A series of riots took place between 6 and 11 August 2011 in cities and towns across England, which sawlooting andarson, as well as mass deployment of police and the deaths of five people.[10]
From 8 to 11 August, other towns and cities in England (includingBirmingham,Bristol,Coventry,Derby,Leicester,Liverpool,Manchester andNottingham) faced what was described by the media as "copycat violence", with social media playing a role. By 10 August, more than 3,000 arrests had been made across England, with at least 1,984 people facing criminal charges for various offences related to the riots.[9][12][13] Initially, courts sat for extended hours. A total of 3,443 crimes across London were linked to the disorder.[14] Along with the five deaths, at least 16 others were injured[update] as a direct result of related violent acts. An estimated £200 million worth of property damage was incurred, and local economic activity – which in many cases was already struggling due to theGreat Recession – was significantly compromised.
Significant debate was generated among political, social, and academic figures about the causes and context of the riots. Attributions for the rioters' behaviour included social factors such as racial tension, class tension, economic decline and its consequent unemployment.[6][13][15][16]
Following the shooting, the media widely reported that a bullet was found embedded in a police radio, implying that Duggan fired on the police.[18] Friends and relatives of Duggan said that he was unarmed. The police later revealed that initialballistics tests on the bullet recovered from the police radio indicate that it was a "very distinct" police issuehollow-point bullet.[18][22] The IPCC later stated that a loadedBruni BBMblank-firing pistol, converted to fire live ammunition, was recovered from the scene.[23][24] It was wrapped in a sock, and there was no evidence that it had been fired.[25]
On 13 August, the IPCC stated that Duggan did not open fire: "It seems possible that we may have verbally led journalists to [wrongly] believe that shots were exchanged." The bullet that had lodged in an officer's radio is believed to have been anoverpenetration, having passed through Duggan's body.[26]
At lunchtime on 6 August, a meeting was called by police between local community leaders, councillors and members of police advisory groups. In this meeting, police were warned several times that there could possibly be another riot similar to theBroadwater Farm riot of 1985 if local concerns regarding the death were not addressed.[27][28]
On 8 January 2014, a coroner’s jury concluded that Duggan was lawfully killed. The verdict of lawful killing was upheld by the Court of Appeal in 2017.[29]
On 6 August, a protest was held, initially peacefully, beginning atBroadwater Farm and finishing at Tottenham police station.[30] The protest was organised by friends and relatives of Duggan to "demand justice" for the family.[16][31][32] The group of some 300 people demanded that a senior local police officer come out to speak to them. When Chief Inspector Ade Adelekan arrived, he was met with boos and cries of "murderer", "Uncle Tom" and "coconut".[33] The crowd stayed in front of the police station hours longer than they originally planned because they were not satisfied with the seniority of the officers available at the time. Rumours that a 16-year-old girl had sustained injuries after attacking police with a champagne bottle began circulating on social media. To date, the girl remains unidentified and the report unconfirmed. However, the rumour alone was sufficient to further fuel tensions in the area.[15][34][35]
A firefighter douses a blaze in Tottenham during the aftermath of the initial riot.
The peaceful march on the morning of Saturday 6 August in Tottenham was followed by rioting and looting, first in Tottenham and later in Tottenham Hale Retail Park.[36] Rioting occurred shortly after about 120 people marched from the Broadwater Farm estate to Tottenham Police Station via the High Road.[37]
The spread of news and rumours about the previous evening's disturbances in Tottenham sparked riots during the night of Sunday 7 August in the London districts of Brixton, Enfield, Islington and Wood Green and in Oxford Circus in the centre of London.[36]
Rioters facing police on the evening of Saturday 6 August 2011
In the evening of Monday 8 August, many areas of London were affected by widespread looting, arson and violence. There were significant outbreaks in parts of Battersea, Brixton, Bromley, Camden, Croydon, Ealing, East Ham, Hackney, Harrow, Lewisham, Peckham, Stratford, Tower Hamlets, Waltham Forest, Wandsworth, Woolwich, and Wood Green. A man was found shot in Croydon and died later in hospital. Another man who had been assaulted in Ealing died in hospital on Thursday 11 August.[38]
Similar riots were reported outside London – most notably in Birmingham, Manchester, Nottingham, Wolverhampton, Liverpool and Bristol.[36][39] There were reports of unrest on a smaller scale in other parts of the country, including Gillingham and Derby.[40]
Rioters attempt to loot a cycle shop in Chalk Farm, Camden.
Following a greatly increased police presence, London was quiet on Tuesday 9 August, but rioting continued in Nottingham and Birmingham (where, according to the police account, 11 shots were fired at police, including at a police helicopter, andpetrol bombs thrown at officers[41]) and spread to Leicester, parts of theWest Midlands and to parts ofGreater Manchester andMerseyside in the north-west of England.[36] On 10 August, London remained quiet while hundreds of arrests were being made by the police.
Three men were killed in Birmingham in a hit-and-run incident related to the disturbances. Looting and violence continued in two locations around Manchester and Liverpool.[36]
Bank workers in Walthamstow observe the destruction which was caused in the early hours of the morning.
The existence of social media made the 2011 riots unparalleled to any before them in terms of the speed at which issues managed to spread and at which rioters were able to mobilise and organise. Many used sites such as Facebook and Twitter to promote and advertise sites for looting and disorder. As a result, many online organisers were handed severe sentences for their roles in the violence.[42]
Throughout the rioting, many of the rioters failed to cover their faces. Some posed for pictures with stolen goods, posting them on social-networking sites.[43]
Although London employsCCTV cameras to monitor crime and large events, reports indicate that citizen footage contributed more to capturing looters in action than the police force.[44] Beyond the CCTV, looters were filmed and photographed with their faces visible. Police forces and investigators used websites likeFlickr to find galleries of the looters to help solve and prevent cases of vandalism and further damage. Facebook pages were also created to identify looters.[45]
Several interactive maps were implemented in theGoogle Maps website that showed satellite views of what was happening in the streets during the rioting. James Cridland, the managing director of the free media resources, created a Google Map that tracked verified locations of rioting.Channel 4 News had similar maps that progressively tracked the damage in the streets as well.[46] The Guardian created both a map and a dataset of events of the riots[47][48] News channels also were able to utilise this public service to capture live footage on the streets and inform citizens of dangerous or crowded areas.
