2026 Belfast Riots - Will one Sudanese manage to unite Billy and Mickey?

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The only 'news' from last night I could find - a house on Shore Road was 'deliberately' set on fire in the dark (X)
'Unlike recent nights, those who carried out the attack were nowhere to be seen.'
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'Disorder seen again in Belfast tonight', posted 10pm 11/06, no location specified (X)
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''Muslims scared'' (X)
🚨 FEAR HAS ENTERED THE MOSQUES OF BELFAST

Reports from Belfast suggest that some mosques have cancelled prayers and activities following three nights of unrest.

Some Muslim families are reportedly staying indoors, avoiding unnecessary travel and taking extra precautions amid fears that tensions could escalate further.

Workers are said to be changing routines.

Parents are reportedly keeping children closer to home.

Fear is no longer confined to the streets.

It is moving into homes, schools, communities and mosques.

There is currently no evidence of a nationwide response across Britain.

But communities far beyond Northern Ireland are watching events unfold closely.

Because after three consecutive nights of disorder, the question is no longer simply what happened in Belfast.

The question is what happens next.

Daily Mail this morning; paramilitaries are not suspected to be involved in the protests and police blame social media instead. The attacker has two brothers, one in Belfast, one in Liverpool.

Makeshift barricade is set on fire near homes in Belfast on third night of riots over Sudanese migrant 'knife attack'​

A makeshift barrier was set on fire near homes in Belfast on the third night of protests over Monday's alleged knife attack.
At least 200 extra police officers were drafted in from the British mainland following 48 hours of turmoil that saw violent clashes between police and protesters. Groups first lashed out on Tuesday night after a Sudanese asylum seeker was charged with attempted murder.

Hadi Alodid, 30, then appeared in court on Wednesday after Stephen Ogilvie, 44, was left missing an eye and with lacerations.
Scenes were significantly calmer on Thursday as police fielded a robust presence, but there were still pockets where masked groups gathered.
A makeshift barricade involving two industrial bins was built across Newtownards Road in east Belfast and then set on fire.
At least a dozen of the Police Service of Northern Ireland's (PSNI) armoured Land Rovers flooded the road to provide cover for fire crews.
Around 170 people also gathered in Whiteabbey, north Belfast, but later dispersed without incident.

There was a line of police vehicles in Glengormley, where mobs torched a bungalow and cars on Wednesday night, as the PSNI increased its presence across the region.
Some businesses once again closed early, or were too fearful to open their doors at all, and trains and buses stopped from 6pm.
Police Scotland was expected to send around 90 officers, including five inspectors, under a mutual aid agreement with the Police Service of Northern Ireland.
Officers have also been sent from the North West and North East of England, according to a police source, but forces declined to say for operational reasons whether they were participating.
Besides the isolated demonstrations, communities were left to pick through the rubble in areas that have been shaken to the core by the rioting.
On Thursday, a senior police officer said there was no evidence loyalist paramilitaries were coordinating the unrest - instead pointing to social media.
Assistant Chief Constable Ryan Henderson told the BBC: 'At this stage we have no evidence to say that the violence is being coordinated by loyalist paramilitaries.
'What we have seen is significant coordination from online social media activity, some from people within Northern Ireland - and some from outside of Northern Ireland, outside the island of Ireland - generating that activity.

'That momentum, that drive, that toxicity is what's bringing people out onto the streets. It needs to stop.'
The condition of Stephen Ogilvie, who lost his left eye and suffered deep cuts to his head, face, and back in the attack, was said on Thursday to be 'improving'.
It is understood he could be awoken from his coma within the next 48 hours.
DUP leader Gavin Robinson said he met with the parents of Mr Ogilvie on Thursday afternoon, who have been left 'broken' after the incident.
'They have asked me to share that whilst their son remains in a coma, his condition is improving,' he said.
'They hope, pray and trust that he will be released from that coma within the next 24 or 48 hours, at which point assessments will be made about his sight and other impacts from the atrocity that happened on Monday evening.'
Meanwhile, more information emerged about Alodid on Thursday.
A friend speaking to The Telegraph revealed Alodid was a policeman in Khartoum before he travelled to the UK through the asylum 'back door'.
He was born and spent his early years in Saudi Arabia, but headed back to Sudan for his education

