Written by 7:41 am In the News

Southport killer charged

A 17-year-old boy – Axel Rudakubana – appeared in an English court charged with the murder of three young girls in a knife attack at a summer dance class that has shocked the nation and sparked two nights of violent protests.

Rudakubana is accused of murdering Alice Dasilva Aguiar, nine, Bebe King, six, and Elsie Dot Stancombe, seven, with a kitchen knife on Monday after entering the class on Hart Street in Southport, Merseyside. Eight other children sustained knife wounds – with five of them left in a critical condition – while two adults were also critically hurt.

Lifting the anonymity order at Liverpool crown court, Judge Menary KC said the “idiotic rioting” in parts of the UK after the attack was one reason why it was in the public interest for his name to be released.

Remanding Rudakubana in youth detention, the judge said keeping the defendant’s anonymity in place ran the risk of “allowing others who are up to mischief to continue to spread misinformation in a vacuum”.

Axel Rudakubana first appeared at Liverpool Magistrates’ Court over Monday’s incident at a “Taylor Swift yoga and dance workshop” summer vacation event for children in the seaside town of Southport.

He is charged with three counts of murder, 10 counts of attempted murder and one of possession of a bladed article. His case was later heard at Liverpool Crown Court, where he sat in the dock covering his face with a grey sweatshirt and did not speak to confirm his name.

Rudakubana was remanded in custody ahead of a further hearing in October.

Large disturbances broke out in Southport, a town in England’s northwest, on Tuesday after false information was spread on social media that the suspect in the stabbings was a radical Islamist migrant, with anti-immigrant protesters descending on Southport town from elsewhere. Police have said the attack was not terrorism-related and that the suspect was born in Britain, quashing speculation on his origins.

Prime Minister Keir Starmer met with police leaders on Thursday to offer them the government’s full backing following violent clashes with protesters in Southport and London.

“As far as the far-right is concerned, this is coordinated, this is deliberate,” Starmer told a press conference. “This is not a protest that just got out of hand. It is a group of individuals who are who are absolutely bent on violence.”

Protesters arrested

Thousands gathered near Starmer’s Downing Street office and residence in London on Wednesday evening, shouting, “Save our kids”, “We want our country back” and “Stop the boats”.

Protesters also threw flares and smoke canisters towards Downing Street. London’s Metropolitan Police said 111 people had been arrested for offences including violent disorder and assaults on police officers. Five officers were injured.

On Tuesday, more than 50 police officers were hurt in protests in Southport, when demonstrators set police vans on fire and dismantled garden walls to hurl bricks at officers.

As well as the killing of three girls aged six to nine, Monday’s attack in the normally quiet town left eight other children and two adults with stab wounds.

Alder Hey Children’s NHS Foundation Trust said in a statement on Thursday that two of the children had been discharged from hospital.

“We continue to treat five children involved in the devastating incident in Southport on Monday, including one recently transferred to us from Aintree University Hospital,” the trust said. “All the children in our care are currently in a stable condition.”

Hundreds of people in the community have taken part in vigils to mourn the slain children, and laid bouquets of flowers at the site of the incident.

(Reuters; Picture Courtesy: Liverpool Echo) 

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