Henry Nowak riots the beginning of wider UK unrest, warns Farage
The “division will get worse” if young white men felt police were prejudiced against them, the Reform leader said, adding: “This has to end”.
London: Britain’s Reform Party leader, Nigel Farage, has warned that rioting after the murder of Henry Nowak risks being “the beginning” of wider unrest.
Farage said the “division will get worse” if young white men felt police were prejudiced against them, adding: “This has to end.”
He made the remarks after using his question at Wednesday’s Prime Minister’s Questions to claim that British people were “living under two-tier policing”.
The murder of 18-year-old Nowak has provoked a national outcry after he was arrested and handcuffed over unfounded allegations of racial abuse as he lay dying.
Nowak’s Sikh killer, Vickrum Digwa, who had stabbed him five times, was treated as a victim by police officers.
Farage has described the killing as a watershed moment and has demanded “pure cold rage” from the public.
Asked about accusations that his language risked inflaming divisions, Farage told Times Radio: “The division will get far worse.
“What you saw in Southampton last night is the beginning. If we get large numbers of young white males who think the police are prejudiced against them, goodness knows where we go. This has to end.”
Rioters in Southampton, where the murder took place, attacked police with bottles, bricks and wheelie bins after a protest on Tuesday night (London time).
Demonstrators chanted “Henry, Henry” and pelted officers with projectiles outside Southampton Central police station.
In footage posted on social media, one protester is heard asking a police officer: “What are you gonna do? Put me in cuffs and kill me?”
The protests, led by Tommy Robinson and other hard-right figures, broke out amid an outcry about the police’s handling of the murder.
“A grieving family have asked us not to respond in the way that the leader of Reform has responded,” Starmer told MPs.
“My response – and the response of others, to be fair – has focused on the lessons to be learned, so we can deliver justice.
“His response has been to appeal for rage. Rage. That’s his response to a father who’s lost his son and asked for that not to happen.”
Farage insisted that he had used the term cold rage “very, very deliberately”.
He said: “Was I angry watching what had happened? Yeah, I bet you were too. Millions of us were.
“In fact, it’s hard to be a human being and not be angry watching it. But I suggested that rage was put in a cold way, not a hot way.”
Earlier, he had used an appearance at PMQs to warn that Nowak’s case showed there was “two-tier policing” in Britain.
The Reform leader was heckled by some MPs as he brought up police guidance, which he
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