This is a list of ethnic riots by country, and includes riots based on ethnic, sectarian, xenophobic, and racial conflict. Some of these riots can also be classified as pogroms.
Country | Riot | Notes | References |
---|---|---|---|
Burundi | 1972 Ikiza tragedy | ||
1993 ethnic violence in Burundi | |||
Côte d'Ivoire | 2004 French–Ivorian clashes | [1] [2] | |
Egypt | 1945 Anti-Jewish riots in Egypt | ||
Ghana | see: Ethnic conflict in Ghana | ||
Kenya (see: Ethnic conflicts in Kenya ) | Somali–Kenyan conflict | ||
2012 Baragoi clashes | |||
2012–13 Tana River District clashes | |||
Lesotho | 2007 Anti-Chinese riot in Maseru | [3] | |
Libya | 1945 Anti-Jewish riots in Tripolitania | ||
1948 Anti-Jewish riots in Tripolitania | |||
Mauritania | 1989 race riots in Mauritania | Riots took place during Mauritania–Senegal Border War | [4] |
Mauritius | 1906 Pagoda riots | ||
1911 Curepipe riots | |||
1937 Uba riots | |||
1943 Belle Vue Harel Massacre | |||
1965 Mauritius race riots | |||
1968 Mauritian riots | |||
1999 Mauritian riots | |||
1999 L'Amicale riots | |||
Nigeria | 1966 anti-Igbo pogrom | ||
Rhodesia | 1925 Kananga riot[ citation needed ] | ||
South Africa | 1949 Anti-Indian riots in Durban | These riots, taking place between 13–14 January 1949, were a pogrom in which Indians were targeted, predominantly by Zulus. In total 142 Asians died and another 1,087 people were injured; the riot resulted in the massacre of mostly poor Indians. It also led to the destruction of 58 shops, 247 dwellings, and one factory. | [5] |
1976 Soweto uprising | |||
1985 Anti-Indian riot in Durban | This riot came as Zulu youth spilled into Asian suburbs of Durban (including Inanda) during the night. While this event was less severe in its intensity and of much shorter duration than the 1949 riots, this riot also saw hundreds of South-African Indians families fleeing their neighbourhoods in order to escape Zulu rioters who looted and torched their homes on the night of 7 August 1985. | [6] [7] [8] | |
2007 Anti-Somali riot in Port Elizabeth | [9] | ||
2020 riot in Senekal | Protests in response to the killing of Brendin Horner turned violent. Rioters, largely Boers, stormed the courthouse where the two perpetrators were being held. Gunfire was exchanged, and a police van outside was turned over and set alight. | [10] | |
Tanzania | 1964 Zanzibar Revolution | Took place on 12 January 1964. | [11] [12] |
Country | Riot | Notes | References |
---|---|---|---|
Brazil | 1823 Anti-Portuguese riots in Rio de Janeiro | [13] | |
1831 Anti-Portuguese riots in Salvador | |||
Canada | 1784 Shelburne riots in Nova Scotia | These riots took place in July 1784 by landless white Loyalist veterans of the American War of Independence against Black Loyalists and government officials in the Nova Scotian town of Shelburne, and the nearby village of Birchtown. They are considered the first race riots in Canada, and are one of the earliest recorded race riots in North America. | [14] |
1835–45 Shiners' War | |||
Riot over a black person taking up a military uniform in 1852 in St. Catharines, Ontario. | |||
Riot over a black man marrying a white woman in 1860 in Chatham, Ontario. | |||
Riot over a blacks sitting in the main theatre section in 1860 in Victoria, British Columbia. | |||
1875 Jubilee riots in Toronto | |||
Anti-Chinese riot in 1887 due to both xenophobia and economic competition, (Vancouver, British Columbia) | |||
Anti-Chinese riot in 1892 due to a small-pox outbreak, (Calgary, Alberta) | |||
Anti-Chinese riot in 1907 due to an altercation between a Chinese employee and a white customer, (Lethbridge, Alberta) | |||
1907 Anti-Oriental riots in Vancouver | As part of the larger anti-Asian Pacific Coast race riots of 1907, along the west coast of Canada and the US. | ||
Anti-German riots in reaction to World War I in 1916, (Calgary, Alberta) | |||
1918 Toronto anti-Greek riot | |||
Anti-Chinese riot in 1919, (Halifax, Nova Scotia) | |||
Anti-immigrant riot in 1919, (Winnipeg, Manitoba) | |||
1933 Christie Pits riot in Toronto | |||
Anti-black riot in 1940, (Calgary, Alberta) | |||
1969 Sir George Williams affair | |||
