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Thursday, July 3, 2025

England's riots: A line has been crossed

by

20110817

The ri­ots in Lon­don, which spread to oth­er cities in Eng­land in a copy-cat pat­tern, were un­like any that had been seen be­fore, and when nor­mal­cy is re­stored, the British au­thor­i­ties will have to ex­am­ine its ori­gins very care­ful­ly. I use the word "ori­gins" rather than "caus­es" be­cause these ri­ots did not ap­pear to be as­so­ci­at­ed with a cause. No one car­ried plac­ards; there were no calls for change or jus­tice; there were no march­es and no de­mands. In fact, the sim­ple pur­pose be­hind the ri­ots ap­peared to be loot­ing and burn­ing. In Lon­don dur­ing the pe­ri­od of these Au­gust 2011 ri­ots, and, there­fore, able to wit­ness them at first­hand, what alarmed me was that, for the most part, the par­tic­i­pants were very young peo­ple; some as young as 12. And while the ma­jor­i­ty of them in Lon­don were black, whites were al­so in­volved.

Go­ing to school in Lon­don and lat­er work­ing there, I have lived through Lon­don ri­ots-they were all as­so­ci­at­ed with a cause or a protest. Loot­ing did oc­cur as a re­sult of some of them, but loot­ing was not their main pur­pose. For in­stance, the 1981 Brix­ton ri­ots were caused by se­ri­ous so­cial and eco­nom­ic prob­lems af­fect­ing Britain's in­ner cities. Lord Scar­man, who in­quired in­to its caus­es, fa­mous­ly blamed the ri­ots on "racial dis­ad­van­tage that is a fact of British life." In 1985, ri­ots erupt­ed in Brix­ton and Tot­ten­ham af­ter hun­dreds of black peo­ple in the two com­mu­ni­ties viewed the ac­ci­den­tal shoot­ing of Cher­ry Groce in Brix­ton as po­lice vi­o­lence. The po­lice broke in­to her home look­ing for her son who they sus­pect­ed in a firearms of­fence. This was ex­ac­er­bat­ed a week lat­er by the death of Tot­ten­ham res­i­dent Cyn­thia Jar­rett, who died of heart fail­ure af­ter four po­lice­men burst in­to her home in a raid. In 1990, there were a se­ries of ri­ots in British cities that start­ed as protests against a most un­pop­u­lar Com­mu­ni­ty Charge, known as the Poll Tax, in­tro­duced by then Prime Min­is­ter Mar­garet Thatch­er. It led to her down­fall.

In­sti­tu­tion­al racism

While each of these protests spawned ri­ots and loot­ing by per­sons who took ad­van­tage of the op­por­tu­ni­ty to do so, loot­ing was not their main pur­pose; much more fun­da­men­tal rea­sons, such as re­sist­ing in­sti­tu­tion­al racism and gov­ern­ment high-hand­ed­ness, un­der­scored them. And this is how the Au­gust 2011 ri­ots dif­fer from any pre­vi­ous one. These were not "race" ri­ots and they were not protests against any­thing: they were sim­ply ex­pe­di­tions in vil­lainy by gangs of young peo­ple. It was their sum­mer fun.

A few months ago, stu­dents protest­ed in Lon­don against high­er uni­ver­si­ty fees that would bur­den them with debt be­fore they even find a job. They all had plac­ards and slo­gans. And, while there were clash­es with po­lice and mo­ments of vi­o­lence, they had a lim­it and a lead­er­ship with whom ne­go­ti­a­tions could be held. These Au­gust ri­ots de­clared no po­lit­i­cal or so­cial pur­pose. They were shock­ing in their sin­gle-mind­ed loot­ing and burn­ing, and the ob­vi­ous lack of fear or re­spect for the po­lice by the vil­lains. Di­ane Ab­bot, the Ja­maican-born, mem­ber of the British House of Com­mons for the Labour Par­ty, cor­rect­ly said that "noth­ing ex­cus­es vi­o­lence. There is no doubt that all types of mind­less thugs latched on to the dis­tur­bances."