There were reports that theBlackBerry Messenger (BBM) service was used by looters to organise their activities, and that inflammatory and inaccurate accounts of Mark Duggan's killing on social media sites may have incited disturbances.[49][50][51] One of the many messages shared between users was the following:
"Everyone in edmonton enfield wood green everywhere in north link up atenfield town station at 4 o clock sharp!!!!," it began. "Start leaving ur yards n linking up with your niggas. Fuck da feds, bring your ballys and your bags trollys, cars vans, hammers the lot!!"[52]
A shop in Tottenham Hale Retail park after the looting
Increased connectivity among individuals led to a greater ability to organise and execute massive gatherings.[54] This not only occurred during the riots in England, but with other collective gatherings such as theArab Spring and theEgyptian revolution of 2011.[55]
Much like BBM, activity on social media shaped the London riots. During the Tottenham riots of 1985, citizens had to head into a public place to voice their message.[56] Yet, with access to Twitter as a communication medium, social media was used to rapidly spread messages of the riots.[56]
OnRadio 4, a police official said social media was used to "organize [...] greed and criminality."[57]The Daily Telegraph described Twitter as being an outlet for promoting gang violence.[57] Evidence shows that Twitter is powerful because tweets of individuals were inspired by news content.[58] However, an article inTime magazine suggested that BlackBerry Messenger was more to blame.[56]
During the riots, Twitter accounted for four out of every 170 UK Internet visits on Monday 8 August. In addition, citizens also used Twitter to band together, after the destruction with hashtags including "#riotcleanup".[58] Evidence shows that people were tweeting and re-tweeting news related to the riots, not original content.[58]
Other than BlackBerry Messenger and social networking sites, mobile phone operatorsT-Mobile andOrange prioritised police requests for information about the phones that were used to plan the riots that hit British cities. Under theRegulation of Investigatory Powers Act, phone companies were required to hand over data about the locations calls were made from, the owners of phones, and lists of calls made to and from a particular handset.[53]
A burnt-out building being doused with water. Built by the London Co-operative Society in 1930 as "Union Point",[59] the building included aCarpetright on the ground floor and many flats on the upper storeys.
Trevor Ellis, a 26-year-old man fromBrixton Hill was shot dead inCroydon,South London, on 8 August.[60][61][62] His family denied reports that Ellis, who had come from the Brixton area to Croydon with a group of friends, had been involved in looting.[63][64] 13 people were arrested in connection with the murder. All were later bailed and then released without action. On 16 December, the eve of Ellis's birthday, detectives opened up a fresh appeal into the murder, asking for witnesses to come forward.[65]
On 10 August, inWinson Green, Birmingham, three men – Haroon Jahan, 21, and brothers Shahzad Ali, 30, and Abdul Musavir, 31 – were killed in ahit-and-run incident while attempting to protect their neighbourhood from rioters and looters.[66][67][68] On 19 April 2012, eight men, each indicted on three counts of murder, were tried atBirmingham Crown Court before Mr Justice Flaux; the jury acquitted all of the defendants on all charges.[69]
Floral tributes at the site of the fatal assault of Richard Mannington Bowes. The flowers at the top spell out the word "why".
A 68-year-old man, Richard Mannington Bowes, died on 11 August after he was attacked while attempting to stamp out a litter-bin fire inEaling on the evening of 8 August.[70]
The attacker inflicted severe head injuries which resulted in a coma. The assault was caught onCCTV and reportedly filmed on mobile phones by associates of the alleged assailant.[71] The attack on Bowes was witnessed by several police officers, but due to the number of rioters they were unable to come to his aid until riot squad officers pushed back the rioters while being attacked to reach Bowes. A line of officers then held back the rioters as paramedics arrived. Bowes' wallet and phone had been stolen, and police faced difficulty in identifying him. He died of his injuries atSt Mary's Hospital on 11 August 2011 after being removed from life support.[72]
Many tributes were paid to Bowes, including Ealing Council, who flew theUnion Flag at half-mast over its town hall and announced the launch of a relief fund in his name,[73] andMayor of LondonBoris Johnson, who described him as a hero.[74]
16-year-old Darrell Desuze[75] ofHounslow was charged with the murder of Bowes, violent disorder and four burglaries.[76][77] He appeared atCroydonMagistrates' Court on 16 August 2011, where he was remanded in custody until his appearance at theCentral Criminal Court on 18 August 2011.[76] His 31-year-old mother, Lavinia Desuze,[78] was charged with perverting the course of justice.[76] On 12 March 2012 at theInner London Crown Court, Darrel Desuze pleaded guilty to manslaughter, after previously pleading guilty to burglary and violent disorder.[79] The following day the Crown withdrew the murder charge against him.[citation needed] After a trial at the Inner London Crown Court beforeMr Justice Saunders and a jury, Lavinia Desuze was convicted of perverting the course of justice after she destroyed the clothing her son wore on the day of Bowes' death.[80] On 17 April 2012, Mr Justice Saunders sentenced Darrell Desuze to detention for a term of eight years, and Lavinia Desuze to imprisonment for eighteen months.[81]
A burnt-out and vandalised car in Hackney with misspelt graffiti. Arsonists set fire to 12 cars during the riots.
