The Minister of State, Home Office (Lord Hanson of Flint) (Lab):
“With permission, Madam Deputy Speaker, I will now make a Statement
on the violent disorder that occurred earlier this summer. Just
before the parliamentary Recess, I made a Statement to this House
on the horrendous attack that took place in Southport on 29 July.
Five weeks on, our hearts still ache for the three precious little
girls who lost their lives, for their loved ones, and for the other
children who were...Request free trial
The Minister of State, Home Office ( of Flint) (Lab): “With
permission, Madam Deputy Speaker, I will now make a Statement on
the violent disorder that occurred earlier this summer. Just
before the parliamentary Recess, I made a Statement to this House
on the horrendous attack that took place in Southport on 29 July.
Five weeks on, our hearts still ache for the three precious
little girls who lost their lives, for their loved ones, and for
the other children who were injured or endured unspeakable horror
that day. The House will know that a suspect has been charged,
and the investigation into the attack is ongoing. Those grieving
families, the Southport community and the country will need
answers, but, for that reason, the legal process must now take
its course.
That day in the House, all of us came together in sorrow and in
solidarity with the families and the people of Southport, and I
spoke of the bravery, compassion and distress of the police, the
paramedics and the firefighters I had met that morning, who were
first on the scene. It is truly appalling that within hours of
that Statement, the same Southport police were facing the most
disgraceful violent attacks from criminals and thugs. Police
officers were pelted with bricks and bottles. The local mosque—a
place of worship—was subjected to violent attack. While millions
of decent people across the country were praying for bereaved
families, a criminal minority of thugs and extremists saw only an
opportunity to hijack a town's grief. The Merseyside chief
constable, Serena Kennedy, spoke at the funeral of Alice da Silva
Aguiar, where she said she hoped that anyone taking part in the
violent disorder was
‘hanging their head in shame at the pain'
that they had caused the bereaved family.
In the days that followed, we saw further disgraceful violent
disorder in a number of towns and cities. There were repeated
attacks on the same police officers whose job it is to keep
communities safe, and over 100 officers were injured. In
Sunderland, a Citizens Advice branch was set alight. In
Liverpool, a library and vital community hub was torched. In
Hull, shops were looted and a mosque was targeted. In Rotherham,
a hotel used as asylum accommodation was set alight when people
were inside. In Bolton, clashes between rival groups involved
fireworks and bottles being thrown. And we saw people targeted on
the streets because of the colour of their skin. This disgraceful
disorder and racist hatred, including that whipped up by a
hateful minority online, was an insult to those grieving over
Southport.
Let us be very clear: those violent and criminal attacks were not
protests. They were not about grievance. They were thuggery,
racism and crime. Plenty of people across the country have strong
views about crime, policing, immigration, asylum, the NHS and
more, but they do not pick up bricks and throw them at the
police. They do not loot shops or attack places of worship, and
they do not set buildings alight knowing that other human beings
are inside. There is a lot to debate on all kinds of policy
issues, but no one should make excuses for violence or thuggery
that risks public safety. This was brazen criminality,
perpetrated in many cases by those with existing criminal
convictions.
The Prime Minister and I made it clear that criminals would pay
the price for their violence, and we meant it. The Prime Minister
announced a new national violent disorder programme to bring
together the best policing capabilities and enhance intelligence
sharing across forces, and Ministers worked daily with the police
and criminal justice partners to ensure that there was a strong
and determined response. The National Police Coordination Centre
operated a national mobilisation plan to ensure that strategic
reserves of public order officers were ready to be deployed in
support of different police forces. More than 40,000 officer
shifts were worked by public order officers over 10 days, with
over 6,600 public order officers deployed on one day alone. Rest
days were cancelled and additional hours were worked.
The Crown Prosecution Service deployed over 100 additional
prosecutors, boosting its 24-hour charging service with
additional advice from the Director of Public Prosecutions so
that they could move swiftly to charge. The Ministry of Justice
accelerated the work on new cells to bring 500 more prison places
on stream earlier, and the Lord Chancellor made it clear that the
courts stood ready to hear all the cases coming through. The Home
Office established a new rapid procedure for security support for
mosques to ensure that communities felt supported and safe. In
total, around 1,280 people have been arrested, around 800 charges
have been made and over 570 individuals had been brought before
the courts for offences such as violent disorder, assaults on
emergency workers, arson and encouraging violent attacks online.
