Belfast Crowd Responds to Anti-Immigrant Violence

A single crime can ignite 'that fire of racism,' speaker tells demonstrators
By Newser Editors and Wire Services
Posted Jun 13, 2026 12:15 PM CDT
Belfast Crowd Rallies Against Racism After Riots
People gather during an anti-racism rally outside Belfast City Hall sparked by a knife attack on a man in north Belfast on Monday, in Belfast, on Saturday, June 13, 2026.   (Peter Morrison/PA via AP)

Thousands of demonstrators gathered in Belfast on Saturday to denounce anti-immigrant rioters who set fire to homes and cars earlier in the week after a brutal stabbing blamed on a man seeking asylum. The anti-racism rally came after nights of fiery violence in parts of Northern Ireland following the arrest of a 30-year-old from Sudan on charges of attempted murder in a stabbing that left a man partly blind. "All it takes is for one person who's not white and local to commit a crime and that fire of racism is rekindled," Elaine Crory told the crowd gathered outside Belfast City Hall, the AP reports.

The protests had turned violent when masked men set fire to several homes they believed to house immigrants, torched a bus, and pelted police with bricks, bottles, and firebombs. More than two dozen people were left homeless and 12 police officers were injured in what officials called "thuggery." On Saturday, demonstrators carried signs saying, "The problem is evil & violence not race," "Your racism is not patriotism," and "Protect people not prejudice." Cara Bell and Matthew Richardson said it was a happy coincidence to emerge from getting married in City Hall and join the peaceful demonstration after the ugly violence they witnessed earlier in the week. "It's important to note that things like today really show that this is not the general feeling of people in Belfast," Bell said, noting it was "a week where you've seen the worst of humanity and the best of humanity in Belfast."

Despite calls for calm by officials and the family of the victim, far-right and anti-immigrant figures were blamed for whipping up protests in several place across the UK early in the week. Disorder in Glasgow, Scotland, targeted minorities, and terrified worshippers at a mosque went into lockdown, police said. On Saturday, an anti-racism group rallied thousands to reclaim Glasgow streets and "stand up to the far right." The group was met by a much smaller contingent of mostly men who appeared to make Nazi salutes and shouted anti-Muslim chants.

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