Parliament recalled to tackle riots - David Cameron

Bbc.co.uk


Parliament is being recalled on Thursday in response to rioting in England, the prime minister has said.
The government's emergency committee Cobra met on Tuesday after rioting spread across London, with violence flaring in other major cities. "We will do everything necessary to restore order to Britain's streets and make them safe for the law-abiding," David Cameron said in Downing Street.

More than 16,000 officers will be on London streets on Wednesday, he said. All Metropolitan Police leave has been cancelled, with reinforcements called in from other forces, meaning three times as many officers as before will patrol London's streets on Tuesday night, Mr Cameron said. 

Prime Minister David Cameron makes a statement on the England riots outside Downing Street  
David Cameron described the scenes of violence as "sickening"

Meanwhile, Scotland Yard said a 26-year-old man shot in a car during riots in Croydon has died in hospital. Mr Cameron said at least 450 people have been arrested so far, in what he condemned as "sickening scenes of people looting, vandalising, thieving, robbing". He told rioters: "You will feel the full force of the law. And if you are old enough to commit these crimes, you are old enough to face the punishment."

The recall of Parliament will allow MPs to "stand together in condemnation of these crimes and to stand together in determination to rebuild these communities", he said. The prime minister returned early from his holiday in Tuscany to discuss the unrest, which first flared on Saturday after a peaceful protest in Tottenham over the fatal shooting of a man by police. 
 
'Copycat crime'

London has seen a wave of "copycat criminal activity" over the past three days, the Met Police said. More than 69 people have been charged with various offences following hundreds of arrests. Birmingham, Liverpool, Nottingham and Bristol are among the other cities where violence broke out.

Looters in a convenience store in Hackney  
Shops have been looted across the capital

Met Deputy Assistant Commissioner Steven Kavanagh said it was a "shocking and appalling morning for London to wake up to". "The Met was stretched beyond belief in a way that it has never experienced before," he told BBC Breakfast.

Acting Commissioner Tim Godwin ruled out bringing in the Army to help police tackle the violence, but said: "We will be out there in ever greater numbers tonight."
In other developments:
Monday's violence started in Hackney, north London, after a man was stopped and searched by police, who found nothing. Groups of people there began attacking officers in Hackney at about 16:20 BST, throwing stones and a bin. Wooden poles Police cars were wrecked by youths armed with wooden poles and metal bars, while looters smashed their way into shops before police dispersed them.

Nine other forces are supporting the Metropolitan Police, as well as the City of London Police and British Transport Police. Some people had complained there were too few police to deal with the violence. 

Map showing riot locations

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