This robust and swift response from the Government and the
criminal justice system has provided a strong deterrent and shown
our steadfast determination to keep people safe. Most
importantly, order was restored.
I want now to update the House on some of the next steps we will
take. First, we will take forward positive policing reform to
build on the important work done by the National Police
Coordination Centre this summer. I want to particularly thank the
chair of the National Police Chiefs' Council and the public order
lead for the mobilisation work that they did, but the reality is
that the co-ordination infrastructure and systems that they had
to work with were too weak. I am therefore asking His Majesty's
Inspectorate of Constabulary and Fire and Rescue Services to work
quickly with the NPCC, the College of Policing and the national
lead for public order to review the lessons from this summer's
events so that we can ensure that strong co-ordination and
intelligence systems are in place and that there is sufficient
public order policing for the future.
Secondly, as well as ensuring that there is proper punishment for
those responsible for this disorder, we will be pressing forward
at pace with this Government's mission to take back the safety of
our streets and restore respect for the police and the rule of
law. We will put thousands more neighbourhood police officers and
police community support officers back on the streets, reversing
the collapse in community policing and rebuilding the
relationship between local communities and forces. This
Government are very clear that wherever and whenever violence and
disorder emerge—whether in Hartlepool or Harehills, Sunderland or
Stoke—we expect crimes to have consequences and perpetrators to
face the full force of the law. The criminal violence we saw
after the Southport attacks was not the only violent disorder
this summer. We also saw disgraceful arson and attacks on the
police in Harehills. In that case, 32 people have been arrested
and in the past week three men have pleaded guilty to arson and
violent disorder after a bus was set alight.
Thirdly, I have been concerned for a long time that not enough is
being done to counter extremism—including both Islamist extremism
and far-right extremism—as there has been no proper strategy in
place since 2015. I have ordered a rapid review of extremism to
ensure that we have the strongest possible response to the
poisonous ideologies that corrode community cohesion and fray the
fabric of our democracy. Alongside that, the Deputy Prime
Minister is overseeing cross-government work to consider how we
support our communities and address issues of cohesion in the
longer term.
Fourthly, the Secretary of State for Science, Innovation and
Technology will strengthen the requirements for social media
companies to take responsibility for the poison being
proliferated on their platforms with the rollout of the measures
in the Online Safety Act 2023, and we will continue to be clear
that criminal content online results in criminal sanctions
offline. Fifthly, we stand ready to support the police through
the special grant for policing, and the Home Office will work
with police and crime commissioners to ensure that the Riot
Compensation Act 2016 works effectively in the areas that are
affected.
The country recoiled in horror at the scenes of violence and
disorder in some cities and towns earlier this summer, but let
there be no doubt: the minority of criminals and thugs who sought
to cause havoc do not represent Britain. Instead, across the
country we saw decent people coming together to support each
other, to clean up the damage and to rebuild communities: the
bricklayers who repaired the wall of the Southport mosque; the
residents who donated funds and books to restock the Spellow
library; and the volunteers in Sunderland who found a new site to
offer community advice. There are many more examples, and those
small, unassuming acts of selflessness should serve as a message
to the criminals and extremists that they do not speak for
Britain and they never will. I commend this Statement to the
House.”
4.12pm
(Con)
My Lords, this is the first opportunity we have had in this House
to express our sorrow at the events in Southport and our sympathy
to the family and friends of the victims. It was an appalling
tragedy, and they all have my sincere condolences and I hope
those who were injured make full and speedy recoveries. I also
take this opportunity to extend similar sympathies and
condolences to the family and friends of Cher Maximen and Mussie
Imnetu who were killed at the Notting Hill Carnival.
I thank the Home Secretary for making the Statement yesterday. I
am quite sure that the Minister had his summer seriously
disrupted by the dreadful violence and disorder that we saw on
our streets. By and large, I think that the police and the
Government dealt with this violence well. There can never be any
excuse for this type of behaviour, and I agree with the Home
Secretary that this was thuggish and criminal activity. There are
plenty of ways to express legitimate frustrations and points of
view in this country, and many do without resorting to violence
and intimidation. Acting at speed to quell the disturbances was
the right thing to do, and I commend the Minister for his part in
that.
