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2022 Leicester unrest

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

2022 Leicester unrest
Date28 August 2022 – 24 September 2022
Location
Caused byCricket match brawls
Anti-Hindu sentiment[1][2]
MethodsFighting, vandalism
Parties
Casualties
Injuries25 police officers
Arrested47

In August and September 2022, Leicester, England, saw a period of religious and ethnic tension between predominately British Hindus and British Muslims of South Asian origin. The unrest saw rioting, protest marches, sloganeering and ethnic violence between the two populations. It was also preceded by social media campaigning, misinformation and hate propaganda. Muslim apprehensions of what they alleged as "Hindutva fascism" entering their neighbourhoods was evidently the main driver behind the unrest,[1][2] Subsequent independent investigations found Hindu places of worship were desecerated,[3] and Hindu men specifically targeted by mobs. Muslim community leaders and analysts point to the Indian celebrations following the India–Pakistan 2022 Asia Cup match on 28 August as a catalyst, which saw a reaction from Pakistani fans.[4]

Background

Map of Leicester showing some of the localities and suburbs

Like most British cities, Leicester has significant and growing South Asian British populations. Leicester is known for its ethnic diversity, and is one of three cities in England where the White British population are a minority. Since the end of the Second World War, the city has seen successive waves of migration, with immigrants from the Indian sub-continent arriving in the 1960s, followed by Asians arriving from Kenya and Uganda in the early 1970s.[5] By 2021, Leicester's population was 33% Muslim and 25% Hindu.[6]

Muslims, predominantly working class, live in eastern Leicester (LE5 postcode), with particular concentration in the Spinney Hills and North Evington neighbourhoods.[7][8] Hindus predominantly live in north Leicester (LE4 postcode), mainly in the Belgrave area.[9]

The ‘spatial polarization’ developed since the 1970s, with the Belgrave area (a former working class neighbourhood) becoming home to affluent Indian-origin East African Hindus who started 'denying access' to the 'sub-continental' Muslims from Highfields, who were mostly from peasant backgrounds. The two mosques in the Belgrave area in 1995 were run by Gujarati Muslims that came from East Africa.[10][11]

Scholar Ayesha Siddiqa points out the growing extremism among British Muslims, owing to several factors such as the Tory governments encouraging communal education since the 1990s, the British welcome given to Muslim clergy as a partner in the Afghan wars, and the geopolitical developments that brought various extremist ideologies to congregate in Britain. The growing economic disparity between Hindu and Muslim communities had also been a cause for resentment and anxiety among the Muslims.[12] The Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) that came to power in India, along with prime minister Narendra Modi, is expected to have had high levels of support among the Hindus in UK.[13]

The British party politics is seen to have caused polarisation between the two communities, with Muslims siding with the Labour Party and Hindus siding with the Conservative Party. The 2019 general election was not only a "Brexit and NHS election", but also a "Kashmir election" according to The Guardian columnist Sunny Hundal. This was a reference to the Modi Government's decisive action in the complete integration of Kashmir into India in 2019, and the corresponding backlash in Pakistan. These developments had reactions in British Hindu and Muslim communities.[14] Rutgers University's Network Contagion Research Institute (NCRI), which has investigated the online trends between 2019 and 2022, noted a wide dispersion of anti-Hindu and anti-India slurs and tropes during this period.[15] Anti-Hindu memes accompanied by pejoratives such as "pajeet" (slur for Indian or Hindu), "streetshitter", "poojeet", "scamming" (dishonest), "mong" (unintelligent) etc. have been doing the rounds depicting Hindus as dirty, Islamophobic and barbaric.[16]

Locally in East Leicester, a large batch of Hindu immigrants belonging to Daman and Diu,[note 1] carrying Portuguese passports, are said to have arrived in Leicester in the recent years, before Brexit. They settled in the LE5 postcode area, which was otherwise predominantly Muslim.[17][18][note 2] The celebration of Hindu festivals and public consumption of alcohol by the new arrivals were considered disruptive by Muslims living in the area.[20] Leicester East MP Claudia Webbe stated that friction between the two communities had been "simmering for months".[21]

