
Body found outside looted store as LA riots take deadly turn: Live updates
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By and RACHEL BOWMAN FOR DAILYMAIL.COM
Published: | Updated:
California Los Angeles LA Riots 2025
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Telegraph
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Politicians don't want to admit the truth about the Northern Ireland riots
The scenes of violence that have gripped Northern Ireland this week have evoked unwelcome memories of the province's turbulent recent history. But the working-class communities there have found a very different 'grievance' from the one that wreaked devastation on their towns and cities during the Troubles. In the past, the 'enemy' was defined by Northern Ireland's complex divisions over civil rights, religion and the prospect of a united Ireland. In the last few nights, the target has been the local immigrant population. Police have come under attack from violent mobs throwing firebombs, bottles and rocks after demonstrations against Roma residents escalated. Cultural tensions were already high, with locals voicing their objections to the influx of Roma into their communities, even before it was reported that a teenage girl from Ballymena had allegedly suffered a sexual assault at the hands of two teenage Roma boys. The list of complaints is a familiar one: they claim few of the new arrivals speak English and require the support of translators in order to be able to access local services. There are concerns that the Roma people are more likely to be on benefits compared to other ethnic groups. Local women have complained about harassment from groups of Roma men (and women) as they walk to and from their homes. And to complicate matters, no one seems quite sure whether the new arrivals have crossed the border from the Republic of Ireland or are in the UK legally, having arrived in the UK before EU Freedom of Movement was scrapped on December 31, 2020. Similar tensions over the Roma emerged in areas of Britain during the UK's EU membership, when local, usually poorer, areas of some large cities attracted large numbers of those originating in parts of eastern Europe where the Roma have historically suffered persecution and discrimination. In Glasgow, the Govanhill area in the city's south side gained a reputation as the centre of a new Roma community without much civil upset. But unlike Glasgow, Northern Ireland has a recent history of civil unrest, not to mention a folk memory of burning resentment against the establishment, that has proved all too easily exploited by racist elements. Roma families, many with young children, have been forced to flee the mobs who have targeted, and on some occasions, destroyed their homes. Uncomplimentary comparisons have already been made with last year's summer riots that followed the murder of three young girls at a local dance class in Southport. It is tempting now, as it was then, to conclude that this is nothing more than attempts by the 'far-Right' to foment civil disturbance for their own ends. It is more complicated than that. Do local communities have any right to object to the imposition of alien, or at least unfamiliar, cultures upon them? Is it always irrational and xenophobic to resent someone because of their apparent refusal to learn the language of the country in which they have chosen to live? Is it similarly unreasonable to object to the amount of local authority resources devoted towards easing that problem? And while it is both dangerous and unjust to make blanket assumptions about any nationality's attitudes to women and sex, it is undeniable that certain cultures have, by western standards, an outdated view of women's roles in society. Until relatively recently, it was decreed by our political masters that we should never cast aspersions on such attitudes and cultures, but such restrictions are no longer taken seriously, not after the grooming gangs scandal, or Kemi Badenoch's warning that not all cultures are equally valid. An entire community cannot and should not be held accountable for the alleged sexual assault on a teenage girl. But to dismiss local anger as racism, to order people to accept whatever changes are imposed on their communities by their political betters without demur, is simply storing up greater trouble for the future.


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an hour ago
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The political unity in Northern Ireland after three nights of violence has fractured after an attack by masked youths in Larne that resulted in a leisure centre being set on fire. Staff and customers, including children learning to swim, were in the building at the time. The attack coincided with violent scenes amid tensions over immigration in the nearby town of Ballymena. Before Wednesday's attack on the leisure centre, the DUP communities minister, Gordon Lyons, posted on social media that the building had been used to accommodate several people who had fled Ballymena, about 30 minutes away. 'As a local MLA for the area, neither I nor my DUP colleagues were made aware or consulted on this decision until late this afternoon,' he added. 'Protesting is of course a legitimate right but I would encourage everyone to remain peaceful.' His remarks have been criticised by other political parties. The Sinn Féin finance minister, John O'Dowd, called on Lyons to consider his position and said he had 'failed to show leadership'. Matthew O'Toole, the SDLP and opposition leader, said he would refer Lyons to the standards commission. 'The actions of the communities minister cannot be ignored,' he said. 'He is the minister responsible for the housing executive and lives are at stake.' Hilary Benn, the Northern Ireland secretary, also called on Lyons to reflect on his comments. The Sinn Féin first minister, Michelle O'Neill, and the DUP deputy first minister, Emma Little-Pengelly, appeared together on Wednesday to condemn the violence. Echoing comments from the police, O'Neill said: 'It's pure racism, there's no other way to dress it up.' Little-Pengelly described the scenes in Ballymena as 'utter thuggery'. Lyons has defended himself, telling the BBC that his message 'was posted because rumours had been circulating that the leisure centre was being turned into a permanent centre' and that was no longer the case. He said he was trying to defuse the situation. More anti-immigration protests are reportedly planned. A housing association in Portadown has urged tenants to stay with friends ahead of an expected protest in the town.