In London, between Monday afternoon and the early hours of Tuesday, 14 people were injured by rioters.These included a 75-year-old woman who suffered a broken hip inHackney.[3]
InBarking,East London, 20-year-oldMalaysian student Ashraf Haziq was beaten and then robbed twice by looters emptying his rucksack. Footage of the second mugging, which appears to show the second set of muggers pretend to help him then proceed to ransack his rucksack, was uploaded onto YouTube. He suffered a broken jaw, requiring surgery.[4][82] On 2 March 2012, two men, John Kafunda ofIlford and Reece Donovan ofRomford, were found guilty of the robbery of Rossli and also violent disorder by a jury atWood Green Crown Court.[83] The convictions were quashed by the Court of Appeal on 29 November 2012.[84]
InChingford,East London, three police officers were hit by a car used as a getaway vehicle by a group who had looted the Aristocrat store on Chingford Mount Road. Two of the officers were seriously injured and taken to hospital.[85]
Ten firefighters were injured as theLondon Fire Brigade dealt with over 100 serious fires caused by the disturbances. The LFB also reported that eight of itsfire appliances had their windscreens smashed and that twofire cars were attacked.[87]
Vehicles, homes and shops were attacked and set alight. At least 100 families are thought to have been made homeless by arson and looting.[88] Shopkeepers estimated the damages in their Tottenham Hale and Tottenham branches at several million pounds.[89] The riots caused the irretrievable loss of heritage architecture.[90] It was estimated that retailers lost at least 30,000 trading hours.[91]
Cash Converters shop in Salford
The Association of British Insurers said that they expected the industry to pay out in excess of £200 million.[92] Estimated losses in London were indicated to be in the region of £100m.[93]
On 8 August 2011, aSony DADC warehouse inEnfield atEnfield Lock, which also acted as the primary distribution centre forindependent music distributorPIAS Entertainment Group, was destroyed by fire.[94][95] Initially, because millions of items of stock were lost, including most of PIAS's inventory, it was thought that long-term damage to the British independent music industry might result.[94][96][97][98] On 18 August 2011, PIAS confirmed that their operations were back to normal.[99] On 11 August 2011, London police reported that they had arrested three teenagers in connection with the warehouse fire.[100]
TheFinancial Times reported that an analysis showed that 48,000 local businesses – shops, restaurants, pubs and clubs – had suffered financial losses as a result of the looting and rioting in English streets.[101]
According to BBC News, a total of 2,584 businesses were attacked and looted, 231 homes were targeted by burglars and vandals, 664 people were robbed or injured.[9]
A 15-year-old was accused in August 2011 of raping a 13-year-old girl while the riots were taking place. The prosecution described the incident as being geographically "close" to the riots.[102]
A 20-year-old student, Ashraf Haziq, was attacked while cycling along Queen's Road inBarking. The prosecution said that the victim was punched in the face by one of a group of 100 youths. His bike,PlayStation Portable and mobile phone were stolen.[102] In September 2011, an accusation of robbery was made against 24-year-old Reece Donovan. The same month, a 17-year-old, Beau Isagba, was accused and in February 2012 convicted of breaking the victim's jaw with an unprovoked punch.[103][104] In February 2012, John Kafunda and Reece Donovan were convicted of stealing from Rossli, after being identified on camera pretending to help him.[105]Sony offered to replace hisPSP after a video of the attack attracted attention, andNamco Bandai sent him a package of games.[106][107]
Four London buses were set on fire during the riots (two of which were completely destroyed, one suffered serious damage but was subsequently repaired, and one suffered less serious damage and was also repaired) and other buses suffered broken windows and other minor damage.
On 9 August, Croydon'sTramlink was partly shut down due to damage inflicted along its route.[108]Transport for London,London Overground andLondon Underground shut Barking, Peckham Rye and Harrow-on-the-Hill and Hackney Central stations.The train operating companySouthern later announced that trains were not stopping at many stations in south London.[108]National Express Coaches stopped serving Wolverhampton and suburban stops in the Birmingham area (but notBirmingham Coach Station itself) and Manchester (but not Manchester Airport).[109]
Following the initial disorder in Tottenham, theconstituencyLabour MPDavid Lammy appealed for calm, saying that "true justice can only follow a thorough investigation of the facts"[120] and that Tottenham had had its "heart ripped out" by the riots.[121] He said that rioters were not representative of the local community as a whole[122] and insisted that theIndependent Police Complaints Commission must fully establish the circumstances of Mark Duggan's death.[123] Lammy voiced concerns that theEDL andBNP were playing on the London riots and people's fears to advance their political motives.[124]
Streatham's Labour MPChuka Umunna condemned the violence in Brixton and Tottenham.[125][126][127] Umunna called for theBlackBerry Messenger service, used by some of the rioters to co-ordinate their activities, to be "temporarily disabled" between 6pm and 6amBST.[128]
The use of BlackBerry Messenger to encourage violent disorder led to arrests – aColchester man was detained under theSerious Crime Act.[129]
Location of incidents on 6 and 7 August: Red = 6 August, Yellow = 7 August
John Randall, the Conservative MP for Uxbridge and South Ruislip said: "It's a small minority of people causing the trouble. The events in Ealing brought it home, it's just down the Uxbridge Road."[130]Hackney North and Stoke Newington MPDiane Abbott called for the introduction of acurfew.
Newark MPColonelPatrick Mercer called for the deployment ofwater cannon.[131] In December 2010Theresa May, the Home Secretary, had said that the deployment of water cannon by police forces on the British mainland was an operational decision which had been "resisted until now by senior police officers".[132] On 9 August 2011, May rejected their use and said: "The way we police in Britain is not through use of water cannon. The way we police in Britain is through consent of communities."Ken Livingstone, the former London mayor, said "The issue of water cannon would be very useful given the level of arson we are seeing here." Scotland Yard said officers did not have any water cannon and if their use was approved they would have to be brought over fromNorthern Ireland.[133]
May said: "I condemn utterly the violence in Tottenham... Such disregard for public safety and property will not be tolerated, and the Metropolitan Police have my full support in restoring order."[134] She returned to the UK from her summer holiday early to meet senior police officials on 8 August.
A spokesman for thePrime Minister's office added: "The rioting in Tottenham last night was utterly unacceptable. There is no justification for the aggression the police and the public faced, or for the damage to property."[134]
The deputy prime ministerNick Clegg said that the riots were "completely unacceptable" and described the violence as "needless and opportunistic".[135][136]
London's mayor,Boris Johnson, who cut short his summer holiday in Canada to return to the UK on 9 August,[137] said: "I'm appalled at the scenes of violence and destruction in Tottenham"[122] whilst his deputyKit Malthouse told aSky News reporter that "criminal elements were to blame for the trouble".[122]
Prime MinisterDavid Cameron returned from his Italian summer holiday early and he chaired several COBRA emergency meetings with police officials. Cameron condemned the "terrible scenes of people looting, vandalising, thieving, robbing" and told rioters "You will feel the full force of the law. And if you are old enough to commit these crimes, you are old enough to face the punishment."[138]
In a strongly worded criticism of what he deems to be a misplaced "hyper-sensitivity about race", dating back to theMacpherson Report of 1999,Civitas director David Green attributed the reluctance by police to use force to a fear of disciplinary action. He said that "officers in charge of [handling] a riot think it safer to wait for orders from the top".[140]
In a public speech on 15 August, David Cameron blamed a "broken society" in "moral collapse"[141] – broad societal change themes common to his party's election campaign themeBroken Britain.
