LONDON - British Prime Minister
David Cameron said he would recall the British parliament from its Summer recess, and do everything necessary to restore order in London on Tuesday following three consecutive nights of riots. One of the measures he said would be taken was the deployment of 16,000 police officers in the city by Tuesday night.
"This is criminality pure and simple," he told reporters outside his Downing Street office after breaking off his annual holiday to return to Britain. "People should be in no doubt that we will do everything necessary to restore order to Britain's streets."
RELATED:Police prepare for the worst as London riots continueNeighborhoods across the
capital faced a massive clean-up of smashed glass, bricks, bottles and gutted
buildings as police reinforcements reclaimed the streets from the
youths.
Politicians and police blamed the riots - the worst in Britain
for decades - on criminals and opportunistic hooligans.
But residents in
affected areas and some commentators attributed the unrest to local tensions and
anger over economic hardship in a city where the gap between the haves and
have-nots is growing.
The riots broke out amid deepening gloom in Britain,
with the economy struggling to grow while the government is imposing deep public
spending cuts and tax rises brought in to help eliminate a budget deficit that
peaked at more than 10 percent of GDP.
They will also show an ugly side
of London to the rest of the world less than a year before it hosts the 2012
Olympic Games, an event which organizers hope will showcase a dynamic,
prosperous and cosmopolitan city.
Police said they had arrested 334 people in London and
about 100 in Birmingham in the English Midlands. Violence also broke out in
Bristol in the southwest and the northwest port of Liverpool.
At one
point, the London fire brigade said it was running out of vehicles to tackle
fires started by the rioters and police said they had called in 1,700
reinforcements to help London police cope with fast-moving groups of
looters.
Cameron broke off his holiday in Italy on Monday to fly home. He
was due to chair a meeting of Cobra, the government's crisis committee, to work
out a strategy to prevent more violence and consider why the riots broke out and
spread so fast, taking the authorities by surprise.
Some commentators
have blamed the rioting partly on cuts in social services being imposed as a
result of the government's tough austerity policies to reduce a large budget
deficit.
Looters hail from areas of high unemploymentMany looters were from areas
of high unemployment and said they felt alienated from society.
Hooded
youths in Hackney pushed burning rubbish bins down a street towards police on
Monday, laughing as they ran back when police charged them. Others smashed their
way into a shop and ran off clutching bottles of whisky and beer.
Reuters
witnesses saw similar scenes in Woolwich, Clapham in the south and Ealing in the
west. In Ealing, one resident told Reuters about 150 hooded youths had walked
down his road smashing car windows in a display of "mindless
vandalism".
"It's very sad to see...But kids have got no work, no future
and the cuts have made it worse. These kids are from another generation to us
and they just don't care," said Hackney electrician Anthony Burns,
39.
"You watch. It's only just begun."