Southport unrest: Police âfeared they would not make it homeâ
Police officers injured during episodes of violent disorder in Merseyside âfeared they would not make it homeâ to their families, the chief constable has said.
More than 80 officers were injured as violence erupted in Southport, Liverpool city centre and Walton in the past six days.
The killing of three children at a holiday club on 29 July in Southport triggered waves of unrest across the country, partly fuelled by far-right activists and online misinformation.
Serena Kennedy, chief constable of Merseyside Police, said some officers involved in responding both to the knife attack and the subsequent disorder were âcompletely traumatisedâ.
Bebe King, six, Elsie Dot Stancombe, seven, and Alice Dasilva Aguiar, nine, died during the attack at a studio in Southportâs Hart Street, which left ten others injured.
Large groups clashed with police in the town the following day, with bricks and other missiles thrown and damage caused to a mosque.
More scenes of disturbance followed in Liverpool city centre and in Walton on Saturday, where Spellow Lane library was burned out and looted.
Ms Kennedy, along with Liverpool Council leader Liam Robinson, spoke to BBC Radio Merseyside during a walkabout in Liverpool, saying they were aiming to reassure visitors and business owners.
Ms Kennedy said the force had âmore than enough officersâ on duty to keep people safe in the coming days and allow them to âgo about their normal businessâ.
But the police response so far had taken its toll, she confirmed.
âI have spoken to all of the officers who were injured on Tuesday night, and some of them are talking about thinking they werenât going to make it home to their own children, to their own families,â Ms Kennedy said.
She said âhooligans and thugsâ involved in disorder across the country should âhang their heads in shameâ for attempting to connect their actions to the events of 29 July.
âThe parents of those three little girls should be able to grieve and not look at the disorder across the country, and in no way is it connected to what took place last Monday,â she said.
Since the unrest erupted in Southport, the force said there had been 36 arrests with 11 people appearing in court to face a variety of charges.
Officers are poring over âhoursâ of CCTV and social media footage to identify those involved in the violence.
Ms Kennedy said: âIf those people who werenât arrested on Tuesday night, or over the weekend, are sitting there at home having a cup of tea thinking they have got away it, please be reassured you absolutely havenât got away with it. â
âWe are coming for you.â
Mr Robinson said community groups and volunteers who joined the effort to clean up the city after the chaos were the ones who truly represented the âreal spirit of Liverpoolâ.
Axel Muganwa Rudakubana, 17, from Banks in Southport, has been charged with three counts of murder and 10 counts of attempted murder in connection with the Hart Street stabbings.
He is next due to appear at Liverpool Crown Court on 25 October.
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