Belfast Stabbing Sparks Riots: Far-Right Exploits Grievances
Belfast Stabbing Sparks Riots: Far-Right Exploits Grievances

The sight of men and boys in dark clothing with covered faces, posing as defenders of their communities, echoed the Troubles. A photograph captured this unsettling scene, reminiscent of Northern Ireland's violent past.

How the Belfast Stabbing Was the Spark to a Fuse Loaded with Grievance and Provocation

Politicians, social media, and far-right agitators convinced people that migrant-targeting violence would solve all their problems. Within minutes of the footage going online—of a Black man stabbing a white man—there was a sense of inexorability to what came next in Northern Ireland. The grievances, the social media platforms, the politicians' doublespeak, and the international cheerleaders all provided a fuse. On Monday night came the spark.

Those who saw the video will not easily forget it: an assailant on a north Belfast street stabbing and slashing his victim in the face and neck, shouting in Arabic. Residents intervened and halted the assault, but the victim, Stephen Ogilvie, was seriously injured, including losing an eye.

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On Wednesday, Hadi Alodid, 30, a Sudanese refugee, appeared in Belfast Magistrates Court charged with attempted murder. The judicial system was fast, but the gutted homes of minority ethnic families showed that a warped form of vigilante justice was even faster.

Violence Erupts Across Belfast

“Who was in there?” a woman asked on Tuesday night, indicating a scorched, smouldering ruin on McMaster Street, off Newtownards Road, in east Belfast. “A Romanian gypsy family in that one,” came the reply. The woman nodded, as if it made sense that a family should be expelled for a crime committed by a stranger on the other side of the city. Hundreds of youths, many with masks, prowled streets filled with acrid smoke and the drone of police helicopters. To the rioters who burned homes and vehicles, including a Glider bus and a police car, it did, in fact, make perfect sense.

Their social media feeds, elected representatives, and far-right agitators such as Elon Musk and Tommy Robinson assured them it was all connected: immigrants and refugees were taking houses, imposing alien customs, and committing crimes while the police did nothing, thus requiring community action. That worldview underpinned riots in Belfast in 2024, a copycat to riots in England after the Southport attacks, and impelled the ethnic cleansing of Roma from Ballymena last year and patrols by vigilante groups who intimidate dark-skinned men.

Crime Rates and Racist Incidents

Yet Northern Ireland's crime rate fell last year by 3.3% from the previous 12 months and reached its lowest level since 1998, with especially steep falls in violence and injury. Racist hate crime and racist incidents, in contrast, reached their highest level since records began in 2004. Within hours of Monday night's attack, social media platforms crackled with rage. “Enough is enough!” many posted. By 10am on Tuesday, activists were sharing lists of assembly points and times. All businesses were to close at 5.30pm—“no excuses”—and from 7pm crowds were to close roads. Some posts urged peaceful action, others advised the wearing of dark clothes and a readiness to be arrested.

Political Responses and Escalation

At midday, leaders of five main political parties issued a joint statement condemning the stabbing attack and urging restraint. “We call for calm and for space to allow justice to take its course.” Other statements, however, used loaded language. Gavin Robinson, the leader of the Democratic Unionist Party (DUP), called the attack “medieval.” Jim Allister, the leader of the Traditional Unionist Voice party, went further: “What is going to be done to stop this importation of an alien culture that seems to now include attempted beheading?” From thousands of miles away, Musk and Robinson, who was in Moscow, chimed in with exhortations for mass protests.

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By 4pm, steel shutters were coming down over African- and Arab-owned supermarkets, barber shops, and gadget stores, and their owners and staff were preparing to hunker at home. The Belfast Islamic Centre cancelled evening prayers and urged the congregation to stay indoors. Crowds gathered at designated intersections from 6.30pm. Some remained peaceful and eventually dispersed. Others swelled and splintered into breakaway groups that attacked vehicles and homes owned or occupied by people with dark skin.

Night of Chaos

“Foreigners out!” some chanted. Others spraypainted “fuck Islam,” with crosshairs, on walls. By 10pm, smoke plumed over multiple locations: Oakley Street, Crumlin Road, Lendrick Street, McMaster Street, Newtownards Road. In places, there was a carnival atmosphere, with people posing for selfies and drinking beer. One man hoisted up his young son for a better view of a burning house. “Get a duke at that,” he said. “Wow,” the boy replied. Outside Belfast, mobs torched targets in Portadown, Dundonald, and Newtownabbey. The fire service received 256 calls and attended 62 incidents.

Historical Echoes

Similar scenes have played out in England, but Northern Ireland's history echoed through the mayhem. In 1969, mobs burned Catholic families from some of the same streets, setting a precedent. “It's the same type of behaviour—driving out people who are the other,” said Peter Shirlow, the director of the Institute of Irish Studies at the University of Liverpool. The Troubles provided the iconography of boys and men with dark clothing and covered faces posing as defenders of their communities, though now the enemy has changed. “The evidence we have collected on this is quite clear,” Shirlow said. “The majority of Catholics and Protestants agree that immigrants do not make a positive contribution to society and the economy.”

Elements of republicanism “monitor and suppress” xenophobic displays, but loyalists are fractured over the issue, and some unionist leaders stoke the notion of cultural invasion, Shirlow said. “It is well within the definition of racism in terms of stereotyping and dehumanising ethnic minorities.” Kashif Akram, a board member of the Belfast Islamic Centre, said some politicians sought scapegoats for Stormont's failure to build enough houses. “The blame is directed at the most vulnerable: the immigrants.”

Third Consecutive Summer of Racist Violence

Patrick Corrigan, Amnesty International's Northern Ireland programme director, said this was the region's third consecutive summer of organised racist violence, with each outbreak more serious than the last. “This was racist violence on a shocking scale. It did not emerge in a vacuum.” On Tuesday night, a teenage boy on Newtownards Road, inspecting the remains of the burned bus, looked perplexed when asked why his peers were rioting. “If they don't do it, who will?”