Suspect in Southport Stabbings Is Named
Seeking to quell a surge of misinformation-fueled unrest, a British judge on Thursday took the unusual step of naming the 17-year-old suspect in a stabbing rampage that left three children dead and eight injured in northwestern England early this week.
The suspect, Axel Muganwa Rudakubana, appeared in a Liverpool court to face three counts of murder and 10 counts of attempted murder.
The stabbing spree, at a Taylor Swift-themed dance class in the town of Southport on Monday, stunned Britain and ignited two days of racially fueled riots, in multiple cities, that were incited by far-right provocateurs.
Although the police announced that the suspect had been born in Cardiff, Wales, erroneous posts on social media claimed he was an undocumented immigrant, which triggered protests that reached almost to the gates of 10 Downing Street.
Prime Minister Keir Starmer, clearly worried that the violence could escalate in the heat of the summer, summoned police chiefs from around the country to an urgent meeting on Thursday. He announced the creation of a nationwide unit that would allow police forces to share intelligence to crack down on what he called “gangs of thugs” who travel across the country, creating violent disturbances.
“The far right is showing who they are; we have to show who we are,” a visibly angry Mr. Starmer said at a news conference. “This is coordinated, this is deliberate, this is not a protest that got out of hand.”
The unrest posed a stiff early test to Mr. Starmer, less than a month after his Labour Party won a landslide election victory. As a former director of the public prosecution service, Mr. Starmer oversaw hundreds of public disorder cases in August 2011, when riots, looting and arson convulsed Tottenham, a working-class neighborhood in north London, before spreading to eight other cities.
In this case, the proliferation of false claims about the stabbing persuaded the judge, Andrew Menary, to lift legal restrictions on the news media’s ability to report the identity of an underage suspect.
“Continuing to prevent the full reporting has the disadvantage of allowing others to spread misinformation, in a vacuum,” Judge Menary said, adding that the suspect will turn 18 on Aug 7.
During the 55-minute hearing, the suspect rocked back and forth, keeping his face covered by a gray sweatshirt, according to Press Association, a British news agency. The judge set a provisional date of Jan. 20, 2025, for a trial, which he anticipated would last six weeks.
The horrifying attack unfolded on a quiet street in Southport as the dance class, which also included yoga and bracelet making, was drawing to an end. The suspect rampaged through the room with a knife, police said, stabbing the children and two adults.
Three girls died of their injuries: Bebe King, 6, Elsie Dot Stancombe, 7, and Alice Dasilva Aguiar, 9. Of eight injured children, five remain in the hospital, all in stable condition, the authorities said Thursday.
As the traumatized town mourned the children, rioters flooded into the streets of Southport on Tuesday night. More than 50 police officers were injured as demonstrators threw bricks at a mosque, set cars on fire and damaged a convenience store.
A day later, the riots spread to Manchester, Hartlepool, and London, where protesters clashed with the police in Whitehall, near Downing Street. They threw bottles and flares at the officers, as well as at a statue of Winston Churchill.
The Metropolitan Police Service said it had arrested 111 people, a few of whom were carrying knives and other weapons.
In addition to the misinformation, critics said the right-wing protesters had been whipped up by Nigel Farage, the insurgent politician and ally of Donald Trump, who had speculated about the identity of the suspect in a video posted online. Mr. Farage, who recently won a seat in Parliament, questioned why the authorities were not treating the crime as terrorism-related and asked whether the “truth is being withheld from us.”
Mr. Starmer declined to comment on Mr. Farage’s remarks. But others condemned them, including Brendan Cox, the husband of Jo Cox, a Labour lawmaker who was killed by a far-right assailant in 2016. Mr. Farage, he said, was “nothing better than a Tommy Robinson in a suit,” referring to a notorious anti-Islam agitator who has shared online falsehoods about the Southport stabbings that went viral.
Speaking on his prime-time program on GB News, Mr. Farage denied inciting the protests.
For Mr. Starmer, policing unrest is not without challenges. In 2011, critics on the left accused him of abetting a Conservative-led government in its heavy-handed response to the Tottenham riots. Mr. Starmer agreed to have hundreds of disorder cases fast-tracked, turning up to court himself to watch late-night hearings.
On Thursday, he acknowledged the need to strike a balance between free expression and public order. But he pointedly reminded social media companies that it was a crime to incite violence online.
“It’s not protest, it’s not legitimate,” Mr. Starmer said. “It’s crime, violent disorder, an assault on the rule of law.”
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