‘I don’t think any of us will ever be able to forget the image of a nine-year-old child and their family being put in the back of a Land Rover to be rescued from violent, racist thugs’
Twenty-seven people have been made homeless “because people went door-to-door to try and target foreign nationals”, a UK minister has said.
Cabinet Office minister Baroness Anderson of Stoke-on-Trent told the Lords: “I think we need to remember what has actually happened and contextualise what’s happened in the last 24 hours, and what it’s actually led to.
“Twenty-seven people were made homeless last night because people went door-to-door to try and target foreign nationals to burn them out of their homes.
“I can only imagine the terror.
“A two-month-old is the youngest victim who had to be moved from her home and I don’t think any of us will ever be able to forget the image of a nine-year-old child and their family being put in the back of a Land Rover to be rescued from violent, racist thugs who were seeking to undermine them and to undermine their very sense of belonging in a country that many of them have lived in for decades.
“This is simply unacceptable and will not be tolerated.”
Lady Anderson was responding to Labour peer Baroness Ritchie of Downpatrick, the former SDLP MP for South Down.
Lady Ritchie said disorder in Belfast on Tuesday “seemed to concentrate on a pogrom of people of colour”.
Meanwhile, a school principal has hit out after pupils were forced to miss classes after being left homeless following a night of disorder in Belfast.
Terry Rodgers, principal at St Theresa’s Primary School on the Glen Road in West Belfast, detailed how a number of his pupils were forced to miss lessons today after they were burnt out of their homes last night or their families are too frightened to send them to school.
In a letter to parents, Mr Rodgers shared his sympathies with the victim of Monday’s stabbing incident and said that some of his pupils have been “left with horrific memories.”
Mr Rodgers said that “there can be no equivication nor justification for these actions.”
“As school leaders in West Belfast, we feel compelled to raise our voice. The terrible stabbing incident that occurred in North Belfast earlier this week was shocking and the thoughts and prayers of everyone in our school communities are with the victim and his family and friends at this time. No one deserves to suffer such an appalling attack, and like all right minded people we expect justice to take its course through the appropriate legal processes,” he said.
“Today, many of our classrooms have children missing. Some of the children were forcibly evicted from their homes last night by angry mobs and are spending today trying to find alternative accommodation, left with horrific memories that will last a very long time.
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