‘People are scared’: Leicester at sudden crossroads after violence ends 50 years of harmony
Residents and leaders alike are shell-shocked by the clashes, but many are now asking why no one saw this coming
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Your support makes all the difference.To the outside observer, the Golden Mile in Leicester has appeared to teem with its usual, colourful life this week.
By day, the silk and saree shops, the jewellers and the money exchanges, did a demonstrably brisk trade. By evening, the neon lights of the countless vegetarian restaurants glittered as they always do.
But to those in the know, the hustle and bustle of the city’s Belgrave Road was somewhat muted.
“People are scared,” says Dharmesh Lakhani, who runs Bobby’s Deli and is a committee member with the Belgrave Business Association. “My takings are down 30 per cent. Everyone’s staying indoors with their curtains closed. They don’t feel safe to come out.”
This was the aftermath of a weekend that saw tensions boil over into violence.
More than 500 young Hindu and Muslim men clashed with each other – and with police – during two nights of violence that stretched across a swathe of Leicester’s East End. Cars were smashed, bottles and stones were thrown, and 20 arrests were made.
At least 25 police officers were injured. So bad was the violence that patrols had to be redirected from the Queen’s funeral – the biggest policing operation ever undertaken in the UK – to help deal with it.
Now, Leicester finds itself blinking at a sudden reputational crossroads.
After half a century in which its peaceful diversity has come to be acknowledged as a model of integration across the world, city leaders fear that one weekend of violence could have undone five decades of hard work.
What on earth went wrong? How did no one see it coming? And can calm be brought back to a city still simmering with tension?
When trouble first flared last Saturday night (17 September), Lakhani himself was in the nearby Baps Swaminarayan Hindu temple. The congregation were told by police to stay inside for their own safety, but the 54-year-old father of two couldn’t help himself. He went out to look.
“This is my city, my area,” he says. “I had to see it with my own eyes. All these young buggers, running around and throwing things. I was numb. Embarrassed. I couldn’t believe what I was seeing. This, in Leicester? I was lost.”
He wasn’t the only one.
Restaurant owners have described having to shut their curtains and turn out the lights as the mob rampaged. The owner of a local carwash rushed to his business, only to find hundreds of thugs had been kettled there by police. “Very bloody nice, it was,” he says. “Glass and horsesh** everywhere.”
The shock here feels acute because Leicester is fiercely proud of its reputation for harmonious cohesion.
Immigration and tolerance are seen as bedrocks of the city’s character. Its finest moment is often said to have come exactly 50 years ago, when it opened its doors to 10,000 Asian Ugandans fleeing Idi Amin’s expulsion.
In the half-century since – a period in which the city’s Asian-heritage population has grown to almost 40 per cent – it has experienced no real racial or religious clashes. Until last weekend.
Precisely how events unfolded last Saturday is unclear, distorted by claim, counterclaim, social media speculation and deliberate misdirection. Some say the trouble was initiated by a large group of Hindu men marching towards the mainly Muslim Green Lane Road area.
Others say it was a peaceful demonstration, and that a Muslim counter-protest led to the violence. Most appear to believe that the truth is somewhere in the middle.
Either way, what we do know is that this was the culmination of weeks of smaller skirmishes following an India-Pakistan cricket match in Dubai in August. What we also know is that sport, ultimately, had nothing to do with anything.
Rather, many here suggest that inter-community tensions have grown increasingly strained over the past five years, because of a changing demographic and global politics.
One theory suggests that new Hindu arrivals living in the predominantly Muslim Highfields area have experienced frequent abuse, leading to wider antagonism. Another has it that those same arrivals have brought with them the Hindu-nationalist politics of their Indian homeland.
“There is no doubt in my mind that the religious tensions in India, and the actions of a hardline, violent, nationalist government there, have had a direct influence on what we have seen,” says Professor Neil Chakraborti, director of the Centre for Hate Studies at Leicester University. “Without the BJP (Bharatiya Janata Party) in power in India – without their demonisation of minority groups – it is difficult to imagine the same tensions here.
“And what that shows... what we need to recognise – here in Leicester, but everywhere where different communities coexist – is that what goes on thousands of miles away, across continents and borders, will cause ripple effects at home. The global is local. In an interconnected world, events elsewhere will expose and exacerbate local tensions.”
