Smartraveller advises those going to the nation should “exercise a high degree of caution”
“Avoid areas where protests are occurring due to the potential for disruption and violence,” it says.
“Monitor the media for information and updates. Follow the instructions of local authorities.”
The nation was already at yellow warning level, which advises people exercise a high degree of caution, due to terrorism threats.
Nigeria and Indonesia have also delivered warnings to their citizens in or traveling to the UK.
Since then, anti-Muslim and anti-immigration extremists have been mobilised by a wave of disinformation about the killings, including false claims the attacker was an immigrant.
Nigeria’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs issued a travel alert yesterday warning its citizens planning to visit the UK that “demonstrations by far right and other extra-parliamentary groups in parts of the UK in recent weeks have been large and in some instances unruly” and that “there is an increased risk of violence and disorder.”
The alert advises Nigerian citizens to be “extra vigilant” and “self-aware at all times” and to avoid crowded areas, large gatherings and political processions and rallies.
Kenya’s principal secretary for foreign affairs, Korir Sing’Oei, took to social media platform X on Sunday to post, “A deeply worrying situation in the UK. Kenyans are urged to exercise caution.”
Violent protests have also been taking place in multiple cities in Nigeria this weekend over hunger and “bad governance,” with Kenya too recently dealing with nationwide protests against proposed tax hikes.
“Nigeria and Kenya are warning their citizens in the UK after riots in the former colonial power,” said Nairobi-based CNN correspondent Larry Madowo.
“People are calling this ‘aura for aura’ because the UK and other Western nations often issue travel advisories targeting African countries.”
Malaysia’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs was the first nation to react to the UK disorder, issuing “an urgent notice to Malaysians in the United Kingdom” on X on Sunday.
It said it was closely monitoring the situation in the UK and urged its citizens to “stay away from protest areas” and “remain vigilant.”
The Indonesian Embassy in London issued an appeal later on Sunday, urging its citizens in the UK to increase vigilance, especially if traveling or doing activities outside the home, and to “avoid large crowds and places that have the potential to become gathering places for masses or groups of demonstrators.”
Since the stabbing tensions have been ratcheting up across UK cities.
Far-right activists have been accused of using social media platforms to spread disinformation, most notably falsely claiming that the Southport attacker was an immigrant who had arrived in the UK illegally.