However, the Home Secretary's Statement yesterday also prompted a
number of questions which deserve to be explored. First, the Home
Secretary described actions taken by the NPCC and referenced
that:
“the co-ordination infrastructure and systems that they had to
work with were too weak”.
Can the Minister expand on that and explain which systems were
too weak and why? He will be aware of a phrase that I had to
repeatedly deploy when I was in his shoes—often to my regret—that
our police forces retain operational independence. That phrase
may be frustrating on occasions, but it also describes an
important underlying principle that Ministers, while no doubt
“working daily”—to quote the Home Secretary again—should not get
involved in operational matters. I have no doubt the Minister
will agree with that.
Following on from that, what are the terms of reference for the
review that the Home Secretary has commissioned to ensure that
there is
“sufficient public order policing for the future”?
What does “sufficient” mean? At this point, I will refrain from
passing comment on the efforts of the noble Lord's party to
frustrate the previous Government's public order efforts.
The Home Secretary also talked about rebuilding respect for the
police. I agree, but would remind the House that this is not
simply about numbers. The previous Government fulfilled our
promises and ensured that there were more policemen on our
streets than ever before, but numbers are not everything.
Policemen have to be tasked with doing the right jobs, and that
is inconsistent across the country. I obviously hope that the
Government succeed in their aim to rebuild community policing,
but I fear that the Minister will soon be talking about
operational independence again. How many community officers do
the Government expect to recruit and where will they go?
The Home Secretary talked about countering extremism, and that is
of course welcome. She referenced Islamist and far-right
extremism, but I note made no mention at all of far-left
extremism. Why not? I am sorry to say that the far left is in
large part responsible for the most enduring form of racism: that
of anti-Semitism. That is worse now than in my lifetime, and it
sickens and disgusts. I will be charitable and allow that those
who conflate what is happening in the Middle East with the
British Jewish community are just stupid, but some will not be,
and they are just as manipulative as those who foment hatred of
other groups and individuals. Can the Minister reassure us that
the previous Government's work supporting CREST and the Jewish
community will continue, and that anti-Semitism and those stoking
it will be met with the full force of the law?
My final questions relate to—I choose my words very carefully
here—perceived inconsistencies in the policing of protest. I
stress again that the response to this summer's riots was
appropriate and that the Government deserve praise for their
commendable actions, but there is a lingering suspicion that some
riots and disorder attract more robust attention than others.
Referring back to my previous question, there was clear evidence
of anti-Semitism on our streets in relation to Israel/Gaza, and I
know that the police have now made many arrests. I understand, of
course, that it can be difficult to make arrests during a
demonstration; the police are usually heavily outnumbered, so
that could cause more trouble. Nevertheless, the impression
created was one of a degree of tolerance for the chanting of
well-worn anti-Semitic tropes and the display of symbols
sympathetic to proscribed terrorist organisations. Similarly, in
Harehills, in Leeds the police seemingly disappeared when the
Romanian Roma community rioted. Why? I note that arrests are now
being made, and that is welcome, but surely the response should
have been more robust at the time. If there is a good operational
reason why that was not the case then I am more than happy to
hear it, but I would like an answer.
Finally—I have little doubt that the Minister will agree—there
can never be any room for statements from politicians that can be
read as equivocation in these matters. Violence and disorder of
the type that we saw across the summer is always wrong; any
suspicion that this is not the case will merely fuel the keyboard
warriors and stoke yet more trouble. The first step towards
rebuilding trust in the police is consistency, so I hope that the
noble Lord will take my questions in the constructive way that
they are intended. None of us wants to see more of this and we
all want the police to succeed.
(LD)
My Lords, the shocking deaths of three little girls in Southport,
followed by the shocking disorder on our streets perpetrated by a
minority of violent thugs, was truly frightening. There was
racist mob violence in our towns and cities, clearly incited and
organised by far-right groups and individuals —mainly online,
where shockingly they shared the locations of hotels and hostels
housing asylum seekers and migrants. We saw footage of thugs
trying to set fire to some hotels, terrifying the people in them.