The city councils of Manchester and Salford were reported to be investigating their powers for ways of evicting tenants if they, or their children, have been involved in violence or looting in their cities.[142] TheLondon Borough of Greenwich also stated on its website: "We shall seek the eviction of anyone living in council property if they are found to have been engaged in criminal acts."[143]
Several countries issued warnings advising caution to travellers visiting the United Kingdom during the riots.[144]
Khaled Kaim, the Deputy Foreign Minister of theGaddafi government in Libya, called on Cameron to resign over the riots, stating that "Cameron has lost all legitimacy and must go", he also called for an international intervention in the UK against Cameron and accused Cameron of using Irish and Scottish mercenaries against rioters, mocking Cameron's comments on Gaddafi during theFirst Libyan Civil War that year.[145]
In 2012, the Syrian Ambassador to the UN, Bashar Jaafari compared the situation and government response of the Syrian uprising to that of the 2011 England riots.[146]
The Daily Telegraph's editorial said: "What we have experienced in London and elsewhere since Saturday night is a wholly new phenomenon: violent disorder whose sole intent is criminal... In such circumstances, there can be only one response if the law-abiding majority is to be protected: the thugs must be taught to respect the law of the land the hard way."[151]
The Telegraph also reported: "Tottenham riots: police let gangs run riot and loot: Britain's biggest police force is facing criticism after it let looters run riot in north London for almost 12 hours..."[152]
The Guardian called on the public to back the police: "... Britain's 2011 riots have become a defining contest between disorder and order. In that contest, important caveats notwithstanding, there is only one right side to be on. The attacks, the destruction, the criminality and the reign of fear must be stopped. The rule of law in the cities of Britain must not only be defended against delinquent destruction. It must also be enforced."[153]
During the height of the riots,The Guardian was accused of anti-Semitic incitement by the media monitoring organisation, Comment Is Free Watch (CiFW), after Guardian journalist Paul Lewis singled outHasidic Jewish residents who were not involved in the rioting.[154] The content of his report stated, "The make-up of the rioters was racially mixed. Most were men or boys, some apparently as young as 10....But families and other local residents, including some from Tottenham's Hasidic Jewish community, also gathered to watch and jeer at police." CIFW responded by condemning the newspaper saying, "A 1,800 Guardian report doesn't mention the race, ethnicity, or religion of the rioters, somehow found it pertinent to note that some of those who gathered to jeer police were, allegedly, Hasidic Jews." As a result of the negative publicity,The Guardian revised the story.[15][155]
In its 9 August leading article,The Independent said the police's handling ofMark Duggan's death "looks to have been poor", and that there is "context of mistrust of the police here". The paper added that "it is spurious to draw a connection between that disaffection [by the inner-city youth] and specific outbreaks of violence of the sort we have seen in recent days."[156]
PsychiatristTheodore Dalrymple wrote an opinion piece for theNew York Daily News, in which he blamed the "sense of entitlement" that he sees as being common among Britain's youth as a cause for the riots, and said that British youth are today among "the most unpleasant and violent in the world" as a result.[157]
Some journalists made comparisons between these riots and the2005 riots in France.[158][159] In both cases, the unrest started with the death of a young person during a confrontation with the police.[158] In fact, a television report byFrance 2, broadcast in November 2005, showed a visit by a delegation fromÉvry (just outside Paris) toTottenham, with the report calling "Tottenham part of London "regularly shaken by riots" in earlier decades, where "a lot of money was invested" and "the promotion of ethnic minorities", had been made a priority".[158]
'Peace wall' in theManchester Arndale CentreA number of campaigns were launched, aiming to foster greater civic pride in their cities. Pictured is theCIS Tower, Manchester.