Cost of youth­ful bad­ness

As this com­men­tary is be­ing writ­ten the cost of dam­age in the many Lon­don ar­eas that have been the play­ground for this youth­ful bad­ness is es­ti­mat­ed to be well over £100 mil­lion (US$163 mil­lion). This is mon­ey that British in­sur­ers will have to find at a time when share val­ues have fall­en and mar­kets are weak and vul­ner­a­ble. To this fig­ure will have to be added the dam­age done in the cities of Man­ches­ter, Sal­ford, Liv­er­pool, Not­ting­ham and Birm­ing­ham. Al­ready in a dif­fi­cult eco­nom­ic sit­u­a­tion, and still of­fi­cial­ly in re­ces­sion, the British econ­o­my will be placed un­der even greater pres­sure than it now en­dures.

In turn, this will have neg­a­tive con­se­quences for cre­at­ing em­ploy­ment and for strength­en­ing and ex­pand­ing so­cial ben­e­fit schemes. The peo­ple who will be hard­est hit by these in­creased eco­nom­ic and fi­nan­cial pres­sures will be those in these very in­ner cities that have been this sum­mer's play­ground for "all types of mind­less thugs." The loot­ers and burn­ers were un­mind­ful that they were de­stroy­ing their own com­mu­ni­ties, the places in which they live. While they burned and loot­ed big name shops, they al­so loot­ed shops owned by small busi­ness peo­ple (many of them Asians and Africans) who will not eas­i­ly re­cov­er from the wan­ton de­struc­tion.

It may be sig­nif­i­cant that in one area, while cloth­ing stores, su­per­mar­kets, tele­phone shops and com­put­er stores were loot­ed, the book­store, Wa­ter­stone, stood un­touched in splen­did iso­la­tion. The de­sire to read a good book was clear­ly not on any­one's list of good­ies. On day four of the ri­ots, a Lon­don taxi dri­ver be­moaned to me the dras­ti­cal­ly ad­verse ef­fect that they had on his busi­ness. Eco­nom­ic cir­cum­stances, he said, had al­ready re­duced his in­come sig­nif­i­cant­ly, but the ri­ots had caused Eng­lish peo­ple, who would nor­mal­ly vis­it Lon­don at­trac­tions, to stay at home. Even the pop­u­lar Not­ting Hill Car­ni­val-Eu­rope's largest street fes­ti­val-sched­uled for the end of Au­gust is in jeop­ardy as fear ris­es that it might be used as an oc­ca­sion for fur­ther mis­chief.

Un­chart­ed sea­son

For me, the most im­por­tant point about these Au­gust ri­ots is that a line has been crossed. This is not a sum­mer of dis­con­tent man­i­fest­ing it­self in protests. This is a new and un­chart­ed sea­son in which large num­bers of young peo­ple have no re­gard or re­spect for au­thor­i­ty and lit­tle or no moral com­pass. Brazen­ly con­fronting the ful­ly-equipped ri­ot-pre­ven­tion po­lice at close quar­ters was one thing, but beat­ing in­no­cent peo­ple, in­clud­ing old­er women and young men like them­selves, and de­lib­er­ate­ly dri­ving a car at high speed, mow­ing down and killing three men try­ing to pro­tect their shops, is quite an­oth­er. This speaks to a lev­el of law­less­ness un­prece­dent­ed in British cul­ture and, even in its his­to­ry of ri­ots. There is now some­thing trag­i­cal­ly wrong in Britain. And it has deeply af­fect­ed its young peo­ple in the in­ner cities. The British au­thor­i­ties should waste no time in tack­ling it in a broad based and com­pre­hen­sive way.

The writer is a con­sul­tant

and for­mer Caribbean diplo­mat.


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