At least one major incident of communitarian violence has been reported from May, where it was alleged that a Muslim man was surrounded by around 25–30 masked men, and beaten with bats and poles to such an extent that he was hospitalised. The incident was reported to the police, but the Muslim community felt that the police were failing to act, with the result that the perpetrators were still at large and continuing to harass the Muslim community. The Muslim community labelled these perpetrators "Hindutva RSS thugs" and believed that they were from among the recent arrivals from India.[22][23][note 3] According to Majid Freeman, a self described "former aid worker and a key social media influencer", who has been previously known to make false allegations of Quran burning[25] and for supporting the terrorist group ISIL [26] on online forums, "Muslims had made their presence known in the streets" by August and the "troublemakers had disappeared".[27]

Initial clashes

Cricket match brawl

Melton Road in the Belgrave area

After the 28 August India–Pakistan Asia Cup cricket match, which India won, Indian cricket fans poured onto streets in the Belgrave area to celebrate, waving Indian flags, honking car horns and dancing to dhols. An altercation eventually occurred at the corner of the Shaftsbury Avenue and Melton road. According to a local business owner, "someone anti-India" stamped on an Indian flag, and the Indian fans thought he was a Pakistani and got infuriated.[28] A video of this incident is available and the man is reported to be a Sikh.[29] The altercation developed into a brawl, a video clip of which went viral on social media the next day. The clip shows a group of India fans shouting "Pakistan murdabad"[note 4] and walking to the clash site. A police officer is seen arresting a man, and another group is seen beating up a man, and ripping off his t-shirt.[29]

The incident eventually led to eight arrests, including one man arrested at the scene for assaulting an emergency worker.[33]

Build-up

The following day a twitter user with handle "tragicBud", whose user description included the phrase “fuck them pajeets” (anti-Hindu slur), uploaded the video clip of the brawl, along with an interpretation claiming "Nazi" and "Hindutva" objectives of the participants. This was the beginning of "malicious narratives", as the NCRI researchers described it, interpreting an ordinary cricket match brawl as a "Nazi-like Hindutva" ideology. It led to a steady escalation of tensions in Leicester.[29] A slogan of "death to Muslims" was also alleged to have been raised, but the Leicester police dismissed the claim, not finding any verifiable evidence for it.[34][35]

The video clip uploaded by "tragicBud" was widely shared on social media networks, amplified by several British conservative participants.[34] Sunny Hundal's forwarding comment, "extreme Hindutva groups go on the rampage in Leicester", gave journalistic respectability to the anti-Hindutva narrative.[28] The Muslim news site "5Pillars UK" announced that Muslim residents of Leicester were being attacked. British comedian Guz Khan, with 100,000 followers on twitter, called on "mandem" (UK slang for "gang") to sort out the "Modi weirdos".[34] Other reputed organisations that address Islamophobic incidents also joined in, interpreting the video clip as representing Islamophobia. The original tweet of tragicBud received 2,037 retweets and the video clip 305,000 views.[29][note 5]

Further clashes

Green Lane Road in East Leicester

Between 4-6 September, anti-Hindu attacks began to be reported from Leicester. On 4 September, the date of another India–Pakistan match which Pakistan won, a Hindu home celebrating Ganesh Chaturdhi (a Hindu religious festival) was allegedly attacked, eggs were thrown into the house, a Hindu male was attempted to be stabbed, and his aunt was punched in the nose.[39][40][note 6] The next day, there were report of British Pakistani mobs targeting Hindu neighbourhoods, some with weapons, chanting "Modi kutta, Hindustan murdabad" ("Modi dog, Death to India").[39] Videos circulated of gangs roaming through the streets and police trying to block them. Hindus started feeling scared in their homes and writing to the local MPs for help.[42][32]

On 5 September, there was a meeting about the incidents attended by over 300 people along with police representatives. After the meeting, a group of Muslims conducted a march through Leicester to show their "presence". It was reported that clashes and stand-offs with the police lasted till 11 pm.[41]