The locations of immigration offices were leaked online, so they
were facing attacks as well.
The bravery and professionalism of the police and emergency
services are to be commended. They were dealing with what was
sometimes an impossible job. However, it is disappointing that
the Official Opposition has not mentioned the targeted attack on
Muslim communities. They were clearly the focus of these attacks;
online, we saw the most appalling Islamophobia and hate crimes.
That affects not just Muslims in this country but those perceived
to be Muslims, who were of course migrants and asylum seekers—and
anyone perceived to be a supporter of or even associated with
asylum seekers, or from an ethnic-minority community. I know of
what I speak: members of my own family in some of these
communities that were targeted, who wear visible headscarves,
were terrified. Some of them felt that they could not stay in
their homes, in an area such as Walthamstow that was
targeted.
Does the Minister agree that to tackle record levels of hate
crimes against Muslims we need a consistent and coherent approach
to tackling Islamophobia, underpinned by a working definition to
better understand what Islamophobia is and is not, in the way
that we have—quite rightly—a working definition of anti-Semitism?
Six years ago, the All-Party Parliamentary Group on British
Muslims put forward the first working definition of Islamophobia
after two years of consultation with 800 community groups up and
down the country, with all faiths and with victims of hate
crimes. That definition was accepted by all parties, apart from
the last Government. Will this Government look to revisit that,
and start to come to a proper understanding and definition of
what we mean by Islamophobia? Do they intend to appoint an
independent adviser on Islamophobia—a post that has been vacant
for two years? Discrimination, prejudice and hatred damage
everyone and the fabric of our society. We must work together to
challenge it.
The Statement mentions far-right extremism, which has been on the
rise. We saw some people on the streets with signs depicting Nazi
emblems. Make no mistake, these people are entrenched in
anti-Semitism if they support Nazi symbols and that kind of
behaviour. The Statement mentions a review. Can the Minister set
out whether enough attention is being given to tackling far-right
extremism? Can he say a bit more about how the Government intend
to look into that in the review?
The Minister of State, Home Office ( of Flint) (Lab)
I thank noble Lords for their contributions. Like the noble Lord
on the Opposition Front Bench, I start my response where he
started his: with the families of the victims in Southport and
the families of the victims in Notting Hill. I cannot begin to
imagine the pain that they have gone through, attending a dance
class or a carnival and then finding dead bodies of young
children and family members at the end of those events. We need
to put that at the forefront of our minds. When the event
happened on the Monday just before recess, our first thoughts
were with the families.
The noble Lord mentioned—as was echoed by the noble Baroness from
the Liberal Democrat Front Bench—that there is no excuse for the
actions that followed the incident in Southport. It was thuggery
and it was appalling behaviour, and it was in much part
orchestrated by forces that we need to examine in the longer term
and deal with accordingly.
For the interest of the House, we had 40,000 police hours over
the course of those riots. I pay tribute from this Front Bench to
police officers who gave up their leave, faced attacks, and stood
for the values of this House and this Parliament in defending
individuals from the Islamic community, and from other
communities, who were under attack from forces which should have
known better. Such forces will now have time to reflect, during
their time in prison following judicial exercise, fair guilty
pleas and/or—in due course—criminal convictions.
The noble Lord mentioned police independence. We fully support
police independence. However, he will know that the Prime
Minister, the Home Secretary, me and other Ministers in the Home
Office met police shortly after those events to encourage and
understand the response that they were going to make
independently. Make no mistake, when criminal acts of
intimidation and Islamophobia are committed, properties are
burned down and legitimate sources of government support for
asylum seekers are attacked, the courts will take action.
Ultimately, those who have committed these crimes—if found guilty
or pleading guilty—will face considerable sentences. That has
been shown in the response to this House.
