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How Belfast descended into chaos after a 'horrific' attack was 'hijacked'

A stabbing attack in Belfast led to widespread unrest, including property damage and protests. A 30-year-old Sudanese man was charged with attempted murder and related offenses. The incident has reignited debates over UK migration policies, with right-wing politicians using the case to criticize border control measures.

IN BRIEF

Right-wing politicians in the UK have used the immigration status of an alleged attacker to criticise border policy.

Researchers say graphic footage and existing grievances can shape public reaction to an incident.

A stabbing attack in Belfast has become the latest flashpoint in the United Kingdom's migration debate, prompting violent protests and responses from right-wing political figures and online commentators around the world.

Crowds gathered across Belfast on Wednesday, where vehicles and a building were reportedly set alight, roads were blocked, and police maintained a heavy presence across parts of the city.

Demonstrations were also reported elsewhere in the UK.

The unrest followed a stabbing in north Belfast on Monday night that left a man in his 40s in hospital with significant injuries to his eyes and serious slash wounds to his face and back.

Police have charged a 30-year-old Sudanese man with attempted murder, possession of a bladed article in a public place and making threats to kill. Graphic footage of the incident circulated widely online in the hours that followed.

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Authorities later confirmed he had been granted refugee status in the UK in 2023 and had been given leave to remain — the equivalent of permanent residency — until 2028.

Nuala McAllister, a North Belfast member of the Northern Ireland Assembly from the centrist Alliance Party, said people with "far-right agendas" had used the stabbing as an "opportunity to hijack the issue" and target ethnic minorities.

"We currently have another incident in the east of the city where people are targeting more homes to try to get any ethnic minorities out," she told ABC News Breakfast on Wednesday.

"This is an incident that has been whipped up into a frenzy by really bad faith actors here, not only in Northern Ireland, but beyond."

McAllister labelled the attack "horrific and brutal", but said the focus should now be on the police investigation and allowing officers to do their jobs, but disorder across Belfast was stretching already limited police resources.

The attack comes a week after right-wing activists, and politicians both in the UK and abroad seized on the case of a British teenager after tensions again boiled over following the sentencing of his killer — a British Sikh.

Protests came even after the teenager's father appealed for his son's death not to be used to create further division. Britain's interior ministry accused activists of hijacking the tragedy to stir up violence.

Professor Imogen Richards from Deakin University told SBS News that incidents like that in Belfast can become politically significant when they are quickly connected to broader narratives already circulating in public debate.

She said the nationality and migration route of an accused person can make an event immediately legible to some audiences as an immigration issue rather than a criminal matter.

"The political moment may be constituted by framing rather than by the facts of the case," she said.

Incidents as symbols for broader concern

As details emerged about the suspect's immigration status, political figures and online commentators weighed in, with some linking the incident to broader concerns around migration and border policy.

Speaking to reporters, Reform UK leader Nigel Farage described the attack as "barbaric", criticised the UK government's leave to remain policies and "doubted" that the attacker should have been in the country, without providing evidence.

Restore Britain leader Rupert Lowe also said the incident should prompt "mass deportations" and an end to so-called "mass immigration".

In a post on social media, he said a government he led would impose the death penalty for migrants who were convicted of violent attacks.

Anti-immigration activist Stephen Yaxley-Lennon, known as Tommy Robinson, also shared details of planned demonstrations and promoted calls for protests against immigration on X.

United States tech billionaire Elon Musk weighed in and amplified calls for protests, reposting Yaxley-Lennon's content, adding: "Only by protesting REPEATEDLY and LOUDLY will there be any change!!"

Associate professor Mario Peucker from Victoria University told SBS News that these types of responses to incidents like Belfast often move beyond the immediate facts of a case and become attached to broader political agendas.

He said events can become tools used by political actors and movements to reinforce positions and arguments that already existed before an incident occurred.

"They have their own agenda … the incident itself is used as a tool to demonstrate they are right and reinforce what they are calling for," he said.

UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer described the attack as "horrific" and "sickening", adding there would be "absolutely no tolerance for abhorrent scenes of violence like th…

Read the full article at SBS News
Source document: Police statement

2 reports

ABC News (Australia)State / PublicCenter7 days ago
Thousands rally in Belfast to condemn anti-immigrant rioting

Thousands attended an anti-racism rally in Belfast in response to recent violent incidents in Northern Ireland. The unrest followed the arrest of a 30-year-old man from Sudan who was charged with attempted murder after a stabbing incident that left a victim partially blind.

Bias read (Center): The article reports on a public event and related incident without taking a stance or using biased language. It provides factual information about the rally and the underlying events without apparent ideological framing.

SBS NewsState / PublicRight11 days ago
How Belfast descended into chaos after a 'horrific' attack was 'hijacked'

A stabbing attack in Belfast led to widespread unrest, including property damage and protests. A 30-year-old Sudanese man was charged with attempted murder and related offenses. The incident has reignited debates over UK migration policies, with right-wing politicians using the case to criticize border control measures.

Bias read (Right): The article frames the incident through the lens of migration policy criticism by right-wing politicians, emphasizing their response and the broader debate rather than providing balanced perspectives from all sides. It highlights the role of the suspect's refugee status without contextualizing it in

Official sources cited

  • government Police statement
  • government Refugee status confirmation

Go to the primary sources (2)

The official sources this coverage is built on. Read them directly to bypass framing.

  • governmentPolice statement
  • governmentRefugee status confirmation