On 6 September, Leicester Police were authorised to use dispersal (Sections 34 and 35) and stop-and-search (Section 60) powers.[43] They continued to patrol the areas, but further disturbances also continued.[32] By 11 September, 19 people had been arrested for incidents in East Leicester, one of them for threats to kill.[33]

The Muslim social media accounts continued to propagate misinformation and the branding of Leicester Hindus as "RSS Hindutva thugs". A Muslim author Riaz Khan, with 25,000 followers, linked the incident from May to the cricket match brawl and described the participants of the latter as the same "thugs".[23] Another user with 600,000 subscribers, advised the India fans in the UK to "humble themselves" because the Pakistani gangs over here "go a bit nuts".[23] The most virulent misinformation came from Majid Freeman, who claimed that there was a kidnap attempt of a Muslim school girl by three Hindu men. He claimed that he had spoken to the girl's family and that the police had "confirmed" it.[44] Leicester city police denied the claim quite emphatically.[45] Also related was a Majid Freeman post, showing a picture of a man standing in front of a car, and claiming that he was an "RSS man" targeting Muslims, Sikhs, women and children.

A British Pakistani influencer called "Dutch Raja" (Norman Khan from Birmingham),[46] who had 150,000 followers, posted the picture along with a poll asking, "Shall we go Saturday [to] teach these guys a lesson?"; 95% of the respondents voted yes. Thus, Saturday the 17th April was set as the date for Muslim mobilisation.[47][48]

The Hindus in East Leicester that were targeted as "RSS or BJP" men started fearing for their well-being. Some temporarily relocated to other locations; others refrained from going out for fear of being attacked. Some reported receiving stab wounds from the attacks during 4–6 September. One victim's mother told a TV reporter that she had experienced better Hindu–Muslim relations in Daman and Diu in India than she was finding in Leicester.[48][49]

Weekend disorder

Belgrave Road, also called the "Golden Mile"

The weekend 17–19 September, which was reserved for the funeral of Queen Elizabeth II, witnessed a large number of incidents which were described by the British press as "violent disorder".[50]

Saturday, 17 September, began with a peace march organised by Hindus to show solidarity with the victims of the violence in the preceding weeks. The march began on Belgrave Road (which continues on to Melton Road) and followed on to Green Lane Road in East Leicester. The march is said to have been conducted on foot paths, and was overseen by the local police.[51] Despite it being a supervised march, Muslims in East Leicester said they were intimidated and felt threatened.[52][53][54]

According to the police, a second "unplanned protest" was formed after this, by "groups of young men" (apparently Hindus, numbering about 200), proceeding towards Highfields.[55] According to Leicester Mercury, "an opposing group also gathered".[56] Police said it numbered 600–700 men (apparently Muslims). The police scrambled about 100 officers to keep the two groups apart.[57] Both the sides shouted slogans, with British Hindus shouting "Jai Shri Ram" ("Hail Lord Ram") and "Vande Mataram" (patriotic slogan for India), and British Muslims shouting "Allah-o-Akbar" ("God is Great").[58][59] Social media influencers as well as the mainstream press, including The Spectator, The Guardian and Al Jazeera, referenced only the Hindu protesters and emphasised "Jai Shri Ram" as possible evidence of Hindutva extremism.[60][61][62][63]

Uppingham Road, bordering North Evington

According to The Times of India, the trigger for these events was a poster created in Birmingham (following on from Dutch Raja's post), calling on Birmingham Muslims to participate in a protest in Leicester.[64] The Hindus were angered by the poster as well as the fake social media claims regarding a kidnapping attempt by Hindu youth. They marched down the Belgrave Road in protest.[58] The two sides faced off somewhere on Belgrave Road, with the police trying to keep them apart.[58] The police issued a dispersal order at some point, which caused the crowds to move to other locations. A number of breakout incidents then occurred, continuing through the night, with calm being restored only the next morning.[65][50] Videos shared on social media showed various violent incidents, a temple flag being pulled down from a Shiva temple, cars being smashed up and turned over, a man at a vegetable stall being beaten up, and police trying to break up fights involving poles, rods, knives and wooden pieces.[58]