Both Front Benches have mentioned the question of a review. My
right honourable friend the Home Secretary, the Prime Minister
and the Home Office team will undertake a review not just of the
incidents and the response, and not just of the capability of the
response or how it was organised, but of the underlying factors
behind those concerns. It will be a review of what led
individuals across towns and cities in this United Kingdom to
pick up rocks, attack their fellow citizens and attack not just
people seeking asylum but long-standing residents with businesses
in this country. That is not acceptable behaviour, and I hope
that the government response, which I know the noble Lord on the
Front Bench opposite has accepted, responded well to that point
and has helped to close down the initial concern. But there
remain long-term concerns that we need to deal with.
I say to both Front Benches that extremism on all sides is
something that we have to take cognisance of; we must be
responsible in our approach to it and look at the underlying
causes. There is much radicalisation online; there are people in
bedrooms on their own being radicalised from both the left and
the right, and on a whole range of issues. We need to look at
that in the longer term, and my right honourable friend in the
House of Commons, , the Secretary of State for
DSIT, is going to look at how Facebook, Twitter and other social
media platforms have responded and encouraged by their use what
happened in the events that we have just seen.
The noble Lord's question on anti-Semitism is equally as
important as the point about Islamophobia. I want to see
individuals in this society respected for their beliefs. I was
very pleased to see, in discussions I had with members of the
Church of England, that they had reached out to colleagues from
the Jewish and Muslim communities and, particularly in Southport,
had stood side by side to show support and that we have respect
for religious beliefs. We respect the differences in those
religious beliefs and understand that people live their lives and
live their religious beliefs differently, but all have a right to
live, breath and support themselves in the communities that we
represent. That question of tolerance is one that should come
from this House.
Let there be no mistake that a crime is a crime, and when people
throw rocks, abuse, intimidate, organise on social media or
encourage others to do so—we have 90 convictions of people who
encouraged people to burn down asylum seekers' properties—those
are crimes. Those people will be held to account independently of
Ministers and of the police, ultimately. The CPS will decide
whether to charge, a court will determine whether guilt or
innocence is in place and a sentence will be passed. That is a
message that we will share—and I know that the noble Lord shares
that message too.
I have a final point to make in response to points made by the
noble Baroness on the Liberal Front Bench. She is right that the
question of Islamophobia is extremely important. We live in a
multicultural society. These are people of the Islamic faith who
have been born here and whose fathers and mothers have been born
here. It is not an issue of race but an issue of faith, and
people have the right to express their faith openly, in
accordance with their principles. One thing that we did in
response to the attacks was to provide additional support to
mosques in a protection fund. To go back to the point about
anti-Semitism, that has applied equally to Jewish community
organisations and facilities. We will continue to do that.
The message that this House should send out is quite clear. We
live in a decent society, and those people who committed those
offences did so in a way that is offensive to this House. We will
collectively review what happened, look at what needs to be done
and look at the underlying causes, but ultimately make sure that
we have a tolerant, fair and open society.
4.28pm
The Lord
My Lords, I express appreciation to the Minister and his right
honourable friend the Home Secretary for the Government's
Statement. I extend heartfelt sympathy to the families of the
victims of recent violent disorder. I support the Government's
strong and determined response, including the swift apprehension
of perpetrators and bringing them to justice. I also applaud the
strong and positive signal that this sends: protest cannot extend
to violence and abuse. I am grateful that Members of the House
have spoken so powerfully on the evil of anti-Semitic,
Islamophobic and racist incidents, which the Minister rightly
addressed as criminality. In addition to the measures announced,
are His Majesty's Government seeking to address, perhaps through
an inquiry, some of the underlying economic and social issues
that can render people vulnerable to exploitation and incitement,
to their own cost and to the detriment of the wider
community?
of Flint (Lab)
I am grateful to the right reverend Prelate for his response and
the questions he has brought forward today. I am particularly
pleased, as I mentioned, with the support that was given at the
time of the incidents and the discussions we have had with
colleagues around the response at a local level from members of
the Church of England. I also welcome the condemnation he echoed
of violent acts. He will know that the issues of community
cohesion he mentioned are difficult issues to deal with, but ones
that it is essential that this House and the Government grasp and
take forward. I hope he will welcome that the Deputy Prime
Minister is going to be leading on community cohesion. We will be
looking at what we can do to bring groups together to look at how
we bring together all the issues to which both Front Benches have
referred.
