Skip to main content
Gifts from The Morning Star
Stand Up To Racism prepare weekend of mobilisations against the far right
Counter protesters ahead of an anti-immigration protest outside the Refugee and Migrant centre in Birmingham, August 7, 2024

CAMPAIGNERS, trade unionists and members of the public are set to mobilise against the far right this weekend.

The action comes after a surge of Islamophobic and racist violence gripped the nation after the fascists exploited the fatal stabbing of three young girls in Southport to incite riots.

The unrest saw rioters attempt to murder refugees in asylum hotels in Rotherham and Tamworth by trying to set the buildings ablaze, and the targeting of mosques and immigration centres across the country.

The 95th Anniversary Appeal
Support the Morning Star
You have reached the free limit.
Subscribe to continue reading.
More from this author
Deputy Prime Minister Angela Rayner, Chief Executive of Crisis Matt Downie, Mayor of London Sadiq Khan and Homelessness Minister Rushanara Ali during a visit to the homelessness charity Crisis, December 17, 2024
Housing / 8 August 2025
8 August 2025
Palestinians struggle to get donated food at a community kitchen in Gaza City, northern Gaza Strip, Monday, Aug. 4, 2025
Gaza Genocide / 7 August 2025
7 August 2025

Gaza Humanitarian Foundation's aid distribution points are sites of ‘orchestrated killing and dehumanisation’ that must be shut down, MSF says in new report

Similar stories
People join civil society groups led by Stand Up To Racism d
Britain / 31 January 2025
31 January 2025
Campaigners express concerns about the of safety black and minority ethnic communities in London ahead of far-right march
People join civil society groups led by Stand Up To Racism d
Britain / 30 January 2025
30 January 2025
A Stand Up To Racism demonstration in Manchester after a pol
Britain / 16 September 2024
16 September 2024
TROUBLE AHEAD: (Left to right) Tommy Robinson, Donald Trump
Features / 16 August 2024
16 August 2024
Mass protests may have put fascists on the back foot for now, but Nigel Farage and Reform UK are fanning the flames of a dangerous new racist offensive, warns WEYMAN BENNETT, announcing Stand Up to Racism’s new campaign