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    UK PM recalls Parliament for London riot crisis

    LONDON (AP) — British Prime Minister David Cameron recalled Parliament from its summer recess Tuesday and nearly tripled the number of police on the streets after three days of rioting in London blossomed into a full-blown political crisis.

    Cameron described the scenes of burning buildings and smashed windows in London and several other British cities as "sickening," but refrained from more extreme measures such as calling in the military to help beleaguered police restore order.

    Instead, he said 16,000 officers would be on the streets of the capital Tuesday night, almost tripling the number that were out Monday night.

    "People should be in no doubt that we will do everything necessary to restore order to Britain's streets and to make them safe for the law-abiding," Cameron told reporters after rushing home from an Italian vacation to chair a crisis meeting at his Downing Street office.

    A wave of violence and looting has raged across London since Saturday, as authorities struggled to contain the country's worst unrest since race riots set the capital ablaze in the 1980s.

    Some 525 arrests have been made in London alone and dozens were arrested in other cities. Police announced Tuesday that plastic bullets would be "one of the tactics" available to officers to quell the riots.

    The riots also claimed their first death — a 26-year-old found shot dead in a car.

    Parliament will return to duty on Thursday, as the political fallout from the rampage takes hold. The crisis is a major test for Cameron's Conservative-led coalition government, which includes Liberal Democrats who had long suspected its program of harsh budget restraints could provoke popular dissent.

    In London, groups of young people rampaged for a third straight night, setting buildings, vehicles and garbage dumps alight, looting stores and pelting police officers with bottles and fireworks into the wee hours of Tuesday. The spreading disorder was an unwelcome warning of the possibility of violence during London's 2012 Summer Olympics, less than a year away.

    England's soccer match Wednesday against the Netherlands in London's Wembley stadium was canceled to free up police officers for riot duty.

    Cameron said leaves have been canceled for police in London, and reinforcements have been called in from all over the country. Armored vehicles were deployed in some of the worst-hit districts, but authorities still struggled to keep pace with the chaos unfolding at flashpoints across London, in the central city of Birmingham, the western city of Bristol and the northwestern city of Liverpool.

    "The violence we have seen is simply inexcusable. Ordinary people have had their lives turned upside down by this mindless thuggery," police commander Christine Jones said.

    London's police said 14 people were injured. It was unclear if the man who died had been among them.

    The rioters appeared to have little unifying cause — though some claimed to oppose sharp government spending cuts, which will slash welfare payments and cut tens of thousands of public sector jobs through 2015.

    But many were attracted simply by the opportunity for violence. "Come join the fun!" shouted one youth in the east London suburb of Hackney, where shops were attacked and cars torched.

    Rioters were left virtually unchallenged in several neighborhoods and able to plunder from stores at will or attempt to invade homes. Restaurants and stores closed early across London again Tuesday, fearing more looting.

    Graham Reeves, 52, stood dumbstruck in front of the smoldering ruins of his family store, the House of Reeves on Croydon in south London. The store is a local landmark run by his family for decades — he said his 80-year old father was hysterical when he heard the news.

    "No one's stolen anything," Graham Reeves said. "They just burnt it down."

    Disorder flared throughout the night, from gritty suburbs along the capital's fringes to central London's posh Notting Hill neighborhood.

    Police said all London police holding cells were full and prisoners were being taken to surrounding communities. At least 100 have been charged, including an 11-year old. Police were also monitoring Twitter, and warned that those who posted messages inciting the violence could face arrest.

    Three people were arrested on suspicion of attempted murder after a police officer was struck by a car in north London early Tuesday. About 44 police officers have been injured in the violence.

    The images of London's violence recalled the 2005 riots in France, when hooded and masked youths fought police in three weeks of raging overnight battles in housing projects, confrontations that became a challenge to the French state itself.

    Mass deployments of police eventually subdued the rioters, but tensions between French police and youth in the projects continue today, with periodic clashes between youths with Molotov cocktails and police with tear gas. French police say between 30 and 50 cars are set on fire during an average week. On the most fiery night of the 2005 riots, more than 1,400 cars went up in flames.

    Violence in London first broke out late Saturday in the low-income, multiethnic northern district of Tottenham, where protesters demonstrated against the fatal police shooting of Mark Duggan, a 29-year-old father of four who was gunned down in disputed circumstances Thursday.

    A brief inquest hearing into Duggan's death was being held Tuesday, though it will likely be several months before a full hearing.