A man called Azheri Omer said he had been friends with Alodid in Sudan, and that they began the journey to Europe together.
Mr Omer said Alodid had joined the police force in Khartoum, the Sudanese capital, but quit after a few months.
The pair decided to head to Europe by crossing Libya after civil war broke out in Sudan in April 2023.
Mr Omer said Alodid had saved up enough money to take him across the Mediterranean Sea and into Europe, but that his own funds had run out in Libya.
Two of Alodid's brothers later followed in his footsteps, sources familiar with the family told the paper.
One was said to now be living in Liverpool, while the other was thought to be living in Belfast with Alodid.
The suspect's family is understood to be refusing to speak about his arrest and charge, even to friends.
If Alodid indeed moved to escape the civil war, then he is among an estimated 14 million Sudanese displaced from their homes and four million to have left the country in the face of the conflict.

It comes after a second night of violence on Wednesday in which the PSNI used water cannons – banned in England, Wales and Scotland – to disperse around 300 masked protesters in Glengormley, eight miles north of Belfast.
It is believed the group was targeting a hotel said to be housing migrants. A 'hit list' of properties thought to contain migrants had been in circulation for months and was reportedly known to the PSNI.
The force also fired 20 plastic bullets as mobs targeted homes and officers, throwing rocks, petrol bombs and other missiles in Belfast, Glengormley and 24 miles south-west in Portadown.
Police reported 16 arrests, while 12 officers were injured.
On Tuesday night, there appeared to have been a deliberate campaign against non-white residents, with several families left homeless after their houses were set alight. It is not yet clear whether people were targeted in the same way last night.

An African family who have lived in Belfast for 20 years was among those targeted on Tuesday, and a Ukrainian teenager was forced to flee after her family's front door caught fire.
A two-month-old baby had to be rescued from the rioters, and footage showed one family being ushered past flames into an armoured police vehicle.
A Middle Eastern supermarket was specifically targeted in Belfast, while a Turkish barbershop was trashed in County Antrim, around 20 miles outside the city.
In the east of the city, Lendrick Road was swallowed up by flames. Jamie Corry, who has lived there for 13 years, watched in horror as his house was 'completely' destroyed by thugs, alongside 'sentimental' items belonging to his late father.
In a sickening scene, an NHS nurse from an ethnic minority was chased by four masked men while on her way to work at Ulster Hospital, East Belfast, in a reported 'racist attack'.
Meanwhile, more information emerged about Alodid on Thursday.
A friend speaking to The Telegraph revealed Alodid was a policeman in Khartoum before he travelled to the UK through the asylum 'back door'.
He was born and spent his early years in Saudi Arabia, but headed back to Sudan for his education.
A man called Azheri Omer said he had been friends with Alodid in Sudan, and that they began the journey to Europe together.
Mr Omer said Alodid had joined the police force in Khartoum, the Sudanese capital, but quit after a few months.
The pair decided to head to Europe by crossing Libya after civil war broke out in Sudan in April 2023.
Mr Omer said Alodid had saved up enough money to take him across the Mediterranean Sea and into Europe, but that his own funds had run out in Libya.
Two of Alodid's brothers later followed in his footsteps, sources familiar with the family told the paper.
One was said to now be living in Liverpool, while the other was thought to be living in Belfast with Alodid.
The suspect's family is understood to be refusing to speak about his arrest and charge, even to friends.
If Alodid indeed moved to escape the civil war, then he is among an estimated 14 million Sudanese displaced from their homes and four million to have left the country in the face of the conflict.
The UK Government have instructed journalists reporting on Northern Ireland to include in their articles that they are reducing illegal immigration to Northern Ireland, I imagine censorship will only increase. I think we can safely guess that there was some disorder in Belfast and in surrounding areas, but not as intense as the first two nights.
There are multiple scheduled protests on the mainland this weekend and the counter protest in NI tonight, do people prefer if those are covered here or on the Britbong News thread? There are reports of 'armed muslims' in Stoke on Trent and Sheffield, delivery drivers being attacked in Glasgow again, and Liverpool is due a protest and counter protest.
ETA: I forgot, the new EU migration policy is due to come into effect in the RoI - they must take asylum seekers and 'refugees' or face a large fine.
 
