Rioters Clash With Police in Dublin After
Children Hurt in Knife Attack
A suspect was in custody after a woman and three
children were injured in the Irish capital. After the incident, riots that the
police said were driven by “misinformation” about the attack erupted.
Emma Bubola
By Emma
Bubola
Reporting
from London
Nov. 23,
2023
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/11/23/world/europe/dublin-attack.html
Three young
children and a woman in her 30s were injured near a school in Dublin on
Thursday, the police said, an attack that was followed by destructive riots
that they blamed on the far right weaponizing “misinformation” about the
episode.
An adult
woman in her 30s and a 5-year-old girl sustained serious wounds in the attack,
in which a knife was used, the police said, while a 5-year-old boy and a
6-year-old girl were being treated for less serious injuries. The boy was later
released from hospital.
A suspect
in the case was in custody, according to the Garda Síochána, the Irish police
force. Drew Harris, the Garda police commissioner, said that the motive for the
attack remained “entirely unclear.”
The attack,
which the police described as “a serious public order incident,” took place at
Parnell Square East, in central Dublin, shortly after 1:30 p.m. on Thursday.
That
evening, violent scenes broke out in the city after a group of rioters attacked
police vehicles and set fires. Videos from the scene showed stores being
looted, police cars and public buses aflame, and people clashing with police
officers.
In the wake
of the attack, far-right figures spread rumors online about the nationality of
the attacker, and the news service AFP said that one protester told them that
“Irish people are being attacked by these scum.”
The police
said the suspect in custody was a man in his late 40s or early 50s, who was
also injured, but they did not give further information about him. They blamed
a far-right faction for the disorder on Thursday and asked people to leave the
streets.
Mr. Harris
said the riots were “disgraceful,” and suggested they were driven by
misinformation about the knife attack that was being spread online for
“malevolent purposes.”
Liam
Geraghty, a spokesman for the police, said at a news conference that
preliminary information suggested the knife attack was a stand-alone event and
not an act of terrorism. He added that investigators were following a definite
line of inquiry and were not looking for other suspects.
The police
force said in a statement later that it was keeping “an open mind at this early
stage of the investigation.”
“An attack
on children is an act of absolute cowardice and depravity,” Gary Gannon, a
member of Parliament for the area, wrote in a statement.
Ireland’s
president, Michael D. Higgins, said the knife attack was an appalling incident
and that his thoughts and prayers were with the children and their families.
But he added that it was a matter for the police. “That it would be used or
abused by groups with an agenda that attacks the principle of social inclusion
is reprehensible,” he said, referring to the far right protesters, “and
deserves condemnation by all those who believe in the rule of law and
democracy.”
Bystanders
had helped tackle the assailant, according to Mr. Geraghty. “My understanding
is members of the public did intervene at a very, very early stage,” he said,
“and we would applaud those members of the public for getting involved in such
a traumatic and potentially dangerous situation for themselves.”
The five
injured people were taken to hospitals in the Dublin region, according to the
police, who said they were in contact with all the children’s parents.
In a
statement, the Irish justice minister, Helen McEntee, called the knife attack
“an appalling crime” but said “the scenes we are witnessing this evening in our
city center cannot and will not be tolerated.”
“A thuggish
and manipulative element must not be allowed use an appalling tragedy to wreak
havoc,” she said, appealing for calm.
Emma Bubola
is a reporter based in London. More about Emma Bubola


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