    Duggan's death stirred old animosities and racial tensions similar to those that prompted massive U.K. race riots in the 1980s, despite efforts by London police to build better relations with the city's ethnic communities.

    But, as the latest unrest spread, some pointed to rising social tensions in Britain as the government slashes 80 billion pounds ($130 billion) from public spending by 2015 to reduce the huge deficit, swollen after the country spent billions bailing out its foundering banks.

    Sony Corp. said a major blaze had broken out at its distribution center near Enfield, north London, damaging DVDs and other products. So many fires were being fought in the capital that Thames Water warned that some customers could face water pressure drops. In the Clapham Junction area of south London, a mob stole masks from a party store to disguise their identities and then set the building on fire.

    Dozens of people attacked shops in Birmingham's main retail district, and clashed with police in Liverpool and Bristol.

    "This is the uprising of the working class. We're redistributing the wealth," said Bryn Phillips, a 28-year-old self-described anarchist, as young people emerged from a store with chocolate bars and ice cream cones.

    Some residents called for police to deploy water cannons to disperse rioters, or call on the military for support. They questioned the strength of leadership within London's police department — particularly after a wave of resignations prompted by the country's phone-hacking scandal.

    Youths used text messages, instant messaging on BlackBerry phones and social media platforms such as Twitter to coordinate attacks and stay ahead of the police.

    About 100 young people clashed with police in the Camden and Chalk Farm areas of north London on Monday night. In the Peckham district of south London, where a building was set ablaze along with a bus — which was not carrying passengers — onlookers said the scene resembled a conflict zone. Cars were torched in nearby Lewisham, and in west London's Ealing suburb the windows of each store along entire streets had been smashed.

    "There's been tension for a long time. The kids aren't happy. They hate the police," said Matthew Yeoland, a 43-year-old teacher watching the unrest in Peckham. "It's like a war zone and the police weren't doing anything."

    Police said Duggan was shot dead last week when police from Operation Trident — the unit that investigates gun crime in the black community — stopped a cab he was riding in.

    The Independent Police Complaints Commission, which is investigating the shooting, said a "non-police firearm" was recovered at the scene. But the Guardian newspaper reported that a bullet in the officer's radio was police-issue, indicating Duggan may not have fired at the officer.

    Duggan's partner, Semone Wilson, insisted that her fiance was not connected to gang violence and urged police to offer more information about his death. But she rejected suggestions that the riots were linked to protests over his death.

    "It got out of hand. It's not connected to this anymore. This is out of control," she said.

    The past year has seen mass protests against the tripling of student tuition fees and cuts to public sector pensions. In November, December and March, small groups broke away from large marches in London to loot. In the most notorious episode, rioters attacked a Rolls-Royce carrying Prince Charles and his wife Camilla to a charity concert.

    However, the full impact of spending cuts has yet to be felt and the unemployment rate is stable — although it remains highest among youth, especially in areas like Tottenham, Hackney and Croydon.

    Some residents insisted joblessness was not to blame. "It's just an excuse for the young ones to come and rob shops," said Brixton resident Marilyn Moseley, 49.

    ___

    David Stringer, Raphael Satter, Sheila Norman-Culp, Meera Selva and Stephen Wilson contributed to this report.

     
     
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    4,867 comments

    • K  •  6 mths ago
      It took Yahoo a very, very long time to have this article in its Top News. The riots have been going on for days. Instead people got to read about wedding gowns from balloons. Really, Yahoo?
    • Amanda  •  6 mths ago
      I am from the UK. These thugs have no reason at all to be rioting, they are doing it because they think they are hard. They are making all youth look bad. They are making the UK look bad. I find it truly disgusting that they are doing this. People have lost everything because of these idiots. Send them to Afghanistan and bring our boys back home. See how brave they are then!
    • Angry Bird  •  6 mths ago
      WTF? Economic times are hard - so people are burning down small businesses? Have you all gone insane?
    • RSX  •  6 mths ago
      When we run out of money for the moochers in the USSA there will be riots here also! Thank God for our 2nd Amendment Rights, at least we can defend ourselves!! Communism, Marxism, Socialism DOES NOT WORK!!

      "I came here to say that I do not recognize anyone's right to one minute of my life." — Ayn Rand

      Socialism is the doctrine that man has no right to exist for his own sake, that his life and his work do not belong to him, but belong to society, that the only justification of his existence is his service to society, and that society may dispose of him in any way it pleases for the sake of whatever it deems to be its own tribal, collective good.
      — Ayn Rand
    • Danny  •  6 mths ago
      I cannot understand why these people always crap in thier own nest.......
    • LJLrn  •  6 mths ago
      "This is the uprising of the working class. We're redistributing the wealth."