While I cannot give assurances today on timescales or terms of
reference, these will be issues that this House and the House of
Commons return to regularly, because we have to tackle the
underlying causes of individuals feeling alienated from society.
There is no excuse for that behaviour—it is criminal behaviour
and will be dealt with as criminal behaviour—but we still have to
understand the reasons why people have fallen into that criminal
behaviour, just as we would on any other aspect of criminal
behaviour. I give the right reverend Prelate the assurance that
that will be undertaken by the Deputy Prime Minister and others
in the coming months.
(CB)
My Lords, in welcoming everything that has been said so far in
this debate, and welcoming my old friend to this House and to the
Front Bench, I ask him whether he agrees that the actions of
online entities such as Channel3Now in Pakistan, allowing online
advertising sites to make money by purveying violent,
demonstrably deliberate untruths about the country we live in, is
wholly unacceptable. I suggest that at least the possibility of
further regulation should be used to compel internet entities to
see it as their duty to refute the broadcasting of such
content.
of Flint (Lab)
It is nice to see the noble Lord, Lord Carlile, again. We have
seen each other in a number of guises over the years, and I am as
surprised as he is to find myself here today responding to these
issues. He raises an extremely important and valid point. Much of
the content that fired the organisation of some of the events we
saw, not just in Southport but across the whole United Kingdom,
began its life in an internet or social media post that
encouraged poor behaviour, not just in the UK but, as the noble
Lord said, outside the United Kingdom.
The Online Safety Act was passed by both Houses in the last
Parliament and was the child of the previous Government. The
level of implementation of some of the measures in that Act needs
to be looked at. My right honourable friend , the Secretary of State for
DSIT, has met with social media providers to look at the internet
and what role it played, and we will review the policy over time.
This is an organically growing issue, but the points the noble
Lord mentioned are extremely valid, are registered by this
Government and are ones that this Government will look at and
take forward in due course.
(Lab)
My Lords, I welcome my former colleague to the Dispatch Box
again, though in a different Chamber. First, I congratulate the
Government on their response to those who used violence and
hatred during the period of which we are speaking. They were
decisive and fair and observed the separation between politics
and operational capabilities. I think it reassured a great many
people in this country that the Government acted so quickly and
so decisively.
Secondly, I will say how much I welcomed the Minister's comments
about addressing—to use an old cliché—not only crime but the
causes of crime. There is no doubt in my mind that there are deep
underlying causes to what we saw. The Minister mentioned online
social media. I believe they are instrumental but not the
underlying causes. In my view, the underlying causes lie in the
poisoned chalice that the Government have been given of
apparently unlimited immigration, huge reductions in public
services and the language used for the past 10 years describing
immigrants as “dangerous aliens” whether they are legal or
illegal immigrants. Can my noble friend assure me that the Labour
Government will address all three causes over the next few years:
the nature and level of immigration, the language used about it
and the protection of public services? If we do not address those
causes, this sort of thing will happen again.
of Flint (Lab)
Again, I am grateful to my noble friend for his contribution. He
knows as much as anybody in this House, given his previous role
as Home Secretary, about the difficult challenges that we face
here.
To assure him on the Prime Minister's commitment, we want to
review how the policing capability was undertaken. That is not to
interfere with operational policing but, following the Prime
Minister's announcement of the national violent disorder
programme, to try to bring together good practice, look at where
there needs to be resilience and make sure that forces support
each other, which is a natural part of the policing landscape. It
is extremely important to review what happened. As has been
mentioned, we need to look at what happened at Harehills; there
may not have been sufficient policing to deal with it. There is a
whole range of issues and we can learn lessons. It is not for a
Minister to direct chief constables, of the Met or anywhere else,
but it is for a Minister to hold them to account and ensure that
people, as mentioned by both Front Benches, are protected as a
whole.
My noble friend also mentioned the whole question of migration. I
spent a long period over the past 10 years as shadow Immigration
Minister and know that it is a toxic debate at times. In my view,
immigration falls into three or four categories: immigration for
everyone from the centre forward of a football team through to a
professor or somebody else coming to this country because they
are an expert in their field and bringing a contribution to the
growth of our economy, versus people coming on a boat seeking
asylum or people coming here completely illegally. The debate
needs to be put into the context of how we manage that. We need
to detoxify the debate to ensure that we deal with asylum and
speed up asylum claims; deal with people who have come here
illegally, because we must have integrity in the migration
system; and make sure that, in doing that, we do not turn away
people who will help us grow our economy or bring skills and
challenges to our society.
