No complacency over riots coming to Wales, says FM
Walesâ new first minister has said she is ânot complacentâ about the possibility of riots coming to Wales.
Mass disorder broke out across England and Northern Ireland after false information spread across social media claiming the suspect in the murder of three children in Southport was an asylum seeker.
Cardiff-born Axel Muganwa Rudakubana has been charged with three counts of murder, 10 counts of attempted murders and possession of a curved kitchen knife.
âWe are a society and a nation that should be welcoming people⊠we cannot let those people who are determined to be destructive within our communities to get a hold,â Eluned Morgan said.
Ms Morgan officially became Walesâ first female first minister on Tuesday, after the Senedd was recalled to vote in a replacement for Vaughan Gething.
Speaking to BBC Radio Wales Breakfast, she said she had spoken to Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer on Tuesday evening regarding the riots â one of her first duties as first minister.
âI am very concerned about it and Iâm certainly not complacent about the possibility of that happening in Wales, which is why I have already asked for a meeting to be set up with the police and some community leaders,â she said.
âI spoke to Keir Starmer about this last night and, clearly, policing is not a devolved issue so we do need to keep in close contact with them.â
Posting to X, formerly known as Twitter, ex-Member of the Senedd for Plaid Cymru Bethan Sayed said Wales was ânot immuneâ to the attitudes and views being channelled in the outbreaks of violence.
She said a friend of her husband, who was from India, had recently been verbally abused while at a Cardiff petrol station.
âGuys came out of a car and went up to him as he was taking petrol, shouting, screaming at him to go home. Heâs so scared now,â she wrote.
Ms Morgan emphasised there was âno place for racism within our communitiesâ.
She added: âI think we have got to listen to communities and be sensitive to their needs, but there is a line where we must be intolerant of intolerance.
âAnd that is a line I will not be prepared to cross.â
Sir Keir promised communities they would be kept safe after he chaired an emergency Cobra meeting on Tuesday night.
It is understood there are at least 30 potential gatherings planned for Wednesday that police are aware of.
The prime minister praised the ârobust and swift responseâ of the criminal justice system and said it should âsend a very powerful messageâ to those considering further violence.