      No, you're a pathetic little criminal taking advantage of a crisis. Isn't it interesting how "uprisings" always involve stealing from your neighbors and destroying everything around you in a fit of jealous, infantile rage?
    • KHUSRO Y  •  6 mths ago
      ” I am a frequent visitor of London and have seen it evolve during the last 20 years into a Third World City .Majority is of foreigners and minorities, most living on welfare, unemployed or not allowed to work while merely allowed to live there. Various neighborhoods such as Edgeware Rd. Bayswater etc. are mostly non-English speaking foreigners. You cannot find anything made in England on Oxford Street ( except bone-china). Even Harrods is owned by a non-citizen Egyptian. London is also a haven for money-laundering foreign politicians, Generals and leaders facilitated by Isle of Man . Britishers depend mostly on foreign talent to run affairs, and foreign capital to run businesses. They need to send their children to good technical schools and take care of themselves and the country in a modern way, technologically, rather than depend on foreign workers and foreign capital to maintain their decaying country. Being lazy and bums is what becomes London.” We Americans need to take a lesson.
    • Anthony  •  6 mths ago
      I can relate to a protest of a death by officials. But it seems that the statement I have told my kids seems to be true. A person can be smart. People are stupid. This has turned into mob mentality. Mobs are nothing but stupid people.
    • Josh  •  6 mths ago
      Still am uncertain over what the rioting is about, took almost two full paragraphs to state people are rioting, which solves nothing anyways,..
    • Chris  •  6 mths ago
      To bad the store owners can't arm themselves, let a couple of riotors get their f-ing head blown off and they'll stop that shit.
    • T-Bird  •  6 mths ago
      Here's an idea for the masses in the U.S. receiving welfare.

      If you want welfare, foodstamps, etc - fine. However, you will get that ONLY after you put in 40 hours a week working some menial job such as road cleanup, mowing the grass in Yellowstone Park, etc.

      Nothing for free anymore!!

      Of course, those receiving welfare will be upset because now they may actually have to work for a living instead of sitting on their ASS3S collecting free money.
    • adam  •  6 mths ago
      This is in response to all of the people crying "GUN CONTROL" in the comments. One of my favorite sayings about gun control was stated by a Japanese Admiral during WWII when he was asked why the Japanese didn't make a full ground assault on American soil after their attack on Pearl Harbor, he said, "An invasion on American soil would never be possible, because there is a rifle behind every blade of grass and a gun behind every door."

      All of the thugs may have guns in the US, but so do I... and I know how good of a shot I am. ;)
    • frank  •  6 mths ago
      ENOUGH ALREADY! Call out the military and shoot to kill. You cannot negotiate with thugs. They breed themselves into poverty. England once was a great Empire, look at what you have been reduced to. Are you going to let you country dissolve into madness?
      Europe always criticized the United States for being a barbaric gun loving country. I bet you English wish you had the 2nd Amendment now, huh?
    • heh.  •  6 mths ago
      get ready america.... people here in america are becoming more and more desperate, more are out of work, more are becoming homeless and losing literally EVERYTHING with NO hope for any end to it in sight.... it's very scary- get ready
    • coltsblue  •  6 mths ago
      Looters and rioters beware! I will shoot to kill with no questions asked. Come near my home, my business, or my family and I will kill you. I will not do this joyfully but make no mistake because I am a good shot and have plenty of ammunition - this is your only warning.
      Now, it's up to you to figure out who & where I am.
    • Don... Meg...  •  6 mths ago
      The problem is not that there safety net was taken away - it's that they were led to believe that they were entitled to one in the first place.
    • mlehman  •  6 mths ago
      I wonder if the individual British citizens beared arms at levels of those in the U.S. if the thuggery and rioting would be at this level?
    • Mandy  •  6 mths ago
      Did you miss the part where they want to slash welefare? That is at the root of the problem. They are a nanny country just like us. When this government has no choice but to cut welefare, you will see the same thing happening here. They aren't will ing to work for a living, but they ARE willing to riot for a living.
    • oilguy  •  6 mths ago
      I feel sorry for the law abiding citizens of England. You are seeing first hand what happens when law abiding citizens are disarmed and can't protect themselves or their property.
    • Dr. Hfuhruhurr  •  6 mths ago
      This is what happens when people come to rely on the government to take care of them.
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