2026-06-11T12:36:00-0400 / 哥伦比亚广播公司(CBS News)
作者:乔安妮·斯托克 核实制作人
乔安妮·斯托克是哥伦比亚广播公司的核实制作人。她此前曾担任库尔德斯坦24频道英文频道总编辑,以及《防务邮报》执行主编。15 多年来,她结合开源调查方法与实地报道,报道冲突、恐怖主义和虚假信息相关内容。
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更新时间:2026年6月11日 / 美国东部时间下午12:42 / 哥伦比亚广播公司
在谷歌上添加哥伦比亚广播公司
本周北爱尔兰首府贝尔法斯特及周边地区爆发反移民暴力抗议并演变为骚乱期间,一份被认为属于移民及其家人的地址清单在网络上被传播。
此次骚乱由周一发生的恶性持刀袭击事件引发。这段骇人听闻的袭击视频在网络上广泛流传,引发了贝尔法斯特街头连续两晚的骚乱。一群经常蒙面的暴徒纵火焚烧住宅、巴士和垃圾桶,向警察投掷石块并阻断道路。
哥伦比亚广播公司周四获悉,一份被认为是移民(包括其家人)住所的地址清单在呼吁举行大规模抗议的人群中传播。哥伦比亚广播公司在网络上找到的这份清单在 WhatsApp 等封闭社交媒体网络上流传,其中包含贝尔法斯特的二十多个地址。
另一起案例中,X 平台上的一个账号周三清晨分享了一份名单,列出了七个据称是北爱尔兰移民律师及律所的姓名和地址,并敦促“爱国者”们“自行斟酌处理”。
在其工会报告称一名前往阿尔斯特医院上班的护士被蒙面男子追赶后,北爱尔兰卫生与社会服务部门的首席执行官周三在联合声明中表示,一些国际医护人员感到被恐吓,“过于害怕而不敢上班”。
由于传播这些名单所使用的社交媒体平台具有私密性,哥伦比亚广播公司无法确定有多少人转发了该信息,也无法查明其最初发布者是谁。
北爱尔兰警察局(PSNI)周三在一份声明中表示,其已注意到一些社交媒体用户在抗议期间在网络上分享地址信息。
“以这种方式暴露他人住所是完全不可接受的,”北爱尔兰警察局表示,并补充说他们已接到多个家庭、房主和邻居的来电,称他们“因这种鲁莽行为感到极度不安”。
周一,贝尔法斯特的一名英国议会议员谴责其所在城市的骚乱是“基于种族的大屠杀”。
社会民主工党议员克莱尔·汉娜在接受 BBC《新闻之夜》节目采访时表示,抗议者曾挨家挨户寻找移民。
“一群蒙面男子纵火焚烧家庭住所,这无非是令人作呕的懦弱行为,”她说。
此次持刀袭击事件的嫌疑人是一名 30 岁的苏丹男子,他曾在英国申请庇护。他已被指控犯有谋杀未遂、威胁杀人以及携带刀具罪。该男子在申请庇护后进入北爱尔兰,并于 2023 年获得了可在英国停留五年的签证。
该事件的实拍视频显示,一名袭击者将受害者按在地上,用刀割刺其头部和颈部,这一行为被广泛描述为试图斩首。平民在警察赶到前不久进行了干预,他们被认为救下了受害者的性命。
视频在网络上迅速传播,包括埃隆·马斯克和特朗普盟友、英国政客奈杰尔·法拉奇在内的知名人士都分享了该视频,并呼吁举行大规模抗议。
贝尔法斯特议员汉娜指责马斯克、法拉奇以及英国极右翼活动家汤米·罗宾逊(本名斯蒂芬·亚克斯利-伦诺克斯)是“网络上和当地一些根本不关心北 Belfast 社区遭遇的负面人物”,称他们在网络上煽动骚乱。
哥伦比亚广播公司未发现任何迹象表明这些知名公众人物曾在网络上分享地址清单。
警方表示,嫌疑人在袭击中使用了一把厨房刀,受害者左眼失明,头部、面部和背部均有严重伤口。北爱尔兰警察局表示,尚未确定此次持刀袭击的动机。调查仍在进行中,但警方称该事件不被认为是恐怖主义行为。
贝尔法斯特的骚乱发生在英格兰南部南安普敦爆发反移民抗议仅一周之后,那次抗议是针对大学生亨利·诺瓦克的被杀事件。
诺瓦克是白人,于去年 12 月被维克拉姆·迪格瓦杀害。迪格瓦是英国出生的锡克教徒,他曾向警方谎称自己遭到诺瓦克的种族主义袭击。
当警察赶到时,他们最初将受伤的诺瓦克视为嫌疑人,之后才发现他的伤势并试图对他进行复苏抢救。诺瓦克最终因伤势过重死亡,尽管迪格瓦拥有英国国籍,但极右翼活动人士和一些政客将这起案件作为“双重标准”执法的例证,暗示英国白人会受到不同对待。
涉事警局坚决否认了这一指控,但在网络上呼吁举行反移民示威的言论煽动下,暴力抗议爆发了。
List of Belfast addresses said to be immigrant homes circulated online amid riots in wake of stabbing
2026-06-11T12:36:00-0400 / CBS News
By Joanne Stocker Verification producer
Joanne Stocker is a verification producer for CBS News Confirmed. She was previously chief editor of Kurdistan 24 English and managing editor at The Defense Post. She has combined open-source investigation methods with on-the-ground reporting to cover conflict, terrorism, and misinformation for over 15 years.
