Britain’s worst riots in decades raged into yesterday as youths ran amok in Manchester and the industrial Midlands, but London was quiet with 16,000 police swamping the streets to stem violence.
In Manchester, Britain’s third-largest city, youths smashed shop windows, looted shops and chased photographers away from the scene in what police described as the city’s worst violence in 30 years.
Elsewhere, hooded rioters set fire to buildings in West Bromwich and Wolverhampton in central England and a police station in nearby Nottingham was firebombed, although there were no reported injuries.
Photo: Reuters
Looters also targeted shops in the UK’s second city, Birmingham, for another night and 200 rioters pelted police with missiles in the northwest city of Liverpool as the nation faced up to a fourth day of unrest.
In London there was no repeat of the wave of violence which left parts of the capital in flames on Monday night, as vigilante mobs took to the streets to defend their communities.
Police were bracing for more trouble after what they said was the worst night of disorder in living memory in the British capital and their numbers were ramped up from 6,000 to 16,000 on Tuesday night as British Prime Minister David Cameron vowed to do “everything necessary to restore order to the streets.”
Shops in many parts of London closed early and put down their shutters on the advice of police.
Scotland Yard said early yesterday that 768 people had been arrested in London for violence, disorder and looting.
The focus of Tuesday’s violence was Manchester in northwest England, where police were driven back by gangs of hundreds of youths who covered their faces with scarves and ski masks.
Gangs smashed their way into shoe shops and set fire to a girls’ clothing store in the city center.
Two raiders smashed the glass entrance of the Arndale shopping center, central Manchester’s main shopping mall, allowing hundreds of youths to pour into a shop and emerge with armfuls of clothes and shoes.
Looters cleared out an electrical store as powerless police watched on, while other gangs squared up to officers and shouted obscenities in their faces, one correspondent reported.
Assistant Chief Constable Garry Shewan of Greater Manchester Police, who joined the force after moving to the city in 1981, called the scenes “senseless violence and senseless criminality on a scale I have never witnessed before.”
There were similar scenes in Birmingham. In the neighboring town of Wolverhampton youths clashed with riot police brandishing shields.
West Midlands police, who arrested 109 people in Tuesday’s disturbances, said it was investigating reports that a shot had been fired during the disorder.
In London, hundreds of Sikhs camped out overnight yesterday to defend the community of Southall in the capital’s west.
The group, some dressed in traditional clothing, organized motorcycle patrols and monitored the train station for troublemakers.
Similar mobs of soccer supporters congregated in Eltham, south London, in an effort to deter looters.
In a development which will do nothing to calm tensions, Britain’s police watchdog said it had found no evidence that Mark Duggan — whose shooting by police last week was the catalyst for the riots in London — had fired a gun at officers.
In a pre-planned operation, armed officers stopped the taxi in which Duggan, 29, was traveling in the multi-ethnic district of Tottenham in north London. Shots were fired and Duggan died at the scene.
Duggan’s family said they were “completely gutted” by the findings and they called for “answers” from police.
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