By Stefano
Ambrogi and
Mohammad Abbas
LONDON
(Reuters) - Rioting and looting spread across London on
Monday as hooded youths set buildings and cars ablaze, smashed shop windows and
hurled bottles and stones at police in a third night of violence in Britain's
worst unrest in decades.
Prime Minister David Cameron
cut short his holiday to fly home to tackle the violence, which appeared to be
led by youths alienated by years of underemployment which left them feeling
marginalized even before the economic downturn.
"It's been building up
for years. All it needed was a spark," said E. Nan, a young man in a
baseball cap surrounded by other youths in Hackney in east London. "We
ain't got no jobs, no money ... We heard that other people were getting things
for free, so why not us?"
The violence erupted late on
Saturday in London's northern Tottenham district when a peaceful protest over
the police shooting of a suspect two days earlier turned violent.
By Monday, the violence had
spread to parts of the south of the city, including Clapham Junction, one of
London's busiest railway junctions, Woolwich in the capital's southeast and the
Ealing area of west London.
Attackers also smashed shops
and looted property in the city of Birmingham in central England, police said,
in the first sign of the riots spreading beyond the capital.
In Hackney, a multi-ethnic
area in east London close to the site of next year's Olympic Games, hooded
youths set fire to rubbish bins and pushed them down a street toward police,
while hurling bottles and bricks.
Many laughed as they ran back
when police charged them.
In a street thick with smoke,
looters smashed their way into a local shop, stealing whisky and beer. One man
grabbed a packet of cereal, another ran off laughing with four bottles of whisky.
"I am from South Africa
and it reminds me of the riots there, except the police here are not so
rough," said one middle-aged local resident, who declined to give his
name.
"But the kids don't have
any respect for the police or for property. It's sad for the people who live
round here."
In Peckham, a poor area of
south London, flames leapt into the air from a torched building and rubble was
strewn across the street.
A Reuters witness saw two
people breaking into a shop and ripping a 50-inch plasma television off the
wall. A youth in a balaclava carried the screen away and received a round of
applause from the watching crowd.
Cameron's office said he
would cut short his holiday in Italy to
chair a crisis meeting, amid growing calls from the public for officials to
take control of the situation.
Even before Monday night's
violence, police had arrested 215 people, according to Home Secretary Theresa
May.
"The violence we've
seen, the looting we've seen, the thuggery we've seen, this is sheer
criminality ... these people will be brought to justice, they will be made to
face the consequences of their actions," she said.
"SENSELESS"
Despite a heavy presence on
some streets, police appeared unable to contain the violence as rioters who had
initially coordinated through mobile phones and Twitter became increasingly
confident.
Monday's looting began long
before nightfall when workers were returning home, many of them forced to walk
as buses to areas hit by rioting were canceled.
In Hackney, youths in brown
hoods posed for pictures in front of a burning car on a street corner. Others
swarmed around a skip full of bricks and gathered them up.
"I don't know why they
are doing this," said a middle-aged woman who lived nearby. "It's
senseless ... they are just cacking on their own doorstep."
The BBC said the Hackney
clashes broke out after police stopped and searched a man.
In Clapham, another Reuters
witness saw dozens of youths walking in all directions with looted television
sets and other electrical goods. He heard two of them discussing the number of
Playstation 3s they had stolen, and shouting at another young man to return and
get more.
Looters hid their stolen goods
in bins and behind the low walls of the Victorian terraced houses typical of
Clapham. A large pile of boxed Blackberry phones rested by one wall.
Government officials branded
rioters as opportunistic criminals and said the violence would not affect
preparations for next summer's Olympic Games.
But the television pictures of
rioting and blazing buildings, combined with disarray in the transport network,
were likely to dent the capital's image as Britain struggles to avoid an
economic recession.
Youths appeared to have used
a free message service on Blackberry mobile phones to coordinate attacks on
shops and police.
Research In Motion, the
Canadian manufacturer of Blackberry smartphones, said it would work with
British authorities, but gave no details on what information, if any, it would
give the police.
Some have described the
disturbances as a cry for help from poor areas reeling from the government's
harsh austerity cuts to tackle a big budget deficit, with youth services and
other facilities cut back sharply.
"It's very sad to see
... But kids have got no work, no future and the cuts have made it worse. These
kids are from another generation to us and they just don't care," said
Anthony Burns, 39, an electrician from Hackney. "You watch. It's only just
begun."
Officials said there was no
excuse.
"It was needless,
opportunistic theft and violence, nothing more, nothing less. It is completely
unacceptable," said Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg.
(Additional reporting by Adrian Croft, Mohammed Abbas, Matt Falloon, Avril Ormsby and Jon Hemming; Writing by Myra MacDonald, editing by Tim Pearce)
Source : Reuters
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