UK Riots: 'Fightback', Cameron Urges, In Wake Of Three Deaths

Cameron

First Posted: 08/10/11 08:40 PM ET Updated: 10/10/11 06:12 AM ET

LONDON - Thousands of extra police officers flooded the streets of London on Wednesday to deter rioters, and Prime Minister David Cameron warned that the government will take any necessary action to restore order and confidence to Britain's streets.

Even as Cameron promised not to let a "culture of fear" take hold, tensions flared in Birmingham, where a murder probe was opened after three men were killed in a hit-and-run drive as they took to the streets to defend shops from looting.

"We needed a fightback and a fightback is under way," Cameron said in a sombre televised statement outside his Downing Street office after a meeting of the nation's crisis committee.

As if to indicate his resolve, he underlined "nothing is off the table" -- including water cannon, commonly used in Northern Ireland but never deployed in Britain.

The number of arrests in London alone climbed to 805, with courts staffing around the clock to process alleged looters, vandals and thieves -- including one as young as 11. Cameron has recalled Parliament from its summer recess for an emergency debate on the riots Thursday.

An eerie calm prevailed over most of London as night fell Wednesday, with a highly-visible police presence throughout the city.

Metropolitan Police said objects had been thrown at officers in south London's Eltham neighbourhood but that the incident had been "dealt with" and a group was dispersed.

Outside the capital, in England's second largest city of Birmingham, police launched a murder investigation into the deaths of three men hit by a car. Residents said the dead men, aged 21 to 31, were members of Birmingham's South Asian communities who had been patrolling their neighbourhood to keep it safe from looters.

"They lost their lives for other people, doing the job of the police," said witness Mohammed Shakiel, 34. "They weren't standing outside a mosque, a temple, a synagogue or a church -- they were standing outside shops where everybody goes. They were protecting the community."

Tariq Jahan, whose 21-year-old son Haroon was killed, stood in a Birmingham street and pleaded with the South Asian community not to seek revenge against the car's occupants, reported to be black.

"Today we stand here to plead with all the youth to remain calm, for our community to stand united," he said. "This is not a race issue. The family has received messages of sympathy and support from all parts of the community -- all races, all faiths and backgrounds."

He remonstrated with angry young men, urging them to "grow up" and go home.

Chris Sims, chief constable of West Midlands Police, said a man had been arrested on suspicion of murder.

"The information we have at the moment would support the idea that the car was deliberately driven," he said, appealing for calm. "My concern would be that that single incident doesn't lead to a much wider level of distress and even violence between different communities."

The violence has revived debate about the Conservative-led government's austerity measures, which will slash 80 billion pounds ($130 billion) from public spending by 2015 to reduce the country's swollen budget deficit.

Cameron's government has slashed police budgets as part of the cuts. A report last month said the cuts will mean 16,000 fewer police officers by 2015.

London mayor Boris Johnson -- like Cameron, a Conservative -- broke with the government to say such cuts are wrong.
"That case was always pretty frail and it has been substantially weakened," he told BBC radio. "This is not a time to think about making substantial cuts in police numbers."

Scenes of ransacked stores, torched cars and blackened buildings have frightened and outraged Britons just a year before their country is to host next summer's Olympic Games, bringing demands for a tougher response from law enforcement. Police across the country have made almost 1,200 arrests -- including more than 800 in London -- since the violence broke out in the capital on Saturday.

Armoured vehicles and convoys of police vans backed up some 16,000 officers on duty -- almost triple the number who were out Monday night. The show of force seems to have worked -- there were no reports of major trouble in London on Tuesday night, although there were scores of arrests.

"What happened in London last night was, when community leaders and the police came together, there were significant arrests," said police deputy assistant chief constable Stephen Kavanagh. "Some looters were taken away before they got into doing anything, but it was that joint action that made the difference."

Britain's soccer authorities were talking with police to see whether this weekend's season-opening matches of the Premier League could still go ahead in London. A Wednesday match between England and the Netherlands at London's Wembley stadium was cancelled.

Britain's riots began Saturday when an initially peaceful protest over a police shooting in London's Tottenham neighbourhood turned violent. That clash has morphed into a general lawlessness in London and several other cities that police have struggled to halt.

While the rioters have run off with goods every teen wants -- new sneakers, bikes, electronics and leather goods -- they also have torched stores apparently just to see something burn. They were left virtually unchallenged in several neighbourhoods, and when police did arrive they often were able to flee quickly and regroup.