Many people called for the government to urge the police to deploy anti-riot methods often used outside Great Britain, such aswater cannon andbaton rounds (which have been used in Northern Ireland), the use of which has long been resisted by senior police commanders and politicians.[161][162][163]
Pauline Pearce, a 45-year-old woman from Hackney, was filmed close to the rioting, furiously chastising looters over their criminal behaviour.[164][165][166] She was seen holding a walking-stick and gesturing.[166] The resultingHeroine of Hackney video subsequently wentviral.Its rapid spread was helped bytweeting from famous people such as newspaper editorPiers Morgan.[165] Pearce was hailed as a heroine for helping to ease tensions in Hackney; her influence was acknowledged by politicians[167][168] and the national press.[169][170][171] MP forHackney South and Shoreditch,Meg Hillier, invited Pearce to theHouses of Parliament.[172] Speaking toThe Australian newspaper, Pearce described the looting and vandalism as being "heart-breaking" and also contrasted people'srelative poverty with expenditure for theOlympic Games.[173] Pearce was subsequently featured inThe Spectator, dismissingDavid Starkey's view thathip-hop culture was partly to blame for the riots.[174] In September 2011, she was awarded the Team London Award at the annual Peace Awards byBoris Johnson.[175]
Still image fromPauline Pearce'sHeroine of Hackney speech
OnAmazon, sales ofbaseball bats andtruncheons increased significantly overnight.[176][177] Deputy Assistant Commissioner Stephen Kavanagh stated: "We are already seeing a community kickback. People are angry. This is their neighbourhoods that are at stake."[177] Political commentator and foreign affairs analystNile Gardiner suggested that the British Government should prompt a debate which will allow British business owners theright to keep and bear arms.[178]
Three men killed in a hit-and-run incident in Birmingham, Haroon Jahan, Shazad Ali, and Abdul Musavir Tariq, were described as heroes for dying while attempting to defend their neighbourhood.[179][180] Tariq Jahan, the father of 21-year-old victim Haroon, gave a speech appealing for calm, social unity and an end to the violence, hours after his son's death. Jahan was hailed as a hero and a patriot for helping to ease tensions in Birmingham; his influence was acknowledged by politicians and the national press, receiving an award at the 2011Pride of Britain Awards.[181][182] Conservative MEPDaniel Hannan said of him: "Uncomplaining, in control of his emotions, Tariq Jahan reminds us of what it means to be British."[183] TheFinancial Times described Jahan as eloquent and inspiring, and said "His selfless intervention contrasted with the rapacious self-interest of the looters, and was a timely reminder of the obligations of community."[184]
Tens of thousands of users of social networking sites coordinated clean-up operations of their local shopping areas and streets. Some of these groups began being referred to as 'riot wombles', taking up brooms and other tools to clear streets of debris and wreckage,[185] a term that was later used by Prime MinisterDavid Cameron during a speech on the aftermath of the riots on 15 August 2011.[186] Social media sites Twitter and Facebook were also used for reporting information on the riots and to co-ordinate a voluntary citizens' operation to clear up riot-hit areas.[187][188][189] InClapham Junction, dozens of volunteers carrying brooms turned out to assist with clean-up efforts.[190][191] On Facebook, over 900,000 people joined a group entitled "Supporting the Met Police against the London rioters".[43]
Manchester City Councillor Pat Karney, the city centre spokesperson forManchester City Council, said: "The true Mancunian civic spirit has been shown in Manchester today." Staff from city centre businesses and Manchester Metropolitan University joined the volunteers, as food outlets gave out free drinks and snacks.[192] There were several fundraising initiatives to help independent business owners re-build their businesses and livelihoods.[193][194]
A petition was submitted to the UK government proposing that any convicted rioters have their benefit payments cut. This petition was signed by over 200,000 people.[195]
A petition on the UK government website demanding convicted rioters to be banished to theOuter Hebrides of Scotland was set up in the summer of 2011. The reaction caused a public outcry in Scotland and eventually Westminster offered an apology toWestern Isles MPAngus Brendan MacNeil.[196]
By 20:00 on 7 August, the major rioting had spread toWood Green, but some riot police were on hand.[15] Again, the police did not intervene to stop the looting.[15] The mostlyTurkish andKurdish shop owners along Wood Green,Turnpike Lane andGreen Lanes,Harringay, were said to have formed local "protection units" around their shops.[197]
Sangat TV andSikh Channel urged their viewers to protectSikh temples after a report that one was attacked in Birmingham.[205] On the night of 9–10 August 2011, following violence, arson and rioting in London, members of the Sikh community in Southall volunteered to stand guard at various cityGurdwaras, with as many as 200 to 300 Sikhs from different age groups gathered in various Gurudwaras across Southall to safeguard their places of worship from rioters, some armed with swords and hockey sticks.[206][207] The Sikhs drew praise from Prime Minister David Cameron for this action.[208]
On 10 August inEltham, police clashed with a bottle-throwing crowd of about 200 vigilantes, including manyEnglish Defence League members.[209] It was reported that 50 EDL members joined forces with locals to patrol the streets.[210] That same day, a senior police officer said that some vigilante groups were hampering police operations in London.[211]
The ethnic makeup of the rioters varied in different cities: 76% of those arrested in Manchester were white, while 29% were white and 39% black in London, and theWest Midlands was the only area where more than 6% were Asian.[212][213]
Research conducted by theUniversity of Nottingham suggested that race relations in Britain deteriorated in the period following the riots and that prejudice towards ethnic minorities increased.[214] After the hit-and-run incident in Birmingham, in which three Asian men were killed by a black driver, racial tensions between blacks and Asians in Birmingham increased; hostilities were defused by the public appeals for an end to violence by Tariq Jahan, father of one of the victims.[215]
The effects ofBlack culture were discussed by historianDavid Starkey in the edition of the BBC'sNewsnight TV programme of 12 August. Starkey singled out the influence of blackgangster and rap culture on youths of all races, contrasting contemporaryyouth patois with the speech patterns of black Tottenham MPDavid Lammy, who, Starkey asserted, "sounded white". The authorDreda Say Mitchell countered his argument by saying that there is no one single "black culture".[216]
Some commentators remarked on the apparently high proportion of black people involved in the riots and took the view that there was a disproportionately high number of rioters who were black, compared to the overall demographics of the United Kingdom.[217] As the Ministry of Justice has admitted "the group of people brought before the courts is only a subset of all people who took part in the public disorder". In February 2012 a report was published by theMinistry of Justice providing demographic statistics of the people charged over participation the riots up to 1 February 2012 which revealed that 41% of those brought before the courts identified themselves as being from the White group, 39% from the black ethnic group, 12% from the Mixed ethnic group, 6% the Asian ethnic group, and 2% the Other ethnic group.[218] These figures were disproportionate to theaverage UK population;[219][220] however the figures revealed varying demographics in different areas when compared to local populations. For example, inHaringey, the figures revealed that 55% of defendants in court over riot-related charges were black, compared to a 17% Black population; inSalford, 94% of rioters in court were white, compared to an 88% white population, and 6% of rioters were black, compared to a 2% black population.[221] Additionally, looters from 44 foreign countries were jailed, with Jamaicans representing the largest group.[222]
The Ministry of Justice report also noted that rioters brought before the courts were disproportionately male (89%) and young (53% were aged 20 or under, with the number of "juveniles" ranging from 26% in London to 39% inMerseyside, and very few listed as over 40).[223]
