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UK riots

Posted: Sun Aug 07, 2011 12:07 am
by noam
The Guardian wrote:By 10.30pm, Tottenham High Road had been taken over by rioters, with two police cars on fire, a number of shops looted and a building ablaze.

Debris from a looted police station lay strewn across the pavement.

The rioters, mostly teenagers, some of whom had covered their faces with scarves, hurled bricks, bottles and eggs at police. Shopping trolleys had been used to charge at police, who appeared heavily outnumbered.

The violence broke out at dusk after approximately 120 people marched on Tottenham police station to express anger over the death of local man Mark Duggan on Thursday.

A Metropolitan police spokesman said the trouble began when "missiles" were thrown at parked patrol cars at 8.30pm. He said one was pushed, blazing, into the middle of Tottenham High Street. Neither of the two officers who had been driving the cars were injured.

Attempts by police to gain some control succeeded by 11.30pm, as they cleared an area of the street with the worst fires, allowing two fire engines onto the street.

The rest of the area remained in the control of rioters, who gathered along side-streets, some carrying sticks.

Most of the crowd consisted of onlookers, who jeered at police vans as they arrived. There were chants of "we want answers" and "whose streets? Our streets". A number of shops had been looted, including a music shop and an electrical and hi-fi store.

Teenagers, some as young as ten, we seen fleeing the street carrying TVs and stereos. One young man, in his early teens, wheeled a shopping trolley laden with stolen items. A general store and a florist had also been broken into.

A Turkish corner store had stacked boxes of bottled mineral water outside its windows to hold the looters at bay.

Officers from the Territorial Support Group were on the scene, charging at rioters and attempting to block off side streets. Riot police, some with dogs, shepherded people away.

Police on horseback also attended the scene, along with reinforcements from the City of London police. A police helicopter hovered above.

Hails of bottles and bricks were intermittently thrown at police from side streets as reinforcements arrived. Rioters also aimed fireworks at police. At one stage, four firework rockets were shot at a line of horses, prompting a charge and a nearby crowd to disperse in panic.

Hundreds of residents gathered to watch the unrest and there several were reports of attacks on bystanders. At one point rioters were seen beating up a man attempting to take film footage of the scene.

Resident David Akinsanya, 46, said several shop windows had been smashed. "It's really bad," he said. "There are two police cars on fire. I'm feeling unsafe. It looks like it's going to get very tasty. I saw a guy getting attacked."

"The police seem very frightened at the moment, people are unstoppable," Tottenham resident Maria Robinson told the BBC. "They've broken into various businesses, jewellery shops, bookies, it's absolutely crazy. They've beaten up a man for talking to the fire brigade."

Social networking site Twitter was abuzz with messages of support and condemnation of the riots.

Police were unable to confirm whether the violence was connected to outrage over the death of Duggan, 29, who was shot in a police anti-firearms operation in Tottenham.

A family friend of Duggan, who gave her name as Nikki, 53, said the father-of-four's friends and relatives had organised the protest to demand "justice for the family".

"They're making their presence known because people are not happy," she added. "This guy was not violent. Yes, he was involved in things but he was not an aggressive person. He had never hurt anyone."

Duggan had been shot in an exchange of fire after the police's Trident operational command unit, which deals with gun crime in the black community, stopped the vehicle he was travelling in. A police officer was said to have escaped injury in the shoot out when a bullet lodged in his radio.

Local MP David Lammy called for calm, saying the community was anxious over what had happened.

Nearby Broadwater Farm, where the protesters began their march, was the scene of riots in 1985 in which a police constable, Keith Blakelock, was killed by attackers wielding knives and machetes.
shits real/2012/CIA/etc.

Re: Tottenham eh...

Posted: Sun Aug 07, 2011 12:14 am
by gorillabearbear
reminds me of the paris riots in 2005 a bit

Re: Tottenham eh...

Posted: Sun Aug 07, 2011 12:26 am
by volcanogeorge
Resident David Akinsanya, 46, said several shop windows had been smashed. "It's really bad," he said. "There are two police cars on fire. I'm feeling unsafe. It looks like it's going to get very tasty. I saw a guy getting attacked."
Not the best of typos.

But yeah, lots of comparisons to the 80's gonna be on the news in the morning.