On Sunday, 18 September, the police got ready for handling further disturbances by recalling officers from Queen's funeral duties in London.[66] An unauthorised protest was held by Muslims on this day, which is said to have been widely advertised on WhatsApp.[67] Police oversaw the march, which apparently concluded without any incident.[68] An Islamist preacher named Mohammed Hijab from London arrived in Leicester. He posted videos of himself inciting Muslims with anti-Hindu rhetoric and asking them to retaliate. The men agreed and chanted "Allah-o-Akbar".[69] According to reports, the police dispersed their march, but once again, disorder broke out at other locations, this time in North Evington.[67] Police put in place a temporary police cordon and arrested 15 people.[56][68]

On the whole, 47 people were arrested since the beginning of 28 August. Of these 11 people were reported to be from outside Leicester, one from Market Harborough, eight from Birmingham and two from London.[45]

Birmingham aftermath

Tensions continued into the following week, with the unrest spreading from Leicester to the Birmingham area on Tuesday 20 September. Video footage showed nearly 200 Muslim men attempt to surround the Durga Bhawan Temple in Smethwick, a town where almost one-in-four residents are Asian, chanting "Allahu Akbar" in voicing their anger at the temple inviting the controversial Hindutva proponent, Sadhvi Rithambara, as a guest speaker,[70] with one video showing a masked man with a Birmingham accent say "RSS speakers are not welcome in Birmingham, not welcome anywhere in the UK. None of your speakers, any of the hate speakers, we are going to turn up for all of them...we've got no issues with British Hindus, we grew up with them, we know all of them. But RSS, you'll be met by us every single time".[71]

Reactions

The surge in violence took many by surprise, and senior representatives of Leicester's Muslim and Hindu communities urged calm. On Tuesday 20 September, President of the ISKCON Leicester Hindu Temple, Pradip Gajjar, said he was "saddened and heartbroken to see the eruption of tension and violence."[72]

Labour MP Jonathan Ashworth critiqued the events as "shocking scenes of unacceptable incidents of violence," and that all "are united in calling for calm, peace and harmony."

Leicester East MP Claudia Webbe has called for cooler heads to prevail, urging strengthened "dialogue to repair community relations", while warning the violence "has the potential to spread to other areas...and has the potential to spread across the country".[73]

Rob Nixon, Acting Chief Police Constable for Leicestershire, has noted the investigation into the unrest will run for "several months" and that "the traditional community leaders, partners […] having a really detailed dialogue about some of these tensions, how we've got to where we are, and how we resolve them and take the issues forward."

Studies

The Network Contagion Research Institute (NCRI) associated with the Rutgers University analysed the social media traffic during the clashes and reported that malicious narratives played an essential role in instigating the attacks.[74]

A report commissioned by the Henry Jackson Society, which has been critiqued as having an anti-Muslim agenda along with being regarded as a British neo-conservative think tank, claimed that the social media instigators were "Islamist radicals". It named the alleged influencers and provided their background.[75][76][77][78][79][80]

