Courts ready to sit overnight after violent disorder across UK | Politics News


The government has said it will do “whatever it takes” to ensure those engaging in criminal activity during violent disorder across the UK are dealt with, including courts sitting overnight.

It comes as the government’s adviser on political violence and disruption warned that far-right actors are “almost certainly” being “aided and abetted by hostile states in creating and fanning disinformation”.

Latest: Anti-immigration rioters smash windows and hurl chairs at police as they break into hotel

Minister for policing, Dame Diana Johnson, told Sky News the government will ensure the “necessary” resources are put in place so those who have been arrested can be processed quickly.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

How violent UK protests unfolded

Asked whether that includes courts sitting overnight, she said: “The prime minister has been very clear that we will do whatever it takes to make sure that people can get through the court system,” she said.

“We’ve already got people arrested and remanded into custody. It’s very clear that we want to send that message to people – if you engage in this type of criminal thuggery on our streets, you will be held to account.”

She said that the prime minster was the director of public prosecutions during the 2011 riots when the courts did sit through the night and is therefore “very well versed … in making sure we have available what’s needed”.

She also confirmed there was prison capacity to jail those convicted.

“We cannot have people feeling they are not safe on their streets, particularly communities who don’t feel safe because of the colour of their skin,” she added.

Follow Sky News on WhatsApp
Follow Sky News on WhatsApp

Keep up with all the latest news from the UK and around the world by following Sky News

Tap here

Dozens of people have been arrested after violent disorder in England and Northern Ireland on Saturday, with police warning more violence is likely in the coming days.

Police officers were attacked and injured, while there were also clashes between anti-immigration demonstrators and counter-protesters.

Home Secretary Yvette Cooper has said those involved in the clashes “will pay the price”, adding that “criminal violence and disorder has no place on Britain’s streets”.

Police restrain a man during a protest in Liverpool, following the stabbing attacks on Monday in Southport, in which three young children were killed. Picture date: Saturday August 3, 2024.
Image:
Police restrain a man during a protest in Liverpool. Pic: PA

Meanwhile, Justice Secretary Shabana Mahmood has told ministers “the whole justice system is ready to deliver convictions as quickly as possible”.

Protests this week erupted following the fatal stabbing of three young girls in Southport – which was followed by a wave of online misinformation about the suspect spread by far-right activists and agitators.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

‘Criminality can’t drive debate’

Read more from Sky News:
More than 90 arrested after violent protests across UK
Eyewitness: Inside ‘running battle’ in Bristol
How Starmer’s CV could be useful in dealing with unrest

Lord Walney, the government’s adviser on political violence and disruption, told Sky News the Southport tragedy had been “seized on by far-right actors almost certainly aided and abetted by hostile states in creating and planning disinformation to put out false narratives”.

He said the government should “do more” to go after accounts spreading false information and that he had recommended in his recent review to the government that intelligence and security sources should be given more resources.

“You’ll have troll factories in places like Russia and Iran full of Russian or Iranian nationals pretending to be Brits with extreme views on the far right or the far left, whose sole purpose is to create disinformation and fan it,” he said.

“That can have a very significant effect in this environment.”



View Original Source Here

You May Also Like

PM promises ‘beginning of a new chapter’ as he unveils ‘Windsor Framework’ deal on Brexit

Prime Minister Rishi Sunak has outlined details of the “new Windsor Framework”…

Plan to allow vaccinated people from abroad into UK without quarantine to be revealed in ‘next couple of weeks’

Details of a plan to allow vaccinated expats into the UK without…

Sunak repeatedly refuses to apologise for economic pain caused by mini-budget

Rishi Sunak has refused to apologise for the economic turmoil Liz Truss’s…

NHS may move patients into hotels – as Hancock says end of restrictions ‘impossible to know’

The NHS is considering plans to discharge patients into hotels as hospitals…