to the deprivation that may have fuelled the riots is a problem that extends throughout the criminal justice system.

As the nation grapples with the aftermath of these tragic events, the call for a deeper understanding of the underlying causes and a more holistic approach to addressing them has never been more urgent.

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Michael Okonkwo is an experienced Middle East correspondent who has reported from across the region for 14 years, covering conflicts, peace processes, and political upheavals. Born in Lagos and educated at Columbia Journalism School, he has reported from Syria, Iraq, Egypt, and the Gulf states. His work has earned multiple foreign correspondent awards.
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