Following a disturbing knife attack
Social June 13, 2026
Last week, a horrible event took place outside a block of flats in north Belfast at 10.30pm on Monday, 8th June: a Sudanese man tried to behead another Irish man. It was stopped in time (though not by the police); however, the victim barely survived.
After his arrest, as Alodid was being treated for a hand wound, he also threatened to kill a radiologist.

Left: Attacker Hadi Alodid, 30
Right: Victim Stephen Ogilvie, 44
The suspect, a 30-year-old Sudanese man who had claimed asylum in the United Kingdom, has been charged with attempted murder, threatening to kill a second person, and carrying a knife.
Following this event, social unrest occurred. Cars and buses were torched, and clashes with police followed. And while the police are pushing for calm and politicians are condemning the violence, one conclusion is more evident than ever: mass emigration is a failed social experiment, and today ordinary people are confronted with the failure of the system.
Alodid claimed asylum upon arrival in Northern Ireland. His claim was accepted and he was granted five years’ leave to remain in September 2023. So he is in the UK legally as a refugee, and his claim was processed by the Home Office.
You can read more here about how this individual manage to arrive there (hint: fast-track application scheme based on his nationality).
This mass immigration, which was blessed a couple of years ago by Angela Merkel in Germany, brought millions of people from all over the globe, but especially from Africa and the Middle East. Nothing was done to protect borders; even more, many technicalities and workarounds were found. Voices that raised against this movement were silenced. Everyone across the EU has to believe in and support mass migration with no objection. Even at this date, some cheap theatre around migration laws is played for the masses, but nothing ever happens.
And this is the direct result. Importing tons of people from Sudan will also import their problems: their criminals, rapists, mentally ill people, and disturbed individuals like Hadi Alodid.
And when governments fail to protect their own people and countries, those governments are illegitimate. Then social unrest occurs, and social justice takes place — with all its bad implications.
This is hardly the end. More incidents like this will happen, and societies will become unhappier. To some extent, the future existence of the European Union is tied to the "refugees are welcome" mantra.