Some residents stood guard to protect their neighbourhoods -- Sikhs protected their temple in Southall, west London, and some 1,000 far-right members reportedly took to the streets to deter rioters.

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11:47 AM on 08/11/2011
Cameron is so deadset on prosecuting the protestors But I have not heard a single word, about investigating the shooting death of Mark duggan by the police which sparked this whole situation. No one has even said the officers were suspended, even though the police never even gave a reason as to why they pulled him over in the first place.The government and the media want to act like people just got up one morning and decided to destroy the country, meanwhile they turn a blind eye to what caused the situation in the first place.Now Cameron talks about using rubber bullets and water cannons on his own citizens. Sounds a lot like Syrian rule to me.
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carl cid inting
There are no tyrants where there are no slaves
09:12 AM on 08/11/2011
Fightback after the fact? Cameron should have never implemented ruinous austerity on the country. In the face of deflation and high unemployment, austerity is the worst thing to undertake. It is bad policy. It is wrong. And everyone pays the price. For one, the police are hamstrung by cuts to their budget. Will it take a greater disaster to make Cameron's government realize that it embarked on a calamitous program of action?
04:55 AM on 08/11/2011
That's what happens when you get a large population that have nothing left too lose.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Transitteer
and another thing . . .
02:24 AM on 08/11/2011
"some 1,000 far-right members reportedly took to the streets to deter rioters." If the Government does not pursue, arrest and jail these hooligans, the right-wingers will look after this problem in their own way. Then there really will be trouble . . . .
11:04 PM on 08/10/2011
The whole spectacle is just disgusting. Cameron should get thrown out of office for letting it go on like this.
10:09 PM on 08/10/2011
Tariq Jahan sounds like a very responsible and civilized man. My hat is off to him. I am tempted to speculate about his religious heritage for the benefit of the anti-Muslim cretins among us, but I am sure it would be lost on them.
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Abraxas79
09:44 PM on 08/10/2011
The UK can talk to the Syrian president in case they need to go medieval.
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nete peedham
09:44 PM on 08/10/2011
The Bullingdon Club...like "Bully"...
But upper crust, therefore immune from responsibility. British Prime Minister David Cameron and current London mayor, Boris Johnson, were members of The Bullingdon Club -- a members' only dining society in the university preserved for the most privileged of (male only) students -- and known for breaking the plates, glasses and windows of local restaurants and drinking establishments and destroying college property in Oxford. Now Cameron is all law and order...egged on by vapid supporters and deniers. Lots of them here, hysterically "Favorite" the conservatives and "Flag" theh liberals.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
toofarleft4thisworld
The Right Is So Wrong
08:50 PM on 08/10/2011
good luck to those trying to restore order. hope they learned something.
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THE GREAT PURIFIER
If you are going through hell, keep going.
09:17 PM on 08/10/2011
When was the last time the dumb elites were capable of learning?
10:09 PM on 08/10/2011
Seriously? Way to keep your perspective spot on.
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wardropper
New empty micro-bio
08:37 PM on 08/10/2011
And the media ALWAYS play along...
08:54 PM on 08/10/2011
you have to wonder, if the media did not cover this, would it have lasted as long as it has?
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wardropper
New empty micro-bio
08:58 PM on 08/10/2011
Indeed.
10:11 PM on 08/10/2011
Yes, it would have. Perhaps not spread as quickly, but yes.

If they did not cover it, there would be cries of COVER UP!!

Can't have it both ways.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
wardropper
New empty micro-bio
08:36 PM on 08/10/2011
Conservative response to public unrest...

...introduce tougher penalties, increase the number of police in the area, spend money which we have just been told doesn't exist to finance the extra law enforecement and take away one more citizen's right.

THAT is why people sometimes suspect that such unrest can be a result of false-flag agitation by right-wingers who wish to crush everybody who isn't rich enough to look as good as they think they do...
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urnumbersix
"I am not a Number. I am a Free Man!"
10:03 PM on 08/10/2011
Fanned & Fav'ed!
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SeanMartin
Everything in moderation.
10:36 PM on 08/10/2011
And so... what? The police should just stand by while buildings are torched and people are murdered? That's your solution?

Wow.
05:04 PM on 08/11/2011
But they DID just stand by and watch the rampages for many nights in a row.