Clean-up after ‘thuggery and violence’- QHN


BBC Man in track suit and cap crouching down and woman on pavement with a brush sweeping glass into a bin liner.BBC

Shop windows in Sunderland were smashed and a Citizens Advice office was set on fire

A clean-up operation is under way after a night of violence during which three police officers were hospitalised and eight people arrested.

Beer cans and bricks were thrown at riot police outside a mosque in Sunderland and a Citizens Advice office was torched.

North East Mayor Kim McGuinness said she was appalled by the “thuggery” and attacks on police.

Friday’s chaotic evening was the latest outbreak of rioting across England following the killing of three young girls in Southport on Monday.

During the unrest the window of Sunderland Central Police Office was smashed in and insulation pulled down.

The neighbouring Citizens Advice branch, on Waterloo Place in the city centre, was set on fire. Locals said the air was still filled with smoke on Saturday morning.

Rioters also headed to a mosque on St Mark’s Road, a mile from where the fire was set.

Meanwhile, Northumbria Police said two of the three officers injured by crowds throwing beer cans and bricks, were still in hospital.

Sunderland Central Police Office with its window smashed in an insulation strewn on the ground

A police office was badly damaged and a neighbouring Citizens Advice branch set on fire

Asked on BBC Breakfast whether there was any prior knowledge of events or protests planned for Sunderland, Ms McGuinness said: “We saw that these far-right groups were advertising what they called a peaceful protest yesterday in Sunderland.

“That was anything but peaceful.

“It was out and out crime and violence and the police response was strong, protecting a mosque and really having to stand up to very sustained crime and violence from these thugs.”

A group of people with brushes preparing to clean up the streets after disorder. A man in a yellow jacket with the logo Industrial Cleaning Division is standing in front of them.

Volunteers joined council staff in Sunderland city centre on Saturday morning

Posting on X, the city council said: “We are appalled by the events that have unfolded.

“Sunderland is known for being a warm and friendly place, the events of tonight are not a reflection of this proud city and its people.

“We will come together, as we always do, to restore calm for our communities.”

The mayor added: “Things like this really affect the way that local people feel, but the clean-up overnight from Sunderland Council has clearly been absolutely massive.

“And what I’m really heartened by, alongside the thousands of people contacting me saying ‘this is not what we’re about, we’re about that love and that compassion’, is the fact that people in Sunderland are going to come together this morning and help with that clean up.

“And I think that really shows the true spirit of what we are as the North East and as Sunderland.”

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