The 'Brixton riot' of
April 11,
1981 was the most serious
riot in
London,
UK, of the
20th century.
Background
Brixton in
south London was an area of deep social and economic problems — high
unemployment, high
crime, poor housing, no amenities — in a predominantly black community
[1]. The
police were strongly disliked and seen as largely reactionary and distant. An attempt at proactive crime control did much to increase tensions. The
Metropolitan Police began ''
Operation Swamp 81'' at the beginning of April, aimed at reducing
street crime, mainly through the heavy use of the so-called
sus law.
Beginning
The actual riot was unplanned, almost spontaneous. On the evening of the
10th, at around 5.15pm, a black youth with a knife wound was stopped by a police patrol. As he was being escorted by two
police officers along
Railton Road towards a waiting vehicle a large crowd intervened. The police were attacked and the struggle only ended when more police officers arrived; the youth was taken to hospital.
The Riot
Through the night of the 10th and on Saturday 11th the police brought a very strong force into the area. Tensions built throughout the day as crowds slowly gathered. In early evening, as the police attempted to make some arrests on
Atlantic Road, the tension broke: a few bricks were thrown and windows smashed. More police closed in and more missiles began to be thrown. The police retreated, leaving their vehicles to be burned. Other vehicles were burned and shops looted on Railton Road,
Mayall Road,
Leeson Road and
Brixton Road before the police, notably the
Special Patrol Group, returned.
The police sealed the Atlantic-Railton-Mayall area, although a number of other streets had groups of looters. Following agreed tactics the police formed deep shield walls and moved to reclaim the area. The rioters responded with bricks, bottles, and
petrol bombs — the first British use of these incendiary devices outside of
Northern Ireland. Cars and buildings were set alight and
fire engines attacked as they tried to deal with the flames.
The destructive efforts of the rioters peaked at around 8pm, with two
public houses,
schools and other structures burning. Two hours later the police had the area under some control, although the
fire brigade refused to return until the following morning. By 1am the area was largely subdued, with no large groups — except the police — on the streets. Attempts to reignite violence on the
12th failed quickly, with more than 1,000 officers on the streets.
The riot resulted in almost 300 police injuries and 65 serious civilian injuries; over a hundred vehicles were burned, including 56 police vehicles; almost 150 buildings were damaged, with thirty burned. There were 82 arrests. Reports suggested that up to 5,000 people were involved in the riot.
[2]
Aftermath
Between July 3 and 11 of that year, there was more unrest fueled by racial and social discord, in
Handsworth,
Southall,
Toxteth, and
Moss Side. There were also smaller pockets of unrest in
Leeds,
Leicester,
Southampton,
Halifax,
Bedford,
Gloucester,
Coventry,
Bristol, and
Edinburgh.
There was a public inquiry into the riot headed by
Lord Scarman. The
Scarman report was published on
November 25,
1981.
Books/Articles on the Brixton Riot (1981)
★ Kettle, Martin & Hodges, Lucy (1982) Uprising!: Police, the People and the Riots in Britain's Cities, London: Pan Books ISBN 0-330-26845-7
★ Scarman, Leslie (1982) The Scarman Report: The Brixton Disorders, 10-12 April, 1981, London, Penguin Books ISBN 0-140-22455-6
References
1. Kettle, Martin & Hodges, Lucy (1982) Uprising!: Police, the People and the Riots in Britain's Cities
2. The Guardian — How smouldering tension erupted to set Brixton aflame, 13 April 1981
See also
★
Handsworth riots
★
Brixton riot (1985)
External links
★
Urban75 —
An eye witness account by the 'We Want to Riot, Not To Work Collective', 1982
★
Metropolitan Police Service —
Brixton Riots, 1981
★
BBC News Online —
on this day
★
BBC News Online —
In Pictures
★
The Guardian —
How smouldering tension erupted to set Brixton aflame, 13 April 1981