That is all on the agenda. I am still surprised that we are only
seven weeks into this Government. We will look at those issues
and I will report on progress to this House on a regular basis,
as well as being held to account over the next few years.
(CB)
My Lords, I join in condemning the attacks on police officers,
mosques and asylum seekers and the places where people believed
they were. I also support the officers who carried on walking
forward when they were being bricked, despite occasionally not
having the full equipment. We saw, particularly in Southport,
some serious injuries to officers who still kept walking forward.
They did an excellent job.
I ask the Minister to consider two big issues in the review that
he mentioned. First, there was clearly a lack of intelligence at
times about the groups involved— what they were planning and how
many would turn up. Sometimes over the last few years it has
become difficult to use some of the most intrusive surveillance
gathering against political extremists. We understand
why—obviously, political parties should not be targeted in that
way—but, where politics veers into violence, that is a different
matter altogether. It is vital that informants, undercover
officers and all those intrusive things that only Home
Secretaries can authorise are available to use against this type
of people, whether from the left or the right—although at the
moment we are particularly worried about the right and its
ability to organise.
The second area that the review might consider is the number of
officers that can be mobilised together quickly and in large
numbers. It was mentioned that by the time that the riots started
to subside, around 4,000 officers were being deployed. This
sounds like a lot, but when you consider that in Notting Hill
recently—where two murders sadly occurred—7,000 officers were
deployed in about half a square mile, and that the riots of 2011
were only subdued when 16,000 officers were patrolling the
streets of this city, I do wonder whether sufficient officers
were available quickly enough.
Should things recur, I believe the Home Office has a proper,
strategic role to play in this, to ensure that forces are ready
and rapidly able to reinforce. I am certainly aware of forces
waiting hours for reinforcements to arrive when one would hope it
would be minutes.
of Flint (Lab)
Again, I am grateful to the noble Lord for bringing his
significant expertise in this area to the Statement and to the
long-term debate on this issue. First and foremost, I join him in
paying tribute to the brave officers who held that line in the
face of violent attacks that could have caused—and did
cause—considerable harm to injured officers. That is a depleting
factor on police forces in a particular area.
It is important to note that on Saturday 10 August, 6,675
officers were deployed in a single day to hold back criminal
riotous behaviour. Those 6,675 officers put themselves on the
front line, but in doing so they were also not doing other
duties. That is one of the reasons why, immediately after the
riots began, the Prime Minister said he would set up a national
programme to look at deployment of resources, capability and how
this was dealt with. I hope the noble Lord will welcome this.
The extremely important point was made that intelligence-led
policing is absolutely vital to ensure that we get ahead of what
is happening. That means using important—but difficult and
challenging—tactics which involve looking at social media posts,
tracking and looking at the capability of potential offenders and
advising forces on how to deal with them in potential hotspots. I
have no problem whatever in using the tools available to protect
the public, because nobody forces anybody to organise a riot or
to attack buildings and mosques and nobody says “Let's burn this
down” unless they are—or are potentially—going to commit criminal
offences.
If we can nip those in the bud through the better organisation of
policing or by the recognition of techniques that will bring
convictions through the independent forces of the law, the
police, the CPS and the courts, good on that, because that will
protect the type of people that the noble Baroness from the
Liberal Front Bench and the noble Lord, Lord Sharpe, indicated
need protecting.
