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The Murder of Henry Nowak and the Politics of Certainty

This case shows how quickly tragedy becomes raw material for those who seek to exploit it.

· 9 min read
The Murder of Henry Nowak and the Politics of Certainty
police and protestors clashing in Southampton during a protest following the death of Henry Nowak. Alamy

Henry Nowak should first be remembered as an eighteen-year-old who had moved to Southampton to begin adult life. He was murdered as he walked back to his student accommodation, and those who loved him have been sentenced to a life of grief. That is where any serious discussion of the case must begin. As he sentenced Nowak’s killer to a prison term of not less than 21 years on Monday 1 June, Judge William Mousley KC described Nowak as “a much-loved, kind, hard-working and ambitious young man, devoted to his family and with a bright future.” Everything else—policing, race, religion, knife law, politics—is secondary to the tragedy of his senseless death.

The second fact is that Nowak’s grieving family asked the country not to use his death “to create further division, hatred or tension.” Their request was unusually and heartbreakingly dignified, given what they have endured. But it was immediately ignored. Within hours of the sentencing and the release of body-worn-camera footage, the case had become a vessel into which every faction poured its existing anxieties: two-tier policing, anti-white racism, diversity ideology, immigration, Sikh religious exemptions, knife crime, public order, and the legitimacy of the police. Some of these questions merit examination. None deserves to be used to drive further violence and exploitative political agendas.

The most conspicuous political opportunists have been Tommy Robinson, once leader of the English Defence League, and Nigel Farage, currently leader of Britain’s populist New Right political party Reform UK. Elon Musk poured accelerant on these flames by retweeting a series of inflammatory posts to his vast social-media following, which ensured an outpouring of uninformed outrage from across the Atlantic. In a statement, Farage called for “pure cold rage” and cited the case as evidence of the preferential treatment he alleges ethnic minorities receive from British law enforcement. “Britain’s historic way of life,” he added darkly, “is being thrown away.” Robinson spoke at a massive protest in Southampton on 2 June, where he said that Nowak’s treatment by the police is proof that white people are treated as second-class citizens. Musk’s compulsive posting about the case included the claim that official police policy requires racism against whites. The predictable result was fury, simplification of a complex issue, and disgraceful violence against the police in Southampton, during what are now being called the “Farage Riots.”

The horror of the bodycam footage does not excuse the violence, during which protesters hurled chairs, cans, flares, bricks, bottles, and stones at officers. Hampshire Police later said that eleven officers and a police dog had been injured. Arrests followed. None of this did anything for Henry Nowak or his family. It did nothing to improve police accountability. It only added another layer of fear to a city already raw with shock, and it dragged Nowak’s name into the kind of scenes his family had specifically asked the public to avoid.

Condemn This Violence Without Equivocation | Glenn Loury
The protests are not merely the legitimate exercise of constitutional rights to assemble and to petition our government—they are essential for sustaining the moral health of our democracy.

The case is unbearable, in part because the bodycam footage appears to show an innocent man dying while he is treated as a suspect. Nowak told police that he had been stabbed and could not breathe. An attending officer expressed disbelief. Nowak was handcuffed and arrested before the severity of his injuries became apparent. His father later described that treatment as “inhumane and degrading.” But he also made it clear that Vickrum Digwa, his son’s 22-year-old assailant, bears complete responsibility for the murder. That distinction should not be difficult to hold in mind. The killer is responsible for the killing. The police response was still gravely inept.