Delhi-based Centre for Democracy, Pluralism and Human Rights (CDPHR) produced a fact-finding report and zeroed in on the issue of "ethnic enclaves" in Leicester. It said that different religious groups were living in ethnic enclaves, with some ethnicities more "clubbed up" in some spaces more than others. The report claims that the ethnic enclaves gave rise to territorial tensions and localised majoritarianism. Their report was launched in the UK House of Commons.[81]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ From the published accounts, it becomes clear that these immigrants included some Christians and possibly Jews as well.
  2. ^ Daman and Diu are former Portuguese colonies in the Gujarat region of India. These immigrants were entitled to Portuguese passports and decided to move to Britain before the Brexit.[19]
  3. ^ The police issued statement asserting that the incident continued to be under investigation in September. It was not until November that they made seven arrests in connection with this incident.[24]
  4. ^ The expression literally means "death to Pakistan", but as a slogan it would be interpreted as "down with Pakistan" in the subcontinent.[30][31] Moreover, in the context of a cricket match, the country names India and Pakistan would be used as references to the respective teams rather than the countries. However, social media posts in the following days as well as media reports interpreted the slogan as "death to Pakistan".[29][4][32]
  5. ^ Even mainstream news organisations described the contents of the video as "ugly hostility"[36] or "ugly scenes".[32] Leicester Police claimed the videos showed "racist and hateful chanting",[37] and said they were treating it as a "hate crime".[28] Chris Blackburn, who co-authored an investigative report on the riots, pointed out that Leicester was no stranger to "cricket hooliganism", as very similar mob violence occurred after an India–Pakistan cricket match in 2017.[38]
  6. ^ The coverage of this incident and others in the following days came from INSIGHT UK, a British Hindu and Indian organisation, often backed by video evidence. It claimed, "Amongst many incidents a Hindu home celebrating #GaneshChaturthi was attacked. Eggs were thrown into the house, attempted knifing of a young Hindu male and his aunt was punched on the nose when she came to save him."[39] Muslim groups made a counter-allegation that a Muslim youth was attacked on the grounds of an egg-throwing accusation. This was said to have been a second attack after the May incident, and later used in the social media campaigning.[41]