Última edición:
Tribalism is a weird thing but tossing a bunch of monkeys into an area that has enjoyed ethnic tension for the past 70 years is an insane policy move that can only end in strange and violent ways.
The British government has always used poor areas of the country, or areas that don't typically vote for the current party, as a testing ground or soft launch for shit or unpopular policies. The poll tax was started in Scotland, and a lot of the migrant camps and hotels are in deprived neighbourhoods or NI where there's already a lot of tensions like you describe, and also economic problems that lead to a lot of people being unemployed or underemployed and angry about it. It's a powder keg and you'd think they'd have learnt after the poll tax riots and the riots in northern England during Thatcher's "managed decline" programmes.
 
[Guys mass deportations are LITERALLY impossible]
Aren't you the same guy who calls white people "pigskins?":
The concept of sharing an identity with someone else just because they share a SKEEN COLAH with the pigs in my sty is intensely hilarious to me
You also seem to really hate Americans and insult them frequently.
I don't know if you're Hungarian or a Muslim (as "pigskin" is their favorite insult it seems) but your country is less relevant to these riots than mine is if you ARE Hungarian, and if you are then you have like no fucking immigrants in your country so you should shut the fuck up if you're not going to post footage related to the riots, because your opinion on this shit matters zero. We have a shared problem which you don't seem to be a part of, nor do you care about past hurling insults or demoralizing people.

Speaking of worthless opinions, Starmer's response to the Belfast riots as of June 10th (incase it hasn't been posted yet):

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5pillars, an independent Muslim oriented news, claims graffiti was made in Belfast, posted June 12th:
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graffitifuckislam.png graffiti2fuckislam.png
(Potentially a false flag by themselves?)

News seems sparse, assuming its since the rioters obviously dont want people recording and the media may be trying to shut up about it because it looks bad for them, or because people seem to be smashing their van windows or driving them off.
 
The Twelth is coming up and bonfires are being built right now which is a yearly eyesore and intimidation-fest which has continued even after the Peace process.

Last year they had boat people burned in effigy and caused a right stink. I can only imagine what they'll do this year.
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I'm not sure I'd consider that an eye-sore, the bonfires are ridiculously large and impressive structures though. I also don't have a problem with this level of non-violent intimidation, hopefully they'll get the message across before the situation escalates. It's already moved from burning effigies to burning houses.
 
I just find a screed like this so hilariously ironic when the "Europeans" are Irish. Run the clock back 150 years and you'd be saying how it's the superior Nordic English who can't teach Bog Bunnies new tricks.

Racism is fun, but it's culture that counts far more than skin color. If the immigrants were encouraged to assimilate, and not act like the Muslim assholes they are, in a few generations it'd just be good natured ribbing to call them niggers just as I throw out antiquated Irish stereotypes for fun.

So again, blame the real perpetrators of this new colonial era and hurt *them.* This isn't fedposting because I can call for the death of any foreign leader and that's just a foreign policy opinion.

So yeah

Kill the Queen.
kill yourself race traitor
 
Just more American mongoloid sperging, typical. Go play that song around where these protests are taking place and see how it goes. You've had dozens of pages of people trying to explain NI ≠ Southern Ireland and you still don't get it.
Hey now, I know how upset you guys get over us Ameretards getting your history and culture wrong, so I educated myself a bit and I think I can proudly say, I understand now. I hope this rallying image shows the support I have for the country and people of Ireland, God bless.
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BONUS.PNG

Edit:
I apologize for joking about the groups associated with the Troubles recently learning how recent they were, the American education system didn't teach me about Ireland, honestly most of our history classes were spent talking about why Hitler was bad, Jews getting turned into lampshades, why slavery was bad and the confederate south was as bad as Hitler, and something about the civil rights movement and how great it was and how bad whites were, ignoring the violent desegregation by our government's military, honestly I was taught no actual history unless it helped push "white people bad"
 