The Metropolitan Police launched Operation Withern, an investigation into the events leading up to and during the riots.[224][225] The operation was initially led byDetective SuperintendentJohn Sweeney of the Metropolitan Police, with detectives from theHomicide and Serious Crime Command, specialist investigators from the Public Order Branch, and police support staff. Detective Superintendent Robin Bhairam, took over the post event investigation, where officers were drawn from all over the MPS, from different business groups, and placed into 10 Investigation Hubs across London.[226][227] The Deputy Assistant Commissioner of the Metropolitan Police, Steve Kavanagh, stated that the number of officers deployed tripled between 6 and 7 August.[228]
The BBC reported that West Midlands riot police officers were issued withplastic bullets to use against looters, but that none were fired.[229] Metropolitan Police deputy assistant commissioner Stephen Kavanagh confirmed that police in London were considering using baton rounds against rioters, not previously used by mainland police in public order operations (though they were first approved for use in England and Wales in 2001).[230]
TheMetropolitan Police assigned 450 detectives to hunt for rioters and looters.[231] The list of photographed looters was made available on their website.[232] Assistant Chief Constable Garry Shewan ofGreater Manchester Police criticised "unprecedented" criminality. On 10 August, he warned: "Hundreds and hundreds of people, we have your image, we have your face, we have your acts of wanton criminality on film."[233]
Research in Motion (RIM), the maker of the BlackBerry, are reported to have contacted the police to offer help in investigating the use of their system for the organisation of riots.[51]
According toThe Independent, the costs to the Metropolitan Police of policing the disorder and disturbances in London were expected to exceed £34 million. This would have been more than their total bill for the policing of all major public disorder events in the year from April 2010 to March 2011.[234]
By 15 August 2011 around 3,100 people had been arrested, of whom over 1,100 had appeared in court.[13] On 25 August the BBC reported that more than 2,000 people had been arrested in connection with the disorder in London.[235]
It was reported in mid-August that some courts were advised by senior justice clerks to deal harshly with offences committed during the disturbances.[238] The advice was said to tell the courts that they could ignore existing sentencing guidelines and hand down heavy sentences.[238] David Cameron defended the courts for handing out tough sentences, while some Liberal Democrat MPs and civil rights groups criticised some sentences being handed down.[239][240][241] Groups of lawyers complained that Crown Prosecutors were opposing bail in more cases than usual.[242] Empirical evidence suggests tougher sentencing reduced riot-related offences, but that non-riot offences increased.[243]
On 1 September 2011 the BBC reported that officialMinistry of Justice figures showed that of the 1,566 people that had appeared before magistrates on charges connected with the disorder, 1,027 had been in London, 190 in Greater Manchester, 132 in the West Midlands, 67 in Merseyside and 64 in Nottingham.[244]
Sentences of four years in aYoung Offender Institution were given to two males who promoted riots via Facebook. The proposed events inNorthwich andWarrington were not attended by any other people.[245][246] These sentences were affirmed on appeal by theCourt of Appeal.Giving the judgment of the court, theLord Chief Justice of England and Wales,Lord Judge, sitting with Sir John Thomas andLord Justice Leveson, stated that there is "an overwhelming obligation on sentencing courts to do what they can to ensure the protection of the public", that "the imposition of severe sentences, intended to provide both punishment and deterrence, must follow" and that "[t]hose who deliberately participate in disturbances of this magnitude, causing injury and damage and fear to even the most stout-hearted of citizens, and who individually commit further crimes during the course of the riots are committing aggravated crimes". The appeals were dismissed.[247]
On 25 April 2012, the Court of Appeal (Lord Judge CJ,Openshaw & IrwinJJ) increased the sentence imposed by the Inner London Crown Court on Adam Ahmadzai from four years detention to seven years detention for offences of violent disorder, robbery, burglary and criminal damage committed during the riots on 8 August 2011, following a reference fromAttorney General,Dominic GrieveQC.[248] The Lord Chief Justice stated that the offences were of the "greatest possible seriousness".[249]
A woman who had not taken part in the riots received five months for receiving a pair of stolen shorts. The sentence was later reduced on appeal.[250] Greater Manchester Police used Twitter to celebrate the five-month sentence; they later apologised and removed the tweet.[251] A teenager was freed when prosecutors found evidence he had been wrongly charged with arson.While in prison, his own flat was burned down.[252][253] The detaining of under-18s withoutcriminal records was criticised byUNICEF in October 2011 for possibly breaching the 1989 UNConvention on the Rights of the Child.[254] By August 2012, 1,292 rioters had been handed custodial sentences totalling 1,800 years at 16.8 months on an average.[255]
The Tricycle Theatre in Kilburn presented a piece of new writing,The Riots byGillian Slovo, which looked into the events over those days in August and the thoughts and opinions of a range of people directly involved and politicians. It transferred to theBernie Grant Arts Centre in Tottenham, about 400 metres from where the Mark Duggan protest took place, on 5 January 2012, and was due to run until 15 January. The piece included community leaders Stafford Scott and Martin Sylvester Brown, police constables on duty that night and a former resident of the Carpet-Right building, the burned remains now providing a reminder of the events.[citation needed] They were combined with the views ofDiane Abbott,Iain Duncan Smith,Michael Gove and Pastor Nims Obunge. It was received well by all critics,[who?] with 4 stars fromThe Guardian.[256]
Australian mod rock bandthe Feldons referenced the riots in their song "London Town" from their 2012 albumGoody Hallett and Other Stories.[citation needed]
This section needs to beupdated. Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information.(June 2021)
The causes of the 2011 England riots both immediate and long-term have been the subject of media and academic debate. Several speculations have emerged as to what the likely contributory factors might be for the riots; fromsocio-economic causes focusing on unemployment and spending cuts, as well as social media,gang culture and criminal opportunism. The House of Commons Home Affairs select committee began examining the police response to the riots in late 2011. The thenleader of the Opposition,Ed Miliband, called for a public inquiry into the wider causes of the riots and has stated that his party would set up such an inquiry if the coalition fails to do so.[257]
A wide-rangingLSE study calledReading the Riots concluded that the major contributory factors were opportunism, perceived social injustice, deprivation, and frustration at the way communities were policed.[258]
AYouGov poll was carried out on 8–9 August 2011 forThe Sun asking what those surveyed believed to be the main cause of the riots.[259] In it, 42% of those polled thought "criminal behaviour" to be the main cause, whilst 26% thought "gang culture" was, 8% thought "government cuts" were, 5% thought "unemployment" was, 5% thought "racial tensions" was and 3% thought "poor policing" was. In aComRes poll for theSunday Mirror andIndependent on Sunday, in which the question was "do you agree or disagree with these statements about the recent riots?", 90% of those polled agreed that the "Police should be allowed use [sic] to water cannon to disperse rioters", 90% agreed that "There is no excuse whatsoever for the violent rioting and looting over the last few days", 61% agreed that "Government ministers failed to return to their desks quickly enough from holidays" and 50% agreed that "The Government's response to the economic crisis (e.g. cuts to services, unemployment, reduced education funding) is helping fuel the rioters".[260]
Researchers who study the causes of political instability suggest that the critical common factor is the density of youths. A nation's extent of political unrest, i.e. its vulnerability to riot, war or regime change, is directly associated with the percentage of 15- to 24-year-olds in its population.They argue that communities with more than 20% of individuals in this age group run the greatest risk of more frequent and more intense political instability. They describe the phenomena as the "youth bulge theory", where the "bulge" refers to the fattening of the population pyramid just before the base of the youngest age groups.[261]
