Dublin riot: 'Huge destruction' after school stabbing leads to 34 arrests

11 months ago 21
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Watch: Cars torched, shops looted in night of violent Dublin riots

By Eimear Flanagan

BBC News NI

Irish police have arrested 34 people after rioting by a "hooligan faction" caused chaos in Dublin last night.

Violence flared after three children and a school care assistant were injured in a knife attack in the city centre several hours earlier.

Taoiseach (Irish Prime Minister) Leo Varadkar said about 500 people were involved in the riot.

He said they "brought shame" on Ireland and he promised new laws within weeks to bring those involved to justice.

Two of the five people injured in the stabbings outside a primary school on Parnell Square are critically ill.

They include a five-year-old girl and a school care assistant who "used her body as a shield" in an attempt to protect children from the attacker.

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Irish police chief Drew Harris condemns the scenes of violence in Dublin city centre

Just hours after the stabbings, rioters destroyed 11 police vehicles, while 13 shops were badly damaged and more were looted during the clashes with police.

Three buses and a tram were also destroyed and several police officers were injured during over three hours of sustained violence.

'Hateful assumptions'

Ireland's police chief Drew Harris blamed the rioting on a "lunatic, hooligan faction driven by a far-right ideology".

The "extraordinary outbreak of violence" had come after "hateful assumptions" were made based on material circulating online in the wake of the stabbings, he added.

It is understood that included false claims that the attacker was a foreign national.

Sources have indicated to the BBC that the man suspected of carrying out the attack is an Irish citizen in his late 40s who has lived in the country for 20 years.

Image source, PA Media/Brian Lawless

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A tram was burnt out on O'Connell Street in Dublin during the rioting

"These are scenes that we have not seen in decades," said the An Garda Síochána (Irish police force) commissioner.

"What is clear is that people have been radicalised through social media."

Thirty-two people have since appeared in court in Dublin in connection with the riot.

The accused, who include 28 men and four women, face charges including weapons offences, public order offences and theft of items such as clothing and cigarettes.

After the stabbings, rumours spread on the WhatsApp, Telegram and Signal messaging apps and far-right agitators decided they would protest at the crime scene.

But that escalated into violence and the rioters, including children and young adults, soon took over a large area of Dublin city centre.

For months there has been real concern that something like this could happen.

The far right in the Republic of Ireland has grown and become incredibly emboldened, recently holding a protest outside the Irish parliament.

But the violence on Thursday night was on a level not seen in Dublin in decades and has left the people of the city reeling.

The Dublin Fire Brigade said a fire engine that attended the stabbing scene was later attacked by rioters.

Geoff McEvoy from the fire service said: "One of the first calls that truck responded to [after the stabbings] was a petrol bombing of a refugee centre."

He said "the truck was pelted with projectiles" and "beaten with iron implements" while its crew dealt with that incident.

'Nation unsettled and afraid'

Under questioning from reporters, Commissioner Harris denied that his police force had failed to protect Dubliners and their city from the violence.

"We could not have anticipated that in response to a terrible crime - the stabbing of school children and their teacher - that this would be the response," he said.

The Association of Garda Sergeants and Inspectors said police in Dublin needed more support and should be supplemented by officers from outside of the city.

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Looters broke into several shops including this sportswear store in the city centre

The taoiseach said the violence had left the nation "unsettled and afraid".

"Yesterday we experienced two terrible attacks - the first was an attack on innocent children; the second was an attack on our society and the rule of law," said Mr Varadkar.

"Each attack brought shame to our society and disgrace to those involved and incredible pain to those who were caught up in the violence."

Mr Varadkar said the rioters' motivation had nothing to do with Irish patriotism.

"Their first reaction to a five-year-old child being stabbed was to burn our city, attack its businesses and assault our gardaí (police officers), "he said.

Image source, PA Media/Brian Lawless

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A bus and car were set on fire on O'Connell Street on Thursday evening

The taoiseach vowed to use the "full resources of the law to punish those involved" but added that Ireland's hate crime legislation was "not up to date for the social media age".

Eyewitness Patricia MacBride, who is originally from Londonderry, said many of the rioters were "young people - late-teens, early-20s".

"But what was disturbing was there was an older generation of people egging them on," she told the BBC.

Stabbings motive 'entirely unclear'

The knife attack took place outside Gaelscoil Choláiste Mhuire, a primary school in the city centre, after 13:40 local time on Thursday.

It is understood that a group of young children were lining up when a man carried out the stabbings.

A fast-food courier helped to stop the attack by taking off his helmet and using it as a weapon against the suspect.

"[I] just hit him in the head with all power I have and he fell down," said Caio Benicio, who is originally from Brazil.

Image source, PA Media/Brian Lawless

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Garda officers manned the cordon at the scene of the Parnell Square stabbing

A man in his late-40s who was also seriously injured is a person of interest, according to police.

They said they were not looking for anyone else in relation to the stabbings and were following a definite line of inquiry.

Riot police were deployed after disorder broke out near the scene of the attack, including on O'Connell Street which is one of Dublin's main shopping streets.

Irish President Michael D Higgins condemned the attack and the subsequent disorder, which he said "deserves condemnation by all those who believe in the rule of law and democracy".

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