Riot by blacks against white owned businesses in response to perceived discrimination against them in 1991, (Halifax, Nova Scotia) | |||
Yonge Street Riot-rioting by black protestors in response to the Rodney King verdict and another victim of police brutality that occurred shortly before in 1992, (Toronto, Ontario) | |||
1999 Burnt Church Crisis | |||
2020 Mi'kmaq lobster dispute | |||
Mexico | 1911 Torreón massacre | ||
Peru | 1880s anti-Chinese riots | Peruvians held the Chinese as responsible for Chile's invasion during the War of the Pacific, due to Chinese support for Chile throughout the war. This would stem a sense of sinophobia among Peruvians, the first of its kind in Latin America. In the Cañete region, Chinese immigrants were massacred by Afro-Peruvian peasants, led by women during the War of the Pacific. Following the war, Chinese were further targeted and murdered by native Peruvians. In the central Sierra, armed indigenous peasants sacked and occupied the haciendas of landed elite Criollo 'collaborationists', a majority of whom were of ethnic-Chinese descent. In Lima, Indigenous and mestizo Peruvians murdered Chinese shopkeepers. In response, Chinese coolies revolted, some even joining the Chilean Army. It was not until 1890s that anti-Chinese pogroms ended in Peru. | [15] [16] [17] [18] |
1880s Indigenous uprising against White Peruvians | [19] |
Country | Riot | Notes | References |
---|---|---|---|
Belgium | 1941 Antwerp Pogrom | ||
2006 Brussels riots | |||
Bulgaria | 2007 anti-Romani riots in Sofia | [60] | |
Banya Bashi mosque clashes | |||
2019 anti-Romani riots in Gabrovo | A mob of approximately 1000 Bulgarians rioted for four nights following the assault of a Bulgarian shop worker by Romani youths. Property destruction of the Romani area ensued. | [61] | |
Denmark | 1873 St. Croix labor riot | St. Croix agricultural labor rioted against landlords and labor laws. | |
1820–1822 Jewish skirmishes[ citation needed ] | Riots in various Danish and German cities and towns. | ||
France | 2005 Perpignan riots | Riots in Perpignan between Maghrebi and Romani communities after a man of Maghrebi descent was shot dead. | [62] |
2009 riots in Avignon [ citation needed ] | Riots in September 2009 between Turkish and Moroccan youths (one youth of African descent was dead) | ||
2015 Corsican protests | Conflict between locals and immigrants in December 2015 in Ajaccio. | ||
2020 Dijon riots | These riots between members of the Chechen diaspora and the resident Arab community occurred due to an assault on a Chechen teenager by Arab drug dealers. | [63] | |
Germany | 1819 Hep-Hep riots | ||
1938 Kristallnacht | Anti-Jewish riots that would precipitate the Holocaust | ||
Neo-Nazi marches in Dresden | These marches have sparked many riots as recently as August 2015. [64] | ||
1991 Hoyerswerda riots | |||
1992 Rostock-Lichtenhagen riots | |||
Greece | 1990 Komotini events | ||
Kosovo | 2000 riots in Kosovo | ||
2004 pogrom in Kosovo | |||
Italy | 2007 Chinese riot in Milan | [65] [66] | |
2010 African-immigrant riots in Rosarno | [67] | ||
2011 African-immigrant riots in Bari | [68] [69] | ||
2011 African-immigrant riots in Lampedusa | Riots involving mostly Tunisians | [70] | |
2015 riots in Sassari | Riots as result of refugees refusing to reside in provided buildings | [71] | |
2016 anti-Arab riots in Sesto Fiorentino | Chinese-Italian riots against Arab immigrants and refugees | [72] [73] [74] | |
2018 Italian-Senegalese riots in Florence | Senegal community riot the city of Florence | [75] | |
North Macedonia | 2001 insurgency in Macedonia | ||
2012 Republic of Macedonia inter-ethnic violence | |||
2017 storming of Macedonian Parliament | |||
Norway | 2008–2009 Oslo riots | Anti-Jewish riots in the city of Oslo, involving mostly muslim immigrants and far-left activists | |
Netherlands | 1972 Afrikaanderwijk riots | ||
1976 Schiedam riots | |||
Poland | 1936 Przytyk pogrom | Anti-Jewish riots in Przytyk, on March 9, 1936 | |
1939 Bloody Sunday | Anti-German riots that occurred on September 3, 1939, in the city of Bydgoszcz | ||
