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UK Police Provided ‘Inadequate’ Info After Southport Attack: Watchdog

The British Terror Watch Dog said the information provided to the public following the massive stab wounds at a children's dance party last year in Southport was “inadequate” with the clear perception of criticism imposed by British leader Nigel Farage.

Jonathan Hall KC, an independent reviewer of British terrorism law, I said The BBC has promoted widespread speculation on social media that the three young British girls have died, which was announced by police in the wake of a massive stab wound committed by second-generation Rwandan immigrant Axelludakbana.

“People got the feeling that something was somehow being withheld or being fudged, and that caused the type of social media they wanted to spread the disinformation,” Terror Watchdog said.

Shortly after the stab wound, police simply said the attacker was “a 17-year-old man from a Lancashire bank from Cardiff.”

Following speculation on social media that the attacker was an illegal Muslim immigrant on the terrorist watch list, police later said the attacker was born in Wales and that the incident was not being treated as a terrorist attack.

“The public may have been told right away that there was an attack by a 17-year-old man who was a black British man, born in Wales and lived in the UK for his entire life,” Hall said.

Authorities also withheld information for months indicating possible terrifying motives behind the attack. An early search of Rudakubana's speech led to the Al-Qaeda Jihadist Manual and Biowapon Ricin, which and the decision to accuse him of the terrorism laws were withheld from the public, despite the police and political leaders who knew about it.

It was also later revealed that the attackers had been in several interactions with police. Ludakbana has also been featured in the anti-terrorist prevention program three times. However, they dismissed him as a potential threat every time.

To uncover more information from police shortly after the attack to quell the attack and violence, British leader Nigel Farage was accused of robbing the riots and spreading “conspiracy theory” to question whether the attackers were known as a potential terrorist threat.

Farage after it was revealed that prevention failed to prevent the attack and that authorities withheld information from the public. defendant The government is doing “one of the greatest cover-ups” of his life.

Ir Kiel later admitted that he was aware of the development “as they are emerging,” but claimed that he had protected them from the public in order to avoid affecting the trial against Rudakbana. The attack and subsequent riots have led to an increasingly restrictive change in interpretation that is supported by UK restrictive court reporting rules to provide more information to the public.

A specialist operational aide within Metropolitan Police Department Matt Jukes said:

“But I am absolutely certain that it needs to be clear that it is a system built for another age, in my view, and that we need to find a way to say more about those investigations.”

Follow Kurt Zindulka on X: Or email: kzindulka@breitbart.com

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