Far-right groups plan to target homes in attack on lawyers, police told

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Police have been warned that some homes may be attacked on Wednesday as far-right activists plan to target migrant-friendly law offices that are based at residential addresses, in an escalation of the riots gripping the UK.

Authorities are braced for a significant increase in violence after a message shared across far-right activist groups listed 36 targets that included immigration centres, law offices specialising in helping migrants, and refugee shelters.

The Home Office has circulated the list, seen by the Financial Times, to police forces after identifying residential houses among the locations.

Some of the targets may represent individual solicitors working out of residential properties, and one of the addresses sits between a bridal shop and an opticians, according to one person briefed on the situation.

Extra policing support has been offered to at least some of the targeted locations on the list, while several centres have temporarily closed their offices in response to the threat.

Sir Keir Starmer convened a second Cobra crisis response meeting in as many days on Tuesday, as police braced for an eighth night of violence and further trouble on Wednesday sparked by the Southport mass stabbing last week.

Earlier on Tuesday the prime minister called an emergency Cabinet meeting, where he vowed to take “all necessary action” to end unrest that has spread across England and Northern Ireland in the past week.

The Metropolitan police warned that the country was facing “one of the worst spates of violent disorder in the last decade”. Deputy Assistant Commissioner Andy Valentine, who is in charge of the policing operation, declared the unrest a “national critical incident” and vowed that Britain’s biggest force would “do everything in our power to protect London and its communities”.

The Home Office said: “We utterly condemn the recent public disorder targeting asylum seekers, immigration lawyers, our staff and buildings.

“Anyone taking part in this criminal activity, online or on our streets, will face the full force of the law.”

Riot police officers stand outside the damaged Holiday Inn Express Hotel in Rotherham © Christopher Furlong/Getty Images

Brian Booth, acting national deputy chair of the Police Federation of England and Wales (PFEW), which represents officers, said police needed more resources to buy anti-riot gear to help protect officers.

Rubber bullets, he said, cost about £25 a round and £1,000 a year to train an officer in their use before deployment. But injured officers, especially those who are forced into retirement, ultimately cost far more, he said.  

“They do come at a cost, but they are a great deterrent,” Booth said. 

Booth said rubber bullets and CS tear gas canisters should be an option for officers in the worst violence, but the “necessary equipment” might also include water cannons, which have never been used in England.

On rubber bullets, Booth said: “They used them in Northern Ireland the other day. If they are using them there, why are we not using them on the mainland to keep our officers safe.” 

More than 100 officers have been injured, some seriously, in the past week, a figure that could become higher by Wednesday when the federation expects to have received the latest information from branches around the country.

The Crown Prosecution Service, the public prosecutor for England and Wales, meanwhile confirmed that the first charge of using threatening words or behaviour to stir up racial hatred online had been made in relation to the recent violent disorder.

A 28-year-old man from Leeds indicated a plea of guilty to the charge, which related to a series of Facebook posts linked to the disorder.

Justice minister Heidi Alexander told LBC that courts could begin sitting “through the evening, the night, at weekends” in order to expedite the prosecution of rioters.

Stephen Parkinson, director of public prosecutions, told the BBC that prosecutors were “willing to look at terrorism offences” and said he was “aware of at least one instance where that is happening”.

Ahead of demonstrations planned for Wednesday, hotels housing asylum seekers in Rotherham and Tamworth — which were attacked over the weekend — have been evacuated.

People look out from a window
People look out from a window at the Holiday Inn in Manvers, South Yorkshire, which is being used as an asylum hotel © Christopher Furlong/Getty Images

Enver Solomon, chief executive of the Refugee Council charity, urged the authorities to “take every step to ensure all asylum accommodation” remained safe from “appalling attacks”. He also called for an urgent review to examine how rioters were able to get into the Rotherham hotel to prevent a repeat episode.

As the disorder enters its second week, police officers have been told to cancel rest days, restrict their leave and work longer hours in order to respond to often unpredictable outbursts of violence.

Former chief inspector of constabulary Sir Tom Winsor warned that forces were “already stretched” and that day-to-day policing would “suffer” as a result of the riots.

“When these officers are deployed in dealing with riots then they’re not investigating burglaries or violence or all the other things police have to do,” he told the BBC.

Refugee rights activists are concerned that police resources will be spread too thinly and asylum seekers remain under serious threat.

“All hotels that have been targeted should immediately be evacuated,” said Maddie Harris, director and founder of the Humans for Rights Network, a charity supporting refugees. “The government needs to map where is likely to be next and come up with a plan to keep people safe.”

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