Última edición:
It is simply impossible to revoke the citizenship of even the past few year's arrivals en masse, much less the second and third generation immigrants. There is no legal mechanism or political support for it.
laws can be changed and rewritten at will

>but international pressure!
you think donald trumps america is going to protest any euro nation trying to un-brown itself? just half a year ago vance shell shocked half the euro governments with his speech about how they have to reverse migration or face civilisational collapse.
 
laws can be changed and rewritten at will

>but international pressure!
you think donald trumps america is going to protest any euro nation trying to un-brown itself? just half a year ago vance shell shocked half the euro governments with his speech about how they have to reverse migration or face civilisational collapse.
You fail to realize that European Nations will do anything and everything to make themselves feel better than Americans. Even if it means making the official religion of England worshipping sand nigger penis. Because those Americans are so backwards and racist. We're sooooo much better
 
These are riots. Not a war. I don't know why some people here act like the government of the UK is going to suddenly back down and change their immigration policies because of NI riots that happen every summer there, ffs the UK home secretary is some kind of paki or jeet and the king kisses muslim ass.

As the yanks are fond of saying "This ain't their first rodeo". The UK's histories are full of plots and uprisings and only once has it worked but Oliver Cromwell was just a temporary blip and things went right back to the way they were before.

A real uprising needs support from other nations with a vested interest in the outcome, and NI is a territory in Ireland. At best it would revert to back to Ireland, which has an immigration policy as bad as the UK. Most of the EU has similar, if not worse immigration policies. Nothing will change.
 
It is simply out of the realm of political possibility and placed firmly within daydreaming.
The man's out of line, but he's right. Do you guys have any idea how much time and money it takes to deport just one savage via legal channels?

Pogroms are more efficient
 
The man's out of line, but he's right. Do you guys have any idea how much time and money it takes to deport just one savage via legal channels?

Pogroms are more efficient
Dumbass the political will is not there. The people still don't care because it would be an inconvenience to care. Racism means social exclusion, legal troubles, financial troubles, and more.
 
Its a mixed blessing the protestors are practicing OpSec, how’s a man supposed to monitor a situation (more accurately sperg about it given this thread has like 5 pink patches active) in such conditions?
 
As the yanks are fond of saying "This ain't their first rodeo". The UK's histories are full of plots and uprisings and only once has it worked but Oliver Cromwell was just a temporary blip and things went right back to the way they were before.
The United Kingdom might be uniquely well placed as a country that could undergo a sudden revolution. The state keeps its grip on power and crushes dissent almost entirely bureaucratically. What keeps people in line is the threat of having draconian, punitive sentences handed down by a judge, not any fear of a source of actual, physical power.

Britain:
  • Has a poorly funded police force that is largely unarmed and made up of weak, unfit, uncommitted dimwits
  • Polices via coercion and threats of punishment, not actual force
  • Has an armed forces that is both fatally underfunded and made up of highly patriotic white men in the rank and file
  • Has a bloated, demoralised, intensely disliked ruling class stuck in a total ideological and information bubble
  • Has a parliamentary system that grants any majority government, once in power, the tools to wield almost total power with no checks and balances
  • Rules via massive state patronage to its client groups (benefits to migrants and pensioners), which have grown so large that the government is stuck on the road to insolvency in the medium term and will have to default on these at some point
  • Has a highly radicalised working class population that now have the consensus that the government rules over them as second-class citizens in their own country
  • Has several highly radicalised *foreign* populations (most particularly, Muslims) that often live separately but right next to highly white communities (Stoke, Burnley, etc, etc)
  • Has a large population all crammed into a small space with few places to move away to to relieve pressure
  • Is frequently temporarily overwhelmed by local riots when they pop up and is increasingly unable to contain them until they fizzle out (Oldham 2001, 2011, Harehills 2024, post-Southport 2024, Ballymena 2025, Belfast 2026)
  • Has had a government with practically 0 electoral legitimacy for the last 2 years
  • Has a militant sub-population with long experience in insurgency and guerilla warfare (Northern Ireland), one side of which is actively against the government right now (ironically, the loyalists)
It is in a few senses one of the most precarious first-world countries in the world, not that the people running the place even really realise.
 
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