Southport has âmixed emotionsâ as disorder follows attack
Southport is experiencing âmixed emotionsâ after violent disorder followed the deaths of three girls in a knife attack, a vicar has said.
Reverend Marie-Anne Kent, of St Philip and St Paul with Wesley Church in Southport, said services took place across the town earlier to remember Elsie Dot Stancombe, Alice Dasilva Aguiar and Bebe King and support those affected by Mondayâs attack.
However, she said while the focus should be on the âfamilies and young people who have been traumatised⊠weâve been overtaken by the violenceâ.
She said that as a result, there were âa lot of mixed emotions aroundâ, such as anxiety, fear, numbness and grief, adding: âWe need to be together at a time like this.â
Alice, nine, Elsie, seven, and Bebe, six, were killed in the stabbings during a Taylor Swift-themed dance class on Monday, and eight other children and two adults were seriously injured.
Violence erupted the following evening in the Merseyside seaside town, with police blaming far-right groups, and it has since spread to other towns and cities across England.
False claims have spread online that the person responsible was an asylum seeker who had arrived in the UK by boat and a Muslim.
Axel Muganwa Rudakubana, from Banks in Lancashire, has been charged with three counts of murder, 10 attempted murders and possession of a curved kitchen knife.
The 17-year-old, who was born to Rwandan parents in Cardiff and moved to the Southport area in 2013, has no known links to Islam.
Rev Kentâs church stands close to the yoga studio where the attack took place.
She said there was a âstrong community feeling that weâre bigger than all of this and we will build a better world for our young people as they grow upâ.
She said she had seen âso many acts of kindnessâ take place since the attack and churches across the town were âcommitting ourselves to work for peace [and] reconciliation in our communitiesâ.
âSouthport has really pulled together,â she said.
âEvery act of kindness is saying we are against this hate, these acts of violence.â
On Friday, buildings across Southport and north-west England were lit pink in memory of the victims of the attack.
Sefton Council leader Marion Atkinson said it was done as a display of âmoving unityâ.
She added that people would âcontinue to stand united for all of those families who are currently trying to deal with their unimaginable loss and care for victims injuredâ.
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