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UK's Starmer worried by foreign-backed proxy attacks in Britain

April 23, 2026 1:02 PM EDT

FILE PHOTO: Britain's Prime Minister Keir Starmer steps outside 10 Downing Street in London, Britain, April 22, 2026. REUTERS/Toby Shepheard/File Photo

LONDON, April 23 (Reuters) - British ‌Prime Minister ​Keir ​Starmer said on Thursday he was "increasingly concerned" about a growing use of proxies by foreign states to ‌carry out attacks in Britain, pledging to bring forward ⁠new legislation following recent attacks.

London has seen a string of attacks - mostly ‌arson - on Jewish-linked sites ‌in recent weeks. Some of these are being investigated by counter-terrorism officers, although police say they are not currently ​being treated as terrorist incidents.

British authorities have increasingly pointed to hostile state activity as part of the backdrop to ⁠recent incidents, warning that foreign governments may seek to operate through criminal networks or ​proxies to maintain deniability.

"I'm increasingly concerned that a number of countries are using proxies for attacks in ​this country," he said, speaking ‌after meeting members of the Jewish community at Kenton United Synagogue, which was the target of ⁠an arson attack last Sunday.

The fire caused minor smoke damage to an internal room and there were no injuries. A 17-year-old British ⁠boy pleaded guilty on Tuesday to arson not endangering life in connection ​with the incident.

"We have to deal with malign state actors," Starmer said, adding that it would require legislation by the government.

"I want this country ‌to be a place where everybody feels safe and secure. This is not just a ‌battle for the Jewish community," Starmer said. "It is our battle. The ⁠Britain that I want ‌is a Britain where ​people can practice their religion, their faith, in safety and security."

(Reporting by Sam Tabahriti; editing by William ‌James)



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