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Riots: Manchester and Salford

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Stephen Nolan | 17:34 UK time, Wednesday, 10 August 2011

smashed up shop in Manchester

I was dressed in jeans and a T-shirt while standing among the rioters on Oxford Road in Manchester late last night. What distinguished me from the majority of them was the fact you could see my face.

Most others had balaclavas or scarves covering their faces as they moved effortlessly from shop to shop. Their attempt at anonymity was their blatant badge of criminal intent.

The new Tesco shopfront on Oxford Road was battered apart within seconds and about 20 male thieves crawled in. They were followed by five or six young women, dressed as if they were going out for a Saturday night. All with the sole intent to steal. They were in a frenzy. "Free booze!!" they screamed.

I've heard and facilitated a lot of discussion over recent days on 5 live and Ö÷²¥´óÐã Northern Ireland about how angry these people might be for feeling left behind. People have asked whether society and British politics has let them down.

I saw hundreds of criminals last night and few seemed angry to me. If anything, they were laughing out loud as they satisfied their lust for anything and everything that they could grab for free.

The police arrived at the Tesco store, by which time the majority had run away. Not too far away - just about 100 yards. Because that is where their next target was. Dogs were sent into the supermarket and a few of the rioters were caught, arrested and put into the back of a police van. Stretched to the limit, the police moved on and within seconds another gang - different people but roughly the same size of about 10 people - were attacking the next shop in line, a Sainsburys.

Within seconds they were in and out again, and within minutes the police were back, but it was too late again. I spoke to a senior source in the Police Service Northern Ireland yesterday who feels the failings within the policing tactics are obvious. He suggested that both the Met and Greater Manchester Police were reacting well to get to a scene, but failing to hold the territory after they had dominated it.

REACT. DOMINATE. HOLD. A back up team to achieve the "hold" objective was vital, he suggested. To be fair to the GMP, they seemed to do this later in the night and gained significant advantage as a result.

The Prime Minister today has talked about water cannon and baton rounds being 'available' if needed. Many of my N Ireland audience have been contacting me asking why the water cannon has not been sent. These riots are completely different to the NI model.

In NI, riot situations tend to consist of large stationary crowds who are confronting the police. In Manchester, the crowds are numerous but small, and they run away from the police. Consequently the water cannon may have been next to useless last night in Manchester. These vehicles are large and cumbersome and i cannot envisage how they would have helped prevent looting last night.

As the law abiding community gets angrier, they seek more and more possible solutions. What about baton rounds? I doubt they would stop the widespread looting. The guidelines call for "proportionate force'. Imagine the reaction if a police officer shot a baton round at an unarmed teenager who had stolen designer gear under his arms. (Or sausage rolls? I kid you not - Greggs the Baker was decimated in Manchester last night. This was vicious theft.)

Maybe a more effective tactic may be less sensationalist - the police need to dominate the main city areas and seal them off so that the looters do not have access.

As a broadcaster who spends half my week in NI and the other half in England, the differences between a typical NI and English riot couldn't be more stark. If this is not nipped in the bud in England soon, I just wonder if it is only a matter of time until the English thieves stop running away from the police.

The smash and grab nature of the looting in Manchester city centre contrasted to the situation in Salford last night. It was eerily quiet when i got there at about 1am, but the gangs were still out.

Rioters stood face to face with the police. Bricks that had been hurled at the police lay all over the road. The off licence had been raided and glass was strewn over the footpath outside Salford Shopping City. The carcass of a burning car lay in the middle of the road, metal railings had been ripped up and placed as barriers.

We needed to move quickly as we were getting attention from one of the gangs. As we retreated and turned a corner, a boy of about 15 or 16 was filling a bucket with fuel in the local petrol station.

Comments

  • Comment number 1.

    After the G20 riots and the death of Ian Tomlinson, the police are under unusually tight constraints and cannot serve as they might have done if they were not under scrutiny from press and media, and many on the Left, to put it frankly. Jean de Menenzes' and any other tragic death seem to take on a different message. Instead of every death and injury being regretted and the public trusting the authorities such as the IPCC to do their job properly, even they are looked on as untrustworthy by many. So how can the Police regain this ground Nolan talks of? This cannot be compared to the policing of NI because of that history being so different to mainland UK.

  • Comment number 2.

    And boy did those Salford riots look nasty. Only a couple of kilometres away from Media City and the people who have so much money about to move there to work.

  • Comment number 3.

    So, a little bit of rain and the savages retreat to their caves. Well at least we know we don't need water cannon to disperse the cretins, just arm the police with watering cans and sprinkle the vermin with a little bit of water and Bob's Your Uncle, off they scuttle with their filthy tails between their loathsome little legs.

  • Comment number 4.

    I think this is the time, if ever there will be, when Cameron get's people to buy into his Big Society idea....but only if they back it with funds and resources rather than just well meaning talk and meaningless labels. The spontaneous clean-ups show the people of this country are ready and willing but we aren't fools and if it's just a figleaf for government cuts then it will just die another death. I've written about it here :

  • Comment number 5.

    I wasn't aware the advertising of personal blogs was allowed on a Ö÷²¥´óÐã blog website.

  • Comment number 6.

    Another in depth riot piece last night by Nolan. Please could he stop comparing Salford/ UK riots to the religious and historical circumstances found in NI? There are no comparative issues, and I am a bit fed up of his "expertise".

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