References

  1. ^ a b NCRI, Anti-Hindu Disinformation (2022).
  2. ^ a b Samant & Blackburn, Fact Finding Report on Leicester Violence (2023).
  3. ^ UK, INSIGHT (16 September 2023). "One year on: Seeking justice for Hindu victims of the Leicester violence". INSIGHT UK. Retrieved 6 February 2024.
  4. ^ a b Connolly, John (18 September 2022). "Why is violence breaking out in Leicester?". Spectator.
  5. ^ "Around Leicester - Leicester's Ugandan Asian success story". BBC News. Retrieved 21 September 2022.
  6. ^ Cartwright, Edward (14 March 2023). "Census 2021 – Religion in Leicester". East Midlands Economic Data Repository (EMEDR). De Montfort University.
  7. ^ "Muslims in Leicester". Open Society Foundation. Retrieved 21 September 2022.
  8. ^ Samant & Blackburn, Fact Finding Report on Leicester Violence (2023), pp. 1, 5 (Figure 2), 7.
  9. ^ Samant & Blackburn, Fact Finding Report on Leicester Violence (2023), pp. 5 (Figure 3), 7.
  10. ^ McLoughlin, Discrepant Representations of Multi-Asian Leicester (2014).
  11. ^ Andrews, A., ‘A history of South Asian migration into Leicester: an essay on Hindu/Muslim segregation’, in Jewson, N. (ed.), Migration Processes and Ethnic Divisions (Leicester: The Centre for Urban History and The Ethnicity Research Centre, University of Leicester, 1995)
  12. ^ Ayesha Siddiqa, Leicester fire a result of orthodox Muslim clergy of ’90s vs new communal Hindu migrants, The Print, 24 September 2022.
  13. ^ Littlewood, Hindu-Muslim civil unrest in Leicester (2022), p. 9.
  14. ^ Hundal, After the worst election campaign in memory, Britain's religious minorities must unite, New Statesman, 12 December 2019.
  15. ^ NCRI, Anti-Hindu Disinformation (2022), see, for example, Figures 2 and 3.
  16. ^ NCRI, Anti-Hindu Disinformation (2022), p. 9.
  17. ^ NCRI, Cyber Social Swarming (2022), p. 2.
  18. ^ Littlewood, Hindu-Muslim civil unrest in Leicester (2022), p. 5.
  19. ^ William Wallis, Leicester’s communal violence reverberates across continents, Financial Times, 29 September 2022.
  20. ^ Littlewood, Hindu-Muslim civil unrest in Leicester (2022), p. 4.
  21. ^ Vernalls, Richard (20 September 2022). "Leicester tensions have been simmering for 'months' says city MP". Yahoo News.
  22. ^ Majid Freeman, What caused the recent community tension in Leicester?, 5Pillars UK, 12 September 2022; Roshan Muhammed Salih, 'Hindutva gangs' and anti-Muslim violence in Leicester, 5Pillars, via YouTube, 9 September 2022.
  23. ^ a b c NCRI, Cyber Social Swarming (2022), p. 23.
  24. ^ Leicester disorder: Seven more arrests over city unrest, BBC News, 4 November 2022.
  25. ^ NCRI, Rutgers University (10 November 2022). "Cyber Social Swarming Precedes Real World Riots in Leicester: How Social Media Became a Weapon for Violence" (PDF).
  26. ^ "Friend of murdered hostage Alan Henning defends Isil online". The Telegraph. 16 November 2014. Retrieved 7 February 2024.
  27. ^ Littlewood, Hindu-Muslim civil unrest in Leicester (2022), p. 6.
  28. ^ a b c Canton, Naomi (1 September 2022). "Hate crime probe into Leicester violence following India-Pak Asia Cup cricket match". The Times of India. ProQuest 2708452157.
  29. ^ a b c d e NCRI, Cyber Social Swarming (2022), p. 3.
  30. ^ Flashback: Forging ahead for democracy, Dawn, 31 March 2012.
  31. ^ Out on Bail, Riots-Accused Held for Beating Man, Forcing Him to Chant 'Pakistan Murdabad', The Wire, 25 March 2021.
  32. ^ a b c d Singh, Hardeep (13 September 2022). "Leicester: multiculturalism turns violent". Spiked. On [6 September], an emergency meeting was held between representatives of Leicester's Hindu and Muslim communities. Since then, police patrols have continued in the areas affected, but further disturbances are still being reported.
  33. ^ a b East Leicester disorder leads to 27 arrests, BBC News, 16 September 2022.
  34. ^ a b c NCRI, Cyber Social Swarming (2022), p. 21.
  35. ^ Leicester Hindu - Muslim violence: 17 arrested in UK; here's what we know so far, The Free Press Journal, 19 September 2022.
  36. ^ Violence flares during India v Pakistan cricket street celebrations in Belgrave, Leicester, Leicester Mercury, 30 Aug 2022.
  37. ^ Amy Phipps, Arrest after crowds gather in Leicester following cricket match, BBC News, 31 August 2022.
  38. ^ Chris Blackburn, 'India’s press are still claiming a Hindutva connection to the Leicester mobs when there is none', Global Order, 7 October 2022.
  39. ^ a b c NCRI, Cyber Social Swarming (2022), p. 22.
  40. ^ Samant & Blackburn, Fact Finding Report on Leicester Violence (2023), p. 22.
  41. ^ a b Gangs of Hindu youths are ‘terrorising Muslims in Leicester’, 5Pillars UK, 6 September 2022.
  42. ^ Canton, Naomi (8 September 2022). "'Pakistan-origin youths' target Hindu areas in Leicester". The Times of India. ProQuest 2711040258. In one video a PIO [Indian origin] family can be heard terrified in their homes watching the violence from their window as they take a video of the gangs wandering around parked cars shouting with weapons in hand. ... Members of the PIO community are now writing to their local MPs expressing concern.