Re: Tottenham eh...

Posted: Sun Aug 07, 2011 12:57 am
by fractal
sad that so many people take advantage of the situation by looting peoples shops :|

Re: Tottenham eh...

Posted: Sun Aug 07, 2011 1:03 am
by skimpi
volcanogeorge wrote:
Resident David Akinsanya, 46, said several shop windows had been smashed. "It's really bad," he said. "There are two police cars on fire. I'm feeling unsafe. It looks like it's going to get very tasty. I saw a guy getting attacked."
Not the best of typos.

But yeah, lots of comparisons to the 80's gonna be on the news in the morning.
ahh now i get it! at first i was confused, then thought maybe he is like shocked, but also glued to the action and cant wait for more shit to kick of haha

Re: Tottenham eh...

Posted: Sun Aug 07, 2011 1:19 am
by noam
how is it a typo???

'tasty' means shits gona kick off...

Re: Tottenham eh...

Posted: Sun Aug 07, 2011 1:20 am
by fractal
lol, *nasty

Re: Tottenham eh...

Posted: Sun Aug 07, 2011 1:33 am
by noam
nah mate, 't' and 'n' are nowhere near each other on the keyboard, i'd bet my vinyl collection that the guy said 'tasty' - spesh in that part of london

Re: Tottenham eh...

Posted: Sun Aug 07, 2011 1:35 am
by volcanogeorge
Doubt a bloke saying that he feels unsafe would call it tasty, stranger things have happened though.

You know shits going down when there's no live footage because the TV crews are getting attacked...

Hope all the tottenham heads are safe!

Re: Tottenham eh...

Posted: Sun Aug 07, 2011 1:41 am
by abs
maybe he meant toasty? as in fire and shit

looks horrible, hope not too many people get hurt/robbed

Re: Tottenham eh...

Posted: Sun Aug 07, 2011 2:26 am
by Blerim
its not even that unusual.. the amount of riots in London is a madness :i:

and who didn't expect this, the police shot dead a top shotter in his own territory, of course there's gonna be a riot. Same thing would happen in Peckham, Harlesden, Brixton, Grove, Hackney, Southall, Wembley etc etc..

Re: Tottenham eh...

Posted: Sun Aug 07, 2011 2:33 am
by gorillabearbear
So someone on another forum is talking about people's livelihoods being destroyed after seeing a picture of carpet right going up in flames, and I was just wondering, what would actually happen if your place of work was destroyed? Surely you wouldn't just be out on your ear, would you?

Re: Tottenham eh...

Posted: Sun Aug 07, 2011 2:34 am
by noam
depends what you're insured for

Re: Tottenham eh...

Posted: Sun Aug 07, 2011 2:40 am
by gorillabearbear
yeah, I mean obviously the owner probably has some kind of insurance, but what about just the shop assistants and that?

This must make me sound like a bit of a clueless twat, but it's just honestly something I've never had cause to think about before.

Re: Tottenham eh...

Posted: Sun Aug 07, 2011 3:45 am
by fractal
noam wrote:depends what you're insured for
completely

to some shops it's devastating, to others maybe not so bad

either way it's dumb. why attack neighborhood shops? these people did nothing to anyone

Re: Tottenham eh...

Posted: Sun Aug 07, 2011 8:43 am
by PinUp
Looting shops makes it seem less like it was angry protest aimed at the police and more like a bunch of twats fighting out of boredom

Re: Tottenham eh...

Posted: Sun Aug 07, 2011 9:36 am
by drokkr

Re: Tottenham eh...

Posted: Sun Aug 07, 2011 10:02 am
by Pedro Sánchez
Looting an Aldi :a:
Burning it down :W:

Re: Tottenham eh...

Posted: Sun Aug 07, 2011 11:09 am
by magma
volcanogeorge wrote:Doubt a bloke saying that he feels unsafe would call it tasty, stranger things have happened though.
"Tasty" is pretty commonly used in London for when something kicks off... it's not a positive term. It's a "If I stay, I'd better be ready to fight, otherwise I'm fucking oooooffffff to watch from a safe distance" term.

Re: Tottenham eh...

Posted: Sun Aug 07, 2011 11:10 am
by soul dead
if you were there you'd loot though might as well lol