A parliamentary report that states that there was no evidence of “two -level police surveillance” in response to last year’s protests and riots on Southport’s children’s murders has been criticized as “absurd” by commentators.
On Monday, the Interior Affairs Committee of the Chamber of the Commons published a report that the police respond to the disturbances after the murder of three young people at a dance party by Taylor Swift for an unproven teenager was a teenager.
The anger on the massive stabbing resulted in 246 protests and counter-protesters throughout the United Kingdom, according to the report, 88 or that it was found that it was “significant.” To date, it has 1,804 trials and 1,072 positions on disturbances, including some to simply publish on social networks.
Due to the extraordinary number of judges, the Government also embarked on a scheme to free prison criminals to make space in the superpopulated prisons of Great Britain to the house convicted of the roots.
The report, not finding evidence of bias, said by Sky News: “Those who participated in the disorder were not monitored with more force because their alleged political views, but because they were atrocious missiles, assaulting police officers and committing fires caused.
“It was shameful to see comments without foundation on the ‘two -level surveillance’ undermining the efforts of police officers who served bravely in the face of violence.”
The president of the Committee, the conservative deputy Dame Karen Bradley, said: “There is a difference in how the police must deal with violence and how they deal with peaceful protests.
“This needs to recognize commentators who spread too much claims of ‘two -level surveillance.’ The organized disorder is with a robust response; any implicit equivalence with non -violent planned protests is simply incorrect.”
However, despite the MP team attempt to compare Southport’s disturbances with non -violent protests, the ethers have long pointed to disparities with other disturbances, including subdives that preceded Southport Rackdown for their hills, Ashshare Harehhals, Ashsharehararehills, Ashshshsharehararehar Harehhandhs, Ashshhandhshs, Ashshills. Yorkshire, by members of the Romani community.
Duration The outbreak of violence, the police was accused of “retiring” from the Romani river disturbances after being attacked, while a two -story bus was burned, a police car was overwhelmed and fires were fixed.
Others, such as the reform leader UK Nigel Farage, have highlighted the opposition leader and current Prime Minister Sir Kier Starmer kneeling in his parliamentary office in solidarity with the Black Lives Matter rioters in 2020.
Farage also previously compared the response to Southport’s riots with those who left in the Muslim community in Manchester, a week before, after a deceptively edited video that was awaited to show the Migh airport.
The head of the Reforma said that the soft police and government approach, as well as the months they touch, accuse Muslim men accused of being involved in the assaults on airport police officers, demonstrated justice “of two levels” in Great Britain.
This evaluation was shared by Lord Goldsmith, who commented at the time of repression of Southport’s riots than the government’s response “could not contrast more clearly with [previous] Manchester reactions Riere where violent thugs demanded instant justice ‘or otherwise’ [and] Where the ministers are the other way around to explain that they “understood” anger. “
Parliament’s Monday report was widely criticized on social networks. Talktv host Kevin O’Sullivan saying: “Absurd parliamentarians conclude that there were no evidence of two -level surveillance in Southport. Eh? This is simply stupid, the deliberate denial of obvious truth.”
Social Policy Analyst Dr. Rakib Ehsan said GB’s news that the report was trying to “gaslight” to the public, saying: “To say that two -level surveillance is a child of the myth is very disrespectful.”
“This is a shameful, greatly disappointing report. The problem of two -level surveillance should be treated with maximum seriousness, and that [should] Include professional research that seeks it, “he added.
For his part, Nigel Farage said: “I do not accept the findings of the report at all. Not only two -level surveillance, but also two -level justice.
“There are people who say very unpleasant things in the heat of the moment on Facebook that go to prison very, very fast, others on the other side of the argument, we will say, not be treated in the same way.
“Think a few weeks before we had the attacks of Manchester airport and those prosecution took many months to arrive.”