The riots in Tottenham after the death of Mark Duggan were initially blamed on poor relations between the police and the black community.[262][263] ProfessorGus John has argued that the tactical use of frequent "stop and search", particularly of young black men, has caused resentment of the police in the black community.[264]
According toDavid Lammy, the MP for Tottenham, the "cracks that already existed between the police and the community became deep fissures".[123][265]
The Guardian's Reading the Riots Survey concluded: "Although rioters expressed a mix of opinions about the disorder, many of those involved said they felt like they were participating in explicitly anti-police riots. They cited "policing" as the most significant cause of the riots, and anger over the police shooting of Mark Duggan, which triggered initial disturbances in Tottenham, was repeatedly mentioned – even outside London."[266]
Rioters themselves cited exclusion as a reason for their actions. One person, asked by a journalist if rioting was really the best way to accomplish their objectives, responded: "Yes, because if we weren't rioting, you wouldn't be talking to us."[267]
In a House of Commons debate on the riots Home SecretaryTheresa May stated that the riots were symptomatic of a "wider malaise" including worklessness, illiteracy, and drug abuse but also stated that "Everybody, no matter what their background or circumstances, has the freedom to choose between right and wrong".[272] Former Prime MinisterTony Blair, writing inThe Observer, stated that the riots were not caused by a broken society, but due to a group of young, alienated, disaffected youth who are outside the social mainstream and who live in a culture at odds with any canons of proper behaviour; he added that this is found in virtually every developed nation.[273]
An article from theIWCA dubbed the riots as "the lumpen rebellion" and example of aneo-liberal riot.[274]
Max Hastings of theDaily Mail was quoted as blaming young people with an "entitlement culture" and being "bereft of discipline".[275]
A journalist on Al Jazeera suggested a similarity to the disenfranchisement behind theArab Springrevolutionary wave of 2011. Links were made to high youth unemployment and general disenfranchisement.[276] A study by TheFinancial Times published in September 2011 found a strong link between rioting and deprivation.[277]
Christina Odone writing inThe Daily Telegraph links the riots to a lack of male role models and argues that "Like the overwhelming majority of youth offenders behind bars, these gang members have one thing in common: no father at home."[278] This has been linked further with England's having the "worst record in family breakdown in Europe".[279]
The local government budget had been cut in the past year so Haringey Council, which includesTottenham andTottenham Hale, decided to close eight of its 13 youth clubs in 2011, rather than save money through increased efficiency or make cuts in other areas.[287][288]
Scrapping of theEducation Maintenance Allowance, removing of funding for courses where the student already has an equal or lower level qualification and trebling of university tuition fees, combined with high youth unemployment has placed the British youth "between a rock and a hard place" alienating and angering the youth population.[289] Proponents of this argument say that Scottish youth did not riot partly because Scottish students do not have to pay tuition fees.[290]
David Lammy MP has said that Tottenham has the highest unemployment rate in London and the eighth highest in the United Kingdom.[291] The number of people chasing every one job vacancy in Haringey has been put at 23 and 54 in separate reports, and fears had spread of disorder after youth club closures in recent months.[292][293][294] One report about a citizen's inquiry conducted in the aftermath of the violence noted that in Tottenham there were about 10,000 unemployed residents and only 367 job vacancies when the riots broke.[295]
Haringey has the fourth highest level of child poverty in London and 8.8% unemployed.[296]
Other academics have pointed to more prosaic causes of the 2011 riots, citing thecarnivalesque atmospheres created through the usual uses of urban space. For example, researchers from theUniversity of Birmingham noted that 'another sound could be heard above the mêlée, that of laughter. Above the bark of police dogs, and behind the masked and hooded faces of the throng, were smiles, laughter, and shrieks of joy.'[297]
In aNewsnight discussion on 12 August, historianDavid Starkey blamed black gangster culture, saying that it had influenced youths of all races.[216] The BBC received nearly 700 complaints about his statement that the "whites have become black".[298] Cottrell-Boyce, writing in the Youth Justice journal, argued that gangs were constructed as a "suitable enemy" by politicians and the media, obscuring the wider, structural and economic roots of youth violence.[299]
During the riots, on 9 August 2011, UK Home SecretaryTheresa May said: "I think this is about sheer criminality. That is what we have seen on the streets. The violence we've seen, the looting we've seen, the thuggery we've seen – this is sheer criminality, and let's make no bones about it."[300] Paul Hobbs, London correspondent forOne News said that looters are not politically motivated and called the riots "recreational violence".[301] A Manchester rioter said to a BBC correspondent: "Every time I go into town I just think how the shops got smashed up in 2011 by all of us, I just laugh about it every time I go back in now."[302]
The BBC reported that the Chief Constable of West Midlands Police had stated that he thought that the motivation for rioters targeting the city centre was not anger, but greed.[303]
Daily Telegraph columnistPeter Oborne suggested that moral decay is just as bad at the top of society as it is at the bottom, with the rich and powerful generating anger among the British population. He cited theMPs' expenses scandal,bankers' bonuses, andthe phone hacking scandal as setting poor examples.[304] InThe Financial Times cartoonist Ingram Pinn depicted a Union Flag being broken through by a looter in ahoodie carrying a stolen box of Adidas trainers, preceded by two men in suits carrying piles of cash, one saying "MP's Expenses" and another "Banker's Bonus".[305]
Kenneth Clarke, theLord Chancellor andSecretary of State for Justice, writing inThe Guardian, described the riots in part as "an outburst of outrageous behaviour by the criminal classes". He drew attention to the statistic that almost three-quarters of the adults who had been charged with offences related to the disorder already had a criminal record. Clarke characterised this as the legacy of "a broken penal system", one that did not have a good record for preventing reoffending. He said he was proposing radical new measures intended to focus on robust punishment and on delivering reductions in reoffending.[306]
Mainstream media relationship with the communities
A conference held in November 2012 and its subsequent report by Dr Leah Bassel of theUniversity of Leicester, entitledMedia and the Riots – A Call For Action, examined the relationship between mainstream media and communities affected by the riots. It criticised the portrayal of young people in the media coverage, particularly young black people who were disproportionately singled out as being involved. It also criticised the press in spreading misinformation from unreliable sources and in particular disinformation emanating from the police.[307][308][309]
In the articleYouth voices in post-English riots Tottenham: The role of reflexivity in negotiating negative representations, Elster explores the subjective accounts of a group of eighteen 15- to 25-year-olds from Tottenham.[310] This study shows that the media portrayals of the communities associated with the riots were unrecognisable to those actually living in these communities. Its findings also indicate a consensus among the research participants, who were all from the "riot-hit areas", that the UK general public perceive them, and the wider communities in which they live, through media's "riot discourse".[310]
^Bolesworth, Sarah; Neild, Barry; Beaumont, Peter; Lewis, Paul; Laville, Sandra (7 August 2011)."Tottenham in flames as riot follows protest".The Observer. London.Archived from the original on 30 September 2013. Retrieved7 August 2011.