Laid on top of this, Prof Chakraborti reckons, is a factor that is more to do with Leicester itself: complacency.
“As a city, I think, we have assumed we are immune from the kind of challenges we see elsewhere,” he says. “And that’s understandable, because tolerance has been part of our DNA for 50 years, but we have got to be honest and open and smart enough to not hide from the fact that those challenges do exist here.”
Why no one appeared to see the violence coming is a trickier – and potentially thornier – question.
A failure of police and political intelligence appears to have left the city’s institutions unaware of how febrile the atmosphere had become. A lack of diversity within Leicestershire Police, in particular, has been blamed for the force appearing to be surprised – and entirely unprepared – when tensions boiled over.
“At one point you had eight officers trying to hold back 300 lads,” says one business owner who asks not to be named. “They looked sh** scared, all eight of them. And so would I have been.”
For his part, Temporary Chief Constable Rob Nixon said the police were “working to ... arrest and bring to justice those that are causing harm in our communities”.
The question now, perhaps, is where Leicester goes from here.
Community leaders, interfaith organisations, and the city’s elected mayor, Sir Peter Soulsby, have all been at pains to say that the solutions lie in communication, not violence. An independent inquiry has been promised. They have also emphasised that, of the 20 people arrested last weekend, more than half were not even from Leicester – in fact, five of them were from Birmingham.
“It does suggest that there are people with other battles to fight who are coming to Leicester to fight them,” said Sir Peter on Wednesday.
Yet the mayor’s claim that the trouble “does not represent anything that is simmering in Leicester” has been described as naive by those on the ground.
“There are tensions and grievances here,” says Yasmin Surti, secretary of the Federation of Muslim Organisations and a volunteer in the East End for more than 30 years. “And we must recognise them, because if we don’t recognise them, how can we address them?”
The 55-year-old mother of three says only twice, in four decades living in Leicester, has she ever felt anxious.
The first time was in 2010, when a much-publicised EDL march took place in the city. The second is this week, sitting talking to The Independent in Belgrave Road – a mainly Hindu area – while wearing her hijab.
“That’s an internalised thing,” she insists. “No one has said anything or even looked at me any differently. I know the people here are good people. I work here, have friends here. But I got out my car and, yes, what’s happened does make you think: will I be OK?”
Like everyone here, she is convinced that two nights of trouble are not enough to destroy Leicester’s hard-earned reputation.
But, also like everyone here, she knows reputations can quickly be destroyed. She warns that more clashes could begin to cast the city as unsafe, unfriendly and unwelcoming. The damage, she makes clear, would be social and economic – and might be irreparable. “There are no winners – everyone here loses,” she says. “It drags us all down.”
How not to let that happen is now the main focus of many who live in the city. And the growing consensus already appears to be that community engagement must be improved and made fit for the 21st century.
Prof Chakraborti again: “What Leicester has always done well is engage with its different communities. But our engagement today – it is very outdated.
“As a city, we rely on dialogue with a very narrow band of community leaders and opinion-formers, who might do a really sincere job, but they don’t always accurately represent the diverse range of voices that have grown in the city. We need to think of new and more sophisticated ways of hearing all our voices, and reaching out to those who are feeling disenfranchised.”
He stresses a point. “This is not just a Leicester problem,” he says. “I think this is something all towns and cities must learn to do better.”
Across the city at De Montfort University, his counterpart, Kim Sadique, an associate professor in community and criminal justice, agrees.
“There’s this phrase for engagement we have here: samosa and tea,” she says. “You invite people to have samosa and tea, and you talk to them about what can be done to improve their area. But the problem is that the people you are engaging with there are people who want to be engaged. We need to find mechanisms of getting out and speaking to people who don’t come forward. That’s how you create a better future.”
For now, in Bobby’s Deli on the Golden Mile, it is the present that is raising some concerns.
It is Diwali next month, and this road claims to host the biggest light festival outside India.
Yet – even with the street decorations already up – there are worries that people might stay away. These worries are not helped by the fact that India play Pakistan in the T20 cricket World Cup the day before.
“It’s a wonderful night, every year, wonderful,” says Lakhani. “Not just for Hindus. All people come. Hindus, Muslim, Sikhs, Christians. Everyone. And it must go well this year. It must. We need to show the world that this is what Leicester is all about; that we celebrate with each other; that we are one community.”