1939 Skidel revolt | Anti-Polish riots that took place on September 18–19, 1939, in the city of Skidel, part of broader anti-Polish pogroms after the Soviet invasion of Poland. | ||
1945 Kraków pogrom | Anti-Jewish riots that occurred on August 11, 1945, in the city of Kraków | ||
1946 Kielce pogrom | An outbreak of violence against the Jewish community of Kielce, Poland on July 4, 1946 | ||
1991 Mława pogrom | A series of violent incidents in June 1991, when a crowd attacked Roma residents of the Polish town of Mława | ||
2017 Ełk riots | During the New Year's Eve, a Polish man was stabbed to death by a Tunisian man – incident sparked the riots. | ||
Romania | 1990 ethnic clashes of Târgu Mureș | ||
1993 Hădăreni riots | |||
Russia (see also: Ethnic conflicts in the Soviet Union ) | Anti-Jewish pogroms in the Russian Empire | ||
2006 ethnic tensions in Kondopoga | Anti-immigrant riots in Kondopoga, Karelia | ||
2010 Manezhnaya Square riot trials | Anti-immigrant riots on Moscow's Manezhnaya Square following the murder of Egor Sviridov | ||
2013 Biryulyovo riots | Anti-immigrant riots in Biryulyovo District, Moscow | ||
Spain | 2000 race riot in Almería | [76] | |
2007 riots in Madrid | [77] | ||
2008 immigrant riots in Roquetas de Mar | Riot between Senegalese and Roma (Gypsy) families | [78] | |
2015 African riot in Salou | [79] | ||
Sweden | 2010 Rinkeby riots | ||
2013 December Stockholm riots | |||
2013 May Stockholm riots | |||
2016 riots in Sweden | |||
2017 Rinkeby riots | |||
2020 Sweden riots | |||
Turkey | 1934 Thrace pogroms | Anti-Jewish pogrom in Eastern Thrace | |
1955 Istanbul pogroms | |||
1969 Istanbul riots | |||
Ukraine | 1821 Odessa pogrom | ||
1881 Kiev pogrom | |||
1905 Odessa pogrom | |||
1905 Chernihiv pogrom | |||
1905 Kiev pogrom | |||
1914 Lwów pogrom | |||
1918 Lwów pogrom | |||
1919 Kiev pogroms | |||
1941 Lviv pogroms | |||
2014 Odesa clashes | Part of the larger pro-Russian unrest, these riots culminated in the 2 May city clashes, pro-Ukrainian rioters burned the House of Trade Unions where pro-Russian rioters barricaded themselves. | [80] | |
2016 anti-Romani riot in Odesa | Local villagers attack Romani settlement in Odesa after the body of a 9 year old girl was discovered. | [81] | |
United Kingdom | 1911 Siege of Sidney Street | ||
1911 South Wales anti-Jewish riots | |||
1919 riot in South Shields | February 1919 | ||
1919 South Wales race riots | June 1919 | ||
1919 riot in Liverpool | June 1919 | ||
1919 riot in Glasgow | June 1919 | ||
1919 riots in London | In Stepney in April; on St Anne Street in May; and on Cable Street and Poplar in June | ||
1921 Bloody Sunday | |||
1936 Battle of Cable Street | |||
1947 anti-Jewish riots in Birkenhead | |||
1948 riot in Liverpool | August 1948 | ||
1958 riot in Nottingham | August 1958 | ||
1958 Notting Hill race riots | |||
1969 Northern Ireland riots | |||
1975 Chapeltown riot | |||
1976 Notting Hill race riots | |||
1979 Southall race riot | London, 23 April 1979 | ||
1980 St. Pauls riot | In Bristol | ||
1981 Brixton riot | London, April 1981 | ||
1981 Toxteth riots | Liverpool, July 1981 | ||
1981 Handsworth riots | Birmingham July 1981 | ||
1981 Chapeltown Caribbean riot | |||
1981 Moss Side riot | |||
1985 Peckham riot | |||
1985 Handsworth riots | Birmingham July 1985 | ||
1985 Brixton riot | London, September 1985 | ||
1985 Broadwater Farm riot | London, October 1985 | ||
1987 Chapeltown riot | |||
1989 Dewsbury riot | |||
1991 Meadow Well riots | |||
1995 Manningham riot | Bradford, June 1995 | ||
1997 Northern Ireland riots | |||
2001 Oldham riots | Oldham, May 2001 | ||
2001 riots in Burnley | Burnley, June 2001 | ||
2001 Bradford riots | Bradford, July 2001 | ||
2001 riots in Stoke-on-Trent | |||
2001 Holy Cross dispute | |||
July 2001 Belfast riots | |||
November 2001 Belfast riots | |||
2005 Belfast riots | |||
2005 Birmingham riots | |||
2010 Northern Ireland riots | |||
2011 Northern Ireland riots | |||
2011 London riots | |||
2012 North Belfast riots | |||
Belfast City Hall flag protests | |||
2013 Belfast riots | |||
2018 Derry riots | |||
2021 Northern Ireland riots | Riots by Loyalist youths due to post-Brexit trading arrangements and the refusal of the PSNI to prosecute a Sinn Fein member's attendance of an illegal funeral. Eventually escalated when Loyalists threw petrol bombs into a nationalist area. | [82] | |