^abJackson, Peter (7 August 2011)."London riots: Tensions behind unrest revealed".BBC News. BBC Television Centre, White City, London.Archived from the original on 9 August 2011. Retrieved8 August 2011.Rioting has again erupted on the streets of Tottenham almost 26 years after the Broadwater Farm riot. But what lies beneath the latest violent outburst in this chequered corner of north London?
^Adams, Richard; Wells, Matt; Jones, Sam; Owen, Paul (9 August 2011)."A young man shot in his car".The Guardian. UK.Archived from the original on 30 September 2013. Retrieved9 August 2011.
^Sam Jones; Paul Lewis; Matthew Taylor; Ben Quinn (8 July 2011)."London riots spread south of Thames".The Guardian. UK.Archived from the original on 18 January 2014. Retrieved8 August 2011.
^Ali, Mahir (13 September 2011)."English Meltdown: Trying to Make Sense of The London Riots".Newsline. Karachi. Archived fromthe original on 15 September 2011. Retrieved13 September 2011.There was plenty of breast-beating back then [1981] too, and Thatcher came up with prescriptions remarkably similar to the ones that Cameron has lately been offering.
^Arnold, Jennette (16 August 2011)."Reactionary "Ideas" are not What London Needs".Huffington Post. New York City.Archived from the original on 12 January 2012. Retrieved5 September 2011.At a recent meeting with Mayor Johnson [...] I wish he had taken up my offer to come with me to Clarence Rd in Hackney, one of the worst affected areas in the Borough, for a street-reclaiming tea party that had been organised by the rector of Hackney, Fr Rob Wickham and the local community. [...] He also would have met Pauline Pearce.
^Manzoor, Sarfraz (3 September 2011)."Fifteen minutes later".The Spectator. Archived fromthe original on 21 April 2013. Retrieved22 September 2011.She is equally so about historian David Starkey's controversial claim that hip-hop culture and in particular a "particular sort of violent, destructive, nihilistic gangster culture" was to blame for the riots. 'What do you I think of that?' she says. 'Well, in the Queen's English: balderdash. Pigswill. What's been going on has no link to hip-hop. Instead of guessing in his suit and tie he should put a pair of jeans on and get out there and walk around with the people.'
^Bartholomew, Emma (21 September 2011)."London Mayor Boris Johnson praises "Hackney heroine" Pauline Pearce".Hackney Gazette. London.Archived from the original on 4 October 2011. Retrieved22 September 2011.Mr Johnson presented [Pauline Pearce] with a Team London Award at the annual Peace Awards ceremony at City Hall, where he also thanked other "unsung heroes" of the recent disorder in the capital.
^Martin Beckford; James Hall; Christopher Williams; David Millward (9 August 2011)."London riots: residents fight back".The Daily Telegraph. UK.Archived from the original on 10 August 2011. Retrieved10 August 2011.
There has been much speculation about the causes and meanings of the riots that swept through English cities in August 2011...
These disturbances began on 6 August following the police shooting of Mark Duggan, a black resident of Tottenham, North London. Over the following days, they spread within London and to other English cities....
There were no riots in English cities such as Sheffield and Newcastle, and the streets of Welsh and Scottish cities remained equally calm.
^Sam Jones; Paul Lewis; Matthew Taylor; Ben Quinn (8 July 2011)."London riots spread south of Thames".The Guardian. London.Archived from the original on 18 January 2014. Retrieved8 August 2011.
^Sanchez, Raf; Holehouse, Matthew; Willis, Amy (9 August 2011)."London and UK riots: live".The Daily Telegraph. UK.Archived from the original on 9 August 2011. Retrieved9 August 2011.
^Johnson, Wesley (30 August 2011)."Riots to cost Met police £34m".The Independent. London.Archived from the original on 21 October 2011. Retrieved3 September 2011.
^Bell, Brian, Laura Jaitman, and Stephen Machin. "Crime deterrence: Evidence from the London 2011 riots." The Economic Journal 124, no. 576 (2014): 480–506.
^Malik, Shiv (9 October 2011)."Unicef criticises Britain for jailing children over riots".The Guardian. London.Archived from the original on 1 October 2013. Retrieved13 October 2011.The UN children's fund said official figures showing that 45% of all under 18s detained on charges of rioting and looting had no previous criminal history were "very worrying", and represented a possible breach of the 1989 UN convention on the rights of a child.