Anti-Immigrant Violence Erupts Across UK After Stabbing in Belfast
Your Daily Update for June 11, 2026. Plus: Violent demonstrations are taking place across the United Kingdom after an asylum seeker brutally stabbed a citizen on the streets of Belfast on Monday.
The protests come just days after a brutal stabbing in the United Kingdom, pushing tensions over the edge after months of disapproval regarding the nation’s immigration policies.
On Monday evening, around 10:30 pm, a citizen of the city of Belfast – the capital of Northern Ireland, with around 600,000 residents – was stabbed on the street in a brutal incident. Graphic footage circulating on social media showed the attacker repeatedly stabbing the victim’s head and neck area while yelling in a foreign language.
Locals can be heard yelling “He's trying to cut his head off!” and some profanity before bystanders step in to help the victim. The clang of metal can be heard in the video before a man hits the assailant with a hurling stick as another pushes him down to the ground. However, the stabber refuses to let go of the victim until police arrive, in spite of bystanders’ efforts to yank him away.
The victim was identified as Stephen Ogilvie, a 44-year-old native, and he has been hospitalized with severe injuries to the face, neck, and head. Local reports have confirmed that he is now in a medically-induced coma to allow doctors to perform surgery on his injuries, but he is still alive and in stable condition despite the lacerations. Unfortunately, Ogilvie completely lost his left eye in the attack, and he also sustained severe injuries to his right eye.
The weapon was also identified as a kitchen knife, proving that even household items can serve as deadly weapons when used by those with harmful intentions.
Meanwhile, the attacker has been identified as 30-year-old, Sudanese asylum seeker Hadi Alodid, who entered the UK in 2023 after entering via Dublin after a journey from Sudan to Paris. He appeared at a local court on Wednesday and faces charges of attempted murder, possession of an article with blade or point in a public place, and threatening to kill a worker of the National Health Service. He has been refused bail and will remain in jail for the time being, with his hearing set for July 8.
His immigration status, though, has become an important point in question. Alodid was granted refugee status in 2023 for a five-year period, with his visa set to expire in 2028. After that, he would have been eligible to apply for a permanent residency.
Investigations are still underway to determine the motive behind the attack, but police have confirmed that terrorism is likely not the root cause.
Alodid’s status as an asylum seeker, coupled with the brutality of the stabbing, served as the final straw for many residents across the UK – a nation that has faced increasing backlash among the local population over their immigration policies.
Violent demonstrations quickly erupted all over the country, with protesters setting homes, businesses, and cars on fire. Police officers were attacked in multiple cities – various objects, including bricks, were thrown at officials attempting to handle the unrest, forcing authorities to fire water cannons at angry mobs.
Several accounts of racially-motivated violence were also reported by local institutions. Many saw their homes vandalized or set alight solely due to the color of their skin, with angry protesters making the assumption that they were foreigners or illegal immigrants.
“This has nothing to do with community. This is outright thuggery.
The attack in north Belfast was heinous and wrong. But there are dangerous attempts to exploit that, to target and attack innocent people who are simply trying to live, work and raise their families here.”
— First Minister Michelle O’Neill
Reform UK, a far-right party that has been rising in popularity among the young generation, released a controversial statement calling for stricter immigration policies soon after the attack. In particular, party leaders have called for a total ban on all visas from Sudan, which is currently struggling with an ongoing civil war and a severe humanitarian crisis that has killed hundreds of thousands of people.
UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer, who leads the left-wing Labour Party, also released a statement regarding the stabbing. His post on X confirmed that the UK has “absolutely no tolerance for abhorrent scenes of violence like this on our streets.” However, he also condemned the riots: “It is clear that people were targeted last night because of their background and I will not tolerate it. Those responsible will feel the full force of the law.”
The family of Stephen Ogilvie also denounced his stabbing, but they asserted that the violence being used to justify his attack was unacceptable.
“We have been left feeling disgusted by the scenes that unfolded yesterday across Northern Ireland in the wake of what happened.
… to do this in response is not supported by our family, and peaceful protest is only ever the way forward.
We do not want this terrible tragedy to be used to divide people or fuel hostility – do not do this in the name of our loved one as we do not share the same values.”
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Photo courtesy of Breaking News Ireland via X