2022 Leicester unrest | Riots between Muslims and Hindus in Leicester. | ||
2024 United Kingdom riots | Riots against Muslims throughout the UK. | ||
In the broader context of racism in the United States, mass racial violence in the United States consists of ethnic conflicts and race riots, along with such events as:
The Tulsa race massacre, also known as the Tulsa race riot or the Black Wall Street massacre, was a two-day-long white supremacist terrorist massacre that took place between May 31 and June 1, 1921, when mobs of white residents, some of whom had been appointed as deputies and armed by city government officials, attacked black residents and destroyed homes and businesses of the Greenwood District in Tulsa, Oklahoma. The event is considered one of the worst incidents of racial violence in American history. The attackers burned and destroyed more than 35 square blocks of the neighborhood—at the time, one of the wealthiest black communities in the United States, colloquially known as "Black Wall Street."
The Elaine massacre occurred on September 30 – October 2, 1919, at Hoop Spur in the vicinity of Elaine in rural Phillips County, Arkansas where African Americans were organizing against peonage and abuses in tenant farming. As many as several hundred African Americans and five white men were killed. Estimates of deaths made in the immediate aftermath of the Elaine Massacre by eyewitnesses range from 50 to "more than a hundred". Walter Francis White, an NAACP attorney who visited Elaine shortly after the incident, stated "... twenty-five Negroes killed, although some place the Negro fatalities as high as one hundred". More recent estimates in the 21st century of the number of black people killed during this violence are higher than estimates provided by the eyewitnesses, and have ranged into the hundreds. The white mobs were aided by federal troops and local terrorist organizations. Gov. Brough led a contingent of 583 US soldiers from Camp Pike, with a 12-gun machine gun battalion.
The Red Summer was a period in mid-1919 during which white supremacist terrorism and racial riots occurred in more than three dozen cities across the United States, and in one rural county in Arkansas. The term "Red Summer" was coined by civil rights activist and author James Weldon Johnson, who had been employed as a field secretary by the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) since 1916. In 1919, he organized peaceful protests against the racial violence.
The East St. Louis massacre was a series of violent attacks between African Americans and white Americans in East St. Louis, Illinois, between late May and early July of 1917. These attacks also displaced 6,000 African Americans and led to the destruction of approximately $400,000 worth of property. They occurred in East St. Louis, an industrial city on the east bank of the Mississippi River, directly opposite the city of St. Louis, Missouri. The July 1917 episode in particular was marked by violence throughout the city. The multi-day rioting has been described as the "worst case of labor-related violence in 20th-century American history", and among the worst racial riots in U.S. history.
Lynching was the widespread occurrence of extrajudicial killings which began in the United States' pre–Civil War South in the 1830s, slowed during the civil rights movement in the 1950s and 1960s, and continued until 1981. Although the victims of lynchings were members of various ethnicities, after roughly 4 million enslaved African Americans were emancipated, they became the primary targets of white Southerners. Lynchings in the U.S. reached their height from the 1890s to the 1920s, and they primarily victimized ethnic minorities. Most of the lynchings occurred in the American South, as the majority of African Americans lived there, but racially motivated lynchings also occurred in the Midwest and border states. In 1891, the largest single mass lynching in American history was perpetrated in New Orleans against Italian immigrants.