(Con)
My Lords, I was born in Harehills in Leeds, as I believe was the
noble Baroness, Lady Blake of Leeds. It is a terribly deprived
community and I still live about three miles from there. Will the
Minister, whom I welcome to his post, join me in condemning those
who immediately sought to exploit the appalling violence that
took place in Harehills for their own political ends, using
language that was designed only to stoke division and tension
within that community, and did so from the luxury of Milwaukee? I
refer, of course, to the leader of Reform UK.
of Flint (Lab)
I am grateful for the noble Lord's welcome to me coming to this
position. The Member for Clacton, if that was the Member he was
referring to, is responsible for his own comments, in his own way
and in his own time. He should be held to account by people in
Clacton and by the wider community for any comments he makes. It
is not for me to comment on that; it is for him to make those
comments. What I will say is that, whenever things happen—as they
do—we need to look at, and take action on, that criminal
behaviour and close it down. Sometimes, it happens with summer
activity, with people having too much to drink over long nights;
sometimes, it is fuelled by right-wing violence and, other times,
it is fuelled by other activity. If, underneath that, there are
long-term trends of Islamophobia, anti-Semitism, right-wing
ideology or, indeed, extreme left-wing ideology, we need to look,
in a cold, calm way, at what has caused that, how we deal with
it, how—following the noble Lord, Lord Hogan-Howe—we
intelligently police it and, ultimately, how we bring people to
court if they have committed criminal offences. What Ministers
can do is put the architecture together for that. The Prime
Minister has been trying to look at the lessons learned from the
initial response, which surprised many of us in that week after
Southport, to see how we can improve that response and listen to
what the police say about their own lessons. If that involves
action by the Home Office in support of policing, that is what we
will do.
Baroness of Buckley (Non-Afl)
My Lords, I know that the Government are very conscious of the
UK's international reputation. I want to know whether there is
any ministerial concern about the many free speech and civil
liberties organisations around the world expressing shock about
the degree of state- backed censorship being greenlighted in the
wake of the riots. There is a worry that there is too easy a
slippage and conflation between physical violence, which we can
all condemn, and speech offences. The majority of people have not
been incarcerated for incitement. They may have put out bigoted
memes that we can deplore; none the less, people in the UK are
being imprisoned not for what they do but for what they say. As
there seem to be threats of more censorship, I want the Minister
to reassure me that we will not end up in a situation where these
riots, which were tragic enough, will chill legitimate debate and
lead to a censorious, authoritarian atmosphere where people are
frightened to speak freely.
of Flint (Lab)
There is freedom of speech, and I made it very clear in the wake
of the riots that people are entitled to criticise the UK
Government's asylum policy, immigration policy or any aspect of
UK government policy. What they are not entitled to do is to
incite racial hatred, to incite criminal activity, to incite
attacks on mosques or to incite burnings or other criminal,
riotous behaviour. That is the threshold. The threshold is not me
saying, “I do not like what they have said”—there are lots of
things that I do not like that people have said; the threshold is
determined by criminal law, is examined by the police and is
referred to the CPS. The CPS examines whether there is a criminal
charge to account for, which is then either made through a guilty
plea and a sentence, which happened with the majority of people
who now face time in prison, or put in front of a court for a
jury of 12 peers to determine whether an offence has been
committed. There is no moratorium on criticism of political
policy in the United Kingdom. There is free speech in this United
Kingdom, but free speech also has responsibilities, and one
responsibility is not to incite people to burn down their
neighbour's property.
(Lab)
My Lords, my noble friend the Minister will be aware of the
analysis by the European Consortium for Political Research, which
was published only two weeks ago and substantially reinforces the
question that my noble friend Lord Reid asked. The correlation
between the location of violence and the incidence of child
poverty in any area was significantly greater than the
correlation between rioting and the presence of any of the other,
many factors that people have attributed the violence to. Does my
noble friend agree that any response to the riots must go beyond
punishment and look to restore the essentials of economic equity,
viable public services and greater equality, the absence of which
appears to make violent disorder significantly more likely?
of Flint (Lab)
My noble friend makes extremely valid points about the
examination of the causes. As I have said to this noble House,
the Home Office, via the Deputy Prime Minister and her
department, wishes to look at some of the wider issues of social
deprivation that may or may not have contributed to these riots.
However—if I can again draw both Front Benches opposite back
in—we still have to focus on the points that were made in this
debate: irrespective of social conditions in a particular area,
scapegoating and attacking citizens or individuals who have in
many cases no relationship to those causes is simply not
acceptable, so they have to face the law. However, those are
certainly important issues that need to be examined as part of
the long-term mix on preventing further activity such as happened
over this summer.
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