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Britain: Bradford is fourth city hit by riots
By Liz Smith
10 July 2001
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Last weekend, Bradford was the scene of the worst riots in
Britain for nearly two decades. The clashes in the West Yorkshire
city were sparked by police provocation and a build up of racial
tensions fuelled by the activities of fascist organisations such
as the National Front (NF) and British National Party (BNP).
This is the fourth urban area in the north of England to be
hit by riots. Racist groups like the NF and BNP repeated tactics
they had used recently in Oldham, Leeds and Burnley, first sparking
fighting with Asian youths, and then withdrawing, leaving the
streets clear for the police.
The National Front had announced plans to hold a march in Bradford
on Saturday July 7. The NF is a tiny group, whose attempts to
stage demonstrations in Bradford, one of the most ethnically diverse
cities in England, have always met fierce local resistance. West
Yorkshire Police applied to the Home Office for special powers
to ban the rally by the NF, as well as counter-demonstrations
by the Anti-Nazi League and the Trades Union Congress, resulting
in Home Secretary David Blunkett banning all marches through Bradford
for three months. The planned finale to the Bradford Festival
in the citys Centenary Square on Saturday, which attracts
thousands of people, was also cancelled on the grounds of a possible
NF provocation. A strong police presence in the city centre that
day included a large number of mounted officers.
Late Saturday afternoon, a peaceful and racially mixed rally
of around 500 anti-fascists took place in Centenary Square. National
Front supporters who were standing outside a nearby pub began
making racist taunts.
Mohammed Amran, a regional representative of the Commission
for Racial Equality, described how fighting then broke out: We
were having a peaceful demonstration. The police told everyone
officers had checked the area and there wasnt an NF presence.
Then some lads came out of a pub and started shouting racial abuse.
Then they attacked some Asians. When I got there they were giving
Hitler signals. The police wouldnt let the Asian crowd go
near the pub and drew their batons. Thats when the trouble
started. There was a distrust among the crowd, [they believed]
that the police knew there were NF supporters in the area.
Racists beat up an Asian youth outside Allinsons Bar
in the town centre, which led to fighting between Asians and white
racists that rapidly spiralled out of control. Police then intervened,
pushing Asian youth and anti-fascist protesters away from the
city centre towards the mainly Asian area of Manningham.
The worst of the violence took place on White Abbey Road, the
main thoroughfare into Manningham, where by now around a crowd
of some 1,000 had gathered. According to press reports, some were
armed with sledgehammers and fireworks. Stones and petrol bombs
were thrown at the 500-strong police lines, by now in full riot
gear, with stolen cars being pushed into the advancing police
vans.
At least three pubs and various businesses were severely damaged.
This included Manningham Labour Club, which was firebombed. The
landlord and 27 customers had to hide in the cellar as burning
vehicles initially blocked off the fire exits. A BMW car showroom
was set on fire, and cars were stolen from a Mitsubishi garage
in Emm Lane and used to ram police and other business premises.
The police reported that a number of their officers suffered
mainly minor injuries, and 36 arrests were made13 whites
and 23 Asians. After the riots, an extra 425 police officers were
drafted in from forces in Greater Manchester, South and North
Yorkshire, Merseyside, Humberside, Cleveland and Northumbria.
Manwar Jan Khan of Manningham Residents Association told
the press, Clearly the blame needs to lie with the National
Front. They have been extremely active in the past few months
and have been keen to provoke the community into such action.
West Yorkshire assistant police chief Greg Wilkinson admitted
at a press conference that police were surprised at the ferocity
of the riots, vowing to track down all those involved. He stressed
that police would be monitoring the situation for days to come,
and up to 600 police officers patrolled the city streets on Sunday.
In the early hours of Sunday, two Asian businesses and a pub
were attacked. A group of up to 30 white youths targeted an Asian
restaurant and a petrol station, causing thousands of pounds worth
of damage.
The Kababeesh restaurant in the Greengates area of Bradford
was attacked by a group of youths wearing Bandanas to cover their
faces. Restaurant manager Tayub Amjad said he did not think the
youths were NF supporters but that the attack was in retaliation
for Saturdays events, I think they were local lads
because they targeted the cars of some of my workers.
According to eyewitness reports, two white men attacked the
Bradford Arms pub on Manningham Lane, smashing the windows before
throwing in two petrol bombs.
Though inarticulate, confused and ultimately self-defeating,
the riots expresses the deep going alienation felt particularly
amongst layers of young peopleAsian and whitetowards
the political establishment and a police force that is regarded
as a hostile presence which invariably ends up defending the fascists.
Bradford has a population of over 484,000, of which 18 percent
are from ethnic minorities. Those whose families originally came
from the Indian sub-continentprimarily from Bangladesh or
Pakistanform the largest ethnic minority group in the city.
Many came to Bradford in the 1950s and 60s to work in the citys
textile mills, most of which have long since closed. Unemployment
and deprivation today is disproportionately higher among those
with an ethnic minority background. But social disadvantage is
by no means confined to the citys Asian population. In a
recent government survey, Index of Deprivation, the majority
of Bradford Metropolitan Districts 30 wards were found to
be among the worst-off in England. Bradford ranks sixth worst
in England for unemployment and fifth worst for low incomes. Overall,
Bradford is ranked 64th for deprivation out of 354 districts in
England, which places the city among the top 20 percent worst-off
districts in the country.
Like many urban areas, government regeneration grants of a
few hundred million pounds have hardly scratched the surface of
poverty and long-term unemployment, as the traditional manufacturing
industries such as textiles have closed down.
Fascist groups such as the NF have exploited the social deprivation
amongst poorer white working class families to whip-up racial
antagonisms by alleging that Asians receive preferential treatment
under multi-cultural initiatives. The Labour government is unable
to effectively counter such fascist propaganda because it opposes
the type of sweeping social measures that are necessary to tackle
poverty and urban deprivation. Labours only response to
racist scapegoating is to impose tougher law and order measures
than its Conservative predecessors, including bans on demonstrations
and to flood the inner cities with huge numbers of police. The
ensuing social explosions are almost inevitable, particularly
given the provocative role played by the police and the media,
who have provided numerous opportunities for the racists to spout
their filth.
Home Secretary Blunkett denied that the heavy-handed actions
of the police had played any part in provoking the rioting, which
he denounced as mindless violence. He went on to suggest
that the danger of fascism came from those who promote disorder,
rather than its roots being in the degeneration of the present
social system itself. All history shows, and I mean all
history, that if you allow disorder to take over from democracy,
then fascism can win, he asserted.
The riots sparked by the far right are providing the pretext
for the Labour government to beef up its state forces and prepare
even more repressive measures. Blunkett said the police could
soon be given additional powers, because their traditional cautious
approach meant violence could be more prolonged than in countries
where more hard-line methods were used. He told BBC radio, I
am keen to examine any suggestions that are put forward in circumstances
where people believe they can go on the streets, threaten others
including the police, and believe they can get away with it.
Marsha Singh, MP for Bradford West, said: We will be
talking to the Home Secretary about police measures, whether they
need more powers in terms of public order. We may look at European
models of crime controls, seven hours in White Abbey Road could
have been cleared in half an hour with a water cannon.
Singh, who also told Channel 4 News that the police should
not only ban the NF/BNP, but the Anti-Nazi League as well because
the price is too high, denied that rising poverty
and social inequality in the city had played any role, It
was nothing to with deprivation, this was sheer criminality.
See Also:
Britain: Burnley hit by riots
[27 June 2001]
Britain: Oldham riots sparked
by deliberate cultivation of racism
[29 May 2001]
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