Racism has been reflected in discriminatory laws, practices, and actions against racial or ethnic groups throughout the history of the United States. Since the early colonial era, White Americans have generally enjoyed legally or socially-sanctioned privileges and rights that have been denied to members of various ethnic or minority groups. European Americans have enjoyed advantages in matters of citizenship, criminal procedure, education, immigration, land acquisition, and voting rights.
The Springfield race riot of 1908 consisted of events of mass racial violence committed against African Americans by a mob of about 5,000 white Americans and European immigrants in Springfield, Illinois, between August 14 and 16, 1908. Two black men had been arrested as suspects in a rape, and attempted rape and murder. The alleged victims were two young white women and the father of one of them. When a mob seeking to lynch the men discovered the sheriff had transferred them out of the city, the whites furiously spread out to attack black neighborhoods, murdered black citizens on the streets, and destroyed black businesses and homes. The state militia was called out to quell the rioting.
The 1906 Atlanta Race Massacre, also known as the 1906 Atlanta Race Riot, was an episode of mass racial violence against African Americans in the United States in September 1906. Violent attacks by armed mobs of White Americans against African Americans in Atlanta, Georgia, began after newspapers, on the evening of September 22, 1906, published several unsubstantiated and luridly detailed reports of the alleged rapes of 4 local women by black men. The violence lasted through September 24, 1906. The events were reported by newspapers around the world, including the French Le Petit Journal which described the "lynchings in the USA" and the "massacre of Negroes in Atlanta," the Scottish Aberdeen Press & Journal under the headline "Race Riots in Georgia," and the London Evening Standard under the headlines "Anti-Negro Riots" and "Outrages in Georgia." The final death toll of the conflict is unknown and disputed, but officially at least 25 African Americans and two whites died. Unofficial reports ranged from 10–100 black Americans killed during the massacre. According to the Atlanta History Center, some black Americans were hanged from lampposts; others were shot, beaten or stabbed to death. They were pulled from street cars and attacked on the street; white mobs invaded black neighborhoods, destroying homes and businesses.
This is a list of topics related to racism:
The Chicago race riot of 1919 was a violent racial conflict between white Americans and black Americans that began on the South Side of Chicago, Illinois, on July 27 and ended on August 3, 1919. During the riot, 38 people died. Over the week, injuries attributed to the episodic confrontations stood at 537, two-thirds black and one-third white; and between 1,000 and 2,000 residents, most of them black, lost their homes. Due to its sustained violence and widespread economic impact, it is considered the worst of the scores of riots and civil disturbances across the United States during the "Red Summer" of 1919, so named because of its racial and labor violence. It was also one of the worst riots in the history of Illinois.
Riots often occur in reaction to a perceived grievance or out of dissent. Riots may be the outcome of a sporting event, although many riots have occurred due to poor working or living conditions, government oppression, conflicts between races or religions.
Anti-Mexican sentiment is prejudice, fear, discrimination, xenophobia, racism, or hatred towards Mexico, It’s people, and their culture. It is most commonly seen in the United States.
The Negro Silent Protest Parade, commonly known as the Silent Parade, was a silent march of about 10,000 African Americans along Fifth Avenue starting at 57th Street in New York City on July 28, 1917. The event was organized by the NAACP, church, and community leaders to protest violence directed towards African Americans, such as recent lynchings in Waco and Memphis. The parade was precipitated by the East St. Louis riots in May and July 1917 where at least 40 black people were killed by white mobs, in part touched off by a labor dispute where blacks were used for strike breaking.
Racism in the United Kingdom has a long history and includes structural discrimination and hostile attitudes against various ethnic minorities. The extent and the targets have varied over time. It has resulted in cases of discrimination, riots and racially motivated murders.
The Johnson–Jeffries riots refer to the dozens of race riots that occurred throughout the United States after African-American boxer Jack Johnson defeated white boxer James J. Jeffries in a boxing match termed the "Fight of the Century". Johnson became the first black World Heavyweight champion in 1908 which made him unpopular with the predominantly white American boxing audiences. Jeffries, a former heavyweight champion came out of retirement to fight Johnson and was nicknamed the "Great White Hope". After Johnson defeated Jeffries on July 4, 1910, many white people felt humiliated and began attacking black people who were celebrating Johnson's victory.
In the context of racism in the United States, racism against African Americans dates back to the colonial era, and it continues to be a persistent issue in American society in the 21st century.
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