Which Tyler wrote: ↑Mon Aug 05, 2024 6:53 pm
Since the first riots, these aren't demonstrations that become riots, they're organised riots.
Absolutely, not all rioters will be terrorists, my original question was about when one becomes the other, assuming that nothing had yet.
I dont believe that you have to be part of a proscribed organisation to be a terrorist. It may be that way, but seems an unnecessary hurdle (possibly purely an out of date one)
No, you can be a lone wolf terrorist motivated by a wider ideology. Much harder to investigate prior to an incident for obvious reasons.
I suppose the issue is that not all riots are terrorist offences. Yet all riots end up with people hurt and property damaged. If it’s organised by a terrorist group then you can get the obvious link. The organisation but is essential, and that needs evidence.
I suppose the issue is not to cast the terrorist definition too far. Remember the Duggan riots? An incident triggers a riot, which then acts as a catalyst for other riots. Should that be considered to be terrorism? Those riots elsewhere in the uk weren’t by people who could claim to be personally impacted by the death. Some wanted to demonstrate over the tactics the police used, others just wanted to loot shops. But no one outside of the lunatic right fringe would call these people terrorists.
Anti immigration protests shouldn’t be considered terrorism offences per se. Rioting isn’t terrorism by itself, even considering that some riots are pre planned. There’s a tipping point where a group or those who follow an ideology are viewed to have tipped over a red line. Not sure this explanation is totally answering your question other than to suggest that we should be careful proscribing groups as terrorist or considering certain view points as extremist ideologies, even if we personally don’t like them.