IRELAND Far-right violence erupts in Dublin after school knife attack by Algerian man, 3 girls injured; THEY WANT TO KNOW THE RACE OF THE 50 y.o. MAN

Arheel's Uncle

Senior Reporter

Far-right violence erupts in Dublin following school knife attack​

Protesters clash with police, torch vehicles after three young children are injured in a knife attack.​

Riot police stands next to a burning police vehicle

Riot police stand next to a burning police vehicle. [Clodagh Kilcoyne/Reuters]
Published On 24 Nov 2023 | 24 Nov 2023

Violent clashes broke out in central Dublin on Thursday evening, with vehicles torched and riot police attacked by a far-right mob following a knife attack at a school in the Irish city.
A five-year-old girl was seriously injured in the attack earlier in the day. A woman and two other young children were also hospitalised.

Superintendent Liam Geraghty said at a media briefing that preliminary indications are that a man attacked a number of people on Parnell Square East.

He said that police believe that it was “a standalone incident, not necessarily connected to any wider issues that are ongoing in the country or in the city, and we need to identify the exact reasons for that happening”.

Irish police said the girl was receiving emergency medical treatment in a Dublin hospital. Soon after that announcement, at least 100 people took to the streets, some armed with metal bars and covering their faces.
Police said more than 400 officers were deployed in Dublin city centre to contain the unrest. A police cordon was also set up around the Irish parliament building, Leinster House, and officers from the Mounted Support Unit were in nearby Grafton Street.

There were clashes with riot police as some demonstrators let off flares and fireworks, while others grabbed chairs and stools from outside bars and restaurants.
A number of police vehicles and a tram were damaged during the disorder, while a bus and car were also set on fire on the city’s O’Connell Bridge.

Police and politicians called for calm and warned against misinformation over the attack earlier in the day.

The police said far-right agitators had started the violence after a small group of anti-immigrant protesters arrived at the scene of the stabbing attack and clashed with police.

Flames rise from a car and a bus, set alight at the junction of Bachelors Walk and the O'Connell Bridge, in Dublin


344M8A6-highres-1700812272.jpg


The unrest, the worst in Dublin in years, came after a five-year-old girl sustained serious injuries in a suspected stabbing in Parnell Square East, north central Dublin. [Peter Murphy/AFP]
Protesters vandalise a police vehicle

Protesters vandalise a police vehicle before setting it on fire. Two other children and two adults, a woman and the suspected male perpetrator of the attack, were taken to hospital after the knife attack. [Clodagh Kilcoyne/Reuters]
Riot police officers face down demonstrators next to a burning police car

Police blamed far-right agitators for starting the violence. [Clodagh Kilcoyne/Reuters]
Protestors sort through looted goods in Dublin

Shop windows were routinely smashed during the clashes, and a Foot Locker store was looted. [Peter Murphy/AFP]
Flames rise from the car and a bus,

A double-decker bus, tram and police car were burned out, public transport was shut down and people were urged to stay away from large parts of the city. [Peter Murphy/AFP]
Fireworks are thrown at police officers as a riot breaks out

Police in riot gear stood guard on the streets in the Irish capital as crowds taunted them with chants and set off fireworks. [Clodagh Kilcoyne/Reuters]
Flames rise from a car and a bus

Rumours on social media about the nationality of the assailant, who police only described as a man in his fifties, helped fuel unrest following the attack. [Peter Murphy/AFP]
 
Last edited:
The assailant who stabbed some people was an Algerian mud. The police are agents of ZOG who hate the White Irish.
 
Ensis is correct.


Man charged over Dublin school stabbings that sparked riots​

  • Riad Bouckaher, a naturalised Irish citizen from Algeria, was charged with 8 offences including the attempted murder of 3 children, local media reported
  • The November 23 attack in central Dublin triggered a protest by anti-immigrant agitators that spiralled into looting and the torching of police cars

Published: 1:38am, 22 Dec, 2023

A 50-year-old man was on Thursday charged with attempted murder in Dublin over multiple stabbings at a school that sparked the worst rioting seen in the Irish capital for decades.

Riad Bouckaher
was charged in a Dublin court with eight offences including the attempted murder of three children and causing serious harm to a care worker, Irish media reported.

A five-year-old girl and the care worker are still being treated for their injuries.

fe619667-e105-4287-8d63-7ecfa64ce0be_01060439.jpg

Flames rise from a car and a bus, set alight in Dublin on November 23, as people took to the streets in protest against stabbings earlier in the day. Photo: Getty Images / TNS / AFP
The November 23 school attack in central Dublin triggered a protest by anti-immigrant agitators that spiralled into the torching of police cars and public transport vehicles and shop looting.


Earlier on Thursday police arrested Bouckaher, who had been hospitalised since the attack after passers-by intervened during the stabbings.


“I am a sick person,” Bouckaher told the court, according to the Irish Times newspaper.

Bouckaher, who spoke through an interpreter,
will next appear in court on December 28.

https://www.scmp.com/news/world/eur...rs-and-police?module=hard_link&pgtype=article

 
Back
Top