
BELFAST, Northern Ireland — A wave of violent, anti-immigrant unrest has gripped Northern Ireland following a horrific street stabbing in north Belfast on Monday, June 8, 2026. As the civil disorder escalates, minority essential workers are bearing the brunt of the hostility, leading many to question their future in the country.
The Catalyst: A Brutal Street Attack
The violence erupted after a graphic video of a daylight knife attack on Kinnaird Avenue circulated widely on social media. Hadi Alodid, a 30-year-old Sudanese national with refugee status, allegedly used a kitchen knife to repeatedly stab 40-year-old local resident Stephen Ogilvie in the face, back, and neck.
Passersby bravely intervened using a hurling stick to subdue the attacker until the Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) arrived. The attack left Ogilvie with severe injuries, including the loss of his left eye. He remains in stable condition in the hospital.
Alodid appeared via video link before the Belfast Magistrates’ Court on Wednesday, June 10, charged with attempted murder, possession of a knife in a public place, and making threats to kill. He has been remanded in custody.
Riots and ‘Race-Based Pogroms’
Following the incident, far-right figures amplified the footage online, inciting immediate, coordinated demonstrations. The ensuing unrest has seen masked groups marching through Belfast and surrounding towns, chanting xenophobic slogans, setting up racially segregated checkpoints, and attacking properties.
Emergency services have responded to dozens of arson incidents, with local businesses, a Middle Eastern supermarket, a city bus, and numerous vehicles set ablaze. More than 27 people—including a two-month-old baby, Ugandan carers, and Ukrainian and Romani families—have been made homeless after rioters went door-to-door targeting immigrant households. Media outlets and local officials have characterized the targeted violence as a “race-based pogrom.” Multiple police officers have been injured as authorities deployed water cannons to disperse the crowds.
In a poignant statement issued through the PSNI, the family of the stabbing victim, Stephen Ogilvie, strongly condemned the riots. They emphasized that the “unrest is not welcome” and begged the public not to use their tragedy to fuel hostility or divide the community, stating that the rioters do not share their family’s values.
Healthcare Workers in the Crosshairs
The Royal College of Nursing reported that the hostility has directly spilled over into the healthcare sector, with masked men stopping medical staff on their commutes and demanding to see their credentials.
Among those targeted was Chinonso Uche, a Nigerian nurse who has lived and worked in Belfast for five years. Uche was walking home from her hospital shift, still dressed in her uniform, when she was ambushed by anti-immigrant protesters.
“These boys used a stone and they hit me on the head on my way back from work all dressed in my nursing uniform,” Uche told the Irish News.
When she shared her experience online looking for solidarity, she was met with further xenophobic abuse telling her that “Ireland is tired of immigrants” and that she should “go back home.”
“Nobody cares what you do, even though they know I’m a nurse,” Uche said. “There is no safety for us, that is the truth. It’s actually a very scary and hard time as a healthcare worker to be honest.”
The assault and the lack of empathy online have left Uche reconsidering her future in Northern Ireland. She challenged the underlying logic of the protestors, urging them to consider the structural reliance of the local infrastructure on migrant labor.
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”Ask yourselves who will look after your elderly parents if migrants leave Northern Ireland,” she warned.
As the PSNI maintains a heightened presence on the streets, Northern Ireland’s power-sharing government continues to condemn the violence, reiterating that the regional health system and economy depend heavily on the vital contributions of international workers.