  43. ^ Leicester disorder: Dozens stopped and searched as police granted extra powers, BBC News, 7 September 2022.
  44. ^ NCRI, Cyber Social Swarming (2022), p. 24.
  45. ^ a b Reha Kansara, Abdirahim Saeed, Did misinformation fan the flames in Leicester?, BBC News, 22 September 2022
  46. ^ Littlewood, Hindu-Muslim civil unrest in Leicester (2022), p. 21.
  47. ^ NCRI, Cyber Social Swarming (2022), pp. 24–25.
  48. ^ a b Littlewood, Hindu-Muslim civil unrest in Leicester (2022), pp. 24–25.
  49. ^ Darshna Soni, Leicester mayor orders inquiry into violent unrest, Channel 4 News, 14 October 2022.
  50. ^ a b Caroline Lowbridge, James Lynn, Dan Martin, Large-scale disorder breaks out in Leicester, BBC News, 18 September 2022.
  51. ^ Samant & Blackburn, Fact Finding Report on Leicester Violence (2023), p. 24.
  52. ^ Jahangir Akbar, Hindutva thugs and poor policing created chaos in Leicester on Saturday, 5Pillars UK, 18 September 2022. "Their presence whilst masked with balaclavas and chanting was unruly, intimidating and threatening. The mob disturbed the peace, created anxiety and caused significant, unneeded inconvenience in an already emotionally-charged situation."
  53. ^ Caroline Lowbridge, James Lynn, Dan Martin, Large-scale disorder breaks out in Leicester, BBC News, 18 September 2022. "A resident from Green Lane Road said what she witnessed on Saturday evening was "very intimidating". "The whole situation seemed really out of control," she said. "The police were there but it didn't seem like they had a great handle on things."
  54. ^ Nimo Omer, Wednesday briefing: What's behind the violent clashes in Leicester, The Guardian, 21 September 2022. 'Eyewitnesses claimed a group of Hindu men marched through Green Lane Road, where there are several Muslim-owned businesses. Residents said they heard the group chanting “Jai Shri Ram”, a holy Hindu chant that translates as “hail Lord Ram”.'
  55. ^ Adam Moss, What led to the ugly scenes of violence and disorder in Leicester?, Leicester Mercury, 19 September 2022. "A number of calls came in Leicestershire Police reporting around 200 people had gathered in the east of the city for an unauthorised protest. All local officers available were scrambled to the scene immediately and tried to engage with those who had gathered, while extra police resources were drafted in."
  56. ^ a b Paige Ingram, Police arrest 15 people following disorder in areas of East Leicester, Leicester Mercury, 19 September 2022.
  57. ^ Will Jefford, Greig Watson, Caroline Lowbridge, Leicester disorder: Second man sentenced cites social media influence, BBC News, 20 September 2022.
  58. ^ a b c d Naomi Canton, Temple targeted, cops hit in East Leicester flare-up, Times of India, 19 September 2022.
  59. ^ Littlewood, Hindu-Muslim civil unrest in Leicester (2022), p. 17.
  60. ^ Littlewood, Hindu-Muslim civil unrest in Leicester (2022), p. 17: "Influencers asserted that ‘Jai Shri Ram’ was indicative of extremism which was reflected in mainstream press putting emphasis on the chanting of Jai Shri Ram as possible evidence of extremism.".
  61. ^ Connolly, John (18 September 2022). "Why is violence breaking out in Leicester?". The Spectator. On Saturday a large group of Hindu men protested in the city, with some shouting 'Jai Shri Ram' – a slogan which has increasingly been used by Hindu nationalists in India.
  62. ^ Aina J. Khan; Mark Brown (18 September 2022), "Police call for calm after 'serious disorder' breaks out in Leicester", The Guardian, archived from the original on 18 September 2022, ["Jai Shri Ram"] is a chant that has recently become synonymous with anti-Muslim violence in India, where India's prime minister, Narendra Modi, is under increasing scrutiny for the treatment of minorities, including Muslims in the country.
  63. ^ "Leicester: Call for calm after Hindu-Muslim unrest in UK city", Al Jazeera, 20 September 2022 (Headlined under "Islamophobia") "On Saturday night, a crowd of about 200 Hindu men marched in the city, with some shouting – “Jai Shri Ram” (Hail Lord Ram) – a war cry for far-right Hindus in India. Soon Muslims came out on the streets leading to scuffles."
  64. ^ Naomi Canton, Temple targeted, cops hit in East Leicester flare-up, Times of India, 19 September 2022. 'The poster says: "We going to land in Lesta [to] show these RSS Hindutva extremist not to mess with our Muslim and Sikh women, children and elderly (sic)."'
  65. ^ Shannen Headley, Police refute claims they supported protest which reignited east Leicester violence, Leicester Mercury, 21 September 2022.
  66. ^ Adam Moss, Police diverted from Queen's funeral to deal with tensions in Leicester, Leicester Mercury, 19 September 2022.
  67. ^ a b Adam Moss, What led to the ugly scenes of violence and disorder in Leicester?, Leicester Mercury, 19 September 2022.
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External links

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