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Updated on: June 11, 2026 / 12:42 PM EDT / CBS News
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A list of addresses thought to belong to immigrants and their families was shared online during violent anti-immigration protests that descended into rioting in and around Northern Ireland’s capital Belfast this week.
The unrest was sparked by a brutal knife attack on Monday. That attack, a horrific video of which has been shared widely online, sparked two nights of unrest on the streets of Belfast, with groups of often-masked rioters setting fire to homes, a bus and trash cans, and throwing rocks at police and blocking roads.
CBS News learned Thursday that a list of addresses believed to be the homes of immigrants, including families, was circulated online among people calling for mass protests. A copy of the list found online by CBS News, circulated on closed social media networks such as WhatsApp, includes more than two dozen addresses in Belfast.
In another example, an account on X shared a list early Wednesday morning of seven names and addresses of what it claimed were immigration lawyers and law firms in Northern Ireland, urging “patriots” to “do with that what you will.”
After her labor union reported that a nurse going to work at the Ulster Hospital had been chased by masked men, the chief executives of Northern Ireland’s Health and Social Care service said in a joint statement Wednesday that some international staff felt intimidated and “too frightened to come to work.”
Vehicles set on fire amid anti-immigration protests and riots burn on Lendrick Street in east Belfast, Northern Ireland, June 9, 2026, after the arrest of a Sudanese man accused of stabbing a man in the northern part of the city. PA via AP
Due to the privacy lent by the closed social media platforms used to circulate the lists, CBS News could not determine how many people shared the information, or who originated it.
The Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) said in a statement Wednesday that it was aware of some social media users sharing addresses online amid the protests.
“Highlighting properties in this way is totally unacceptable,” the PSNI said, adding that it had received calls from families, homeowners and neighbors who were “extremely distressed as a result of this reckless activity.”
On Monday, a member of the U.K. Parliament from Belfast condemned the unrest in her city as “a race-based pogrom”.
Claire Hanna, a member of the Social Democratic & Labour Party, told BBC’s “Newsnight” program that protesters had gone door to door looking for immigrants.
“Groups of masked men burning families out of their homes is nothing less than disgusting cowardice,” she said.
Firefighters attend a house which caught fire on Ligoniel Road, Belfast, as disorder flared during an anti-immigration demonstration organized in response to a stabbing attack in the city, June 9, 2026. PA/PA Images/Getty
The suspect in the stabbing attack is a 30-year-old Sudanese man who had claimed asylum in the United Kingdom. He has been charged with attempted murder, threatening to kill, and carrying a knife. The man entered Northern Ireland after applying for asylum and, in 2023, he was granted a five-year visa to remain in the U.K.
Graphic video of the incident shows an attacker straddling the victim on the ground while slashing at his head and neck with a knife, in what has widely been described as an attempted beheading. Civilians intervened before police arrived shortly after, and they have been credited with saving the man’s life.
The video spread quickly online and prominent figures — including Elon Musk and British politician Nigel Farage, an ally of President Trump — were among those to share it and call for mass protests.
Hanna, the Belfast lawmaker, called out Musk, Farage and British far-right activist Tommy Robinson, whose real name is Stephen Yaxley-Lennon, as some of the “negative actors online and politicians locally who don’t really care what communities in north Belfast have been through,” whom she said were fomenting the unrest online.
CBS News has not seen any indication of those prominent public figures sharing address lists online.
Police said the suspect used a kitchen knife in the attack and the victim was blinded in the left eye and left with deep wounds in his head, face and back. The PSNI said no motive has been determined for the knife attack. An investigation is ongoing, but they said it was not believed to be terrorism.
The Belfast unrest came just a week after separate anti-immigration protests in Southampton, southern England, over the killing of college student Henry Nowak.
Protesters stand facing police officers during a demonstration following the conviction of Vikrum Digwa for the murder of student Henry Nowak, in Southampton, Britain, June 2, 2026. Isabel Infantes/REUTERS
Nowak, who was white, was killed in December by Vickrum Digwa, a British-born Sikh, who falsely claimed to police that he had been the victim of a racist assault by Nowak.
When police officers arrived, they initially treated the wounded Nowak as a suspect before noticing his injury and trying to resuscitate him. He died of his injuries, and despite Digwa’s British nationality, far-right activists and some politicians cited the case as an example of “two-tier” policing, implying that White Britons are treated differently.
The police department involved in the incident firmly denied that accusation, but violent protests erupted, fueled by calls online for anti-immigration demonstrations.
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