Thugs hijack Southport, blamed for voilence

Bottles and wheelie bins thrown at officers.
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BBC :

“Thugs” who travelled to Southport to use the deaths of three children “for their own political purposes” were to blame for the violence that saw dozens of police officers injured, the town’s MP has said.
Unrest broke out in the Merseyside town hours after a vigil to honour the victims of Monday’s knife attack at a dance school in which three young girls were killed and eight other children injured.
Patrick Hurley said the disturbance close to a mosque, which saw officers pelted with bricks and a police van set on fire, had been “horrific”.
Merseyside Police Federation’s Chris McGlade said more than 50 police officers were hurt in a “sustained and vicious attack”.

Merseyside Police said the violence was believed to have involved English Defence League supporters.
Mr Hurley told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme the “riot” was “led by people from outside the town”.
He said the “thugs who had got the train in” had used the “deaths of three little kiddies for their own political purposes”.
Mr McGlade said his injured colleagues were the same “courageous officers” who were themselves trying to come to terms with the “unimaginable tragedy” of Monday’s attack.
“I utterly condemn the actions of these mindless and violent thugs – and they will be brought to justice for their actions,” he added.
ACC Goss said it was “sickening” that the disturbance happened within a “devastated” community.
He said the force had faced “serious violence” and was “so proud to have witnessed off-duty officers parade back on duty to support their colleagues who had displayed such courage whilst under constant and sustained attack”.
He also thanked officers from forces in Greater Manchester, Cheshire, Lancashire and North Wales for providing mutual aid and support.
He added that the disorder involved many people “who do not live in the Merseyside area or care about the people of Merseyside”.
“Sadly, offenders have destroyed garden walls so they could use the bricks to attack our officers and have set cars belonging to the public on fire, and damaged cars parked in the mosque car park,” he said.
“This is no way to treat a community, least of all a community that is still reeling from the events of Monday.”
On Tuesday, Merseyside Police named six-year-old Bebe King, seven-year-old Elsie Dot Stancombe and nine-year-old Alice Dasilva Aguiar as the three girls who were killed at a Taylor Swift-themed dance workshop at the Hart Space studio in Hart Street.
At about 18:00 BST, more than 1,000 people joined a peaceful vigil was held outside the Atkinson gallery on Lord Street.
However, following rumours throughout the day of a demonstration, a group began to gather near a mosque on St Luke’s Road, two streets away from Hart Street, at about 19:45 and engaged in a stand-off with police officers.
As the disorder escalated, the group attacked the front of the mosque, throwing bricks, bottles, fireworks and rocks, and officers donned protective gear and used riot shields to defend themselves as wheelie bins and other objects were hurled towards them.
A police vehicle was also set on fire.
Southport Mosque chairman Ibrahim Hussein said he had gone with colleagues to secure the building and had to be taken to a place of safety by police.
He told BBC Radio Merseyside that the group had “started to burn the fences and throw things burning stuff at the windows”. “They smashed all the windows, they broke all the fences and obviously, the chanting and the screaming and the anger just was overwhelming for all of us.” North West Ambulance Service said 27 officers were taken to hospital and 12 were treated and discharged at the scene.