Conor McGregor Watched a Belfast Man Nearly Decapitated and Issued the Call That Has Every Western Government Sweating

Jun 13, 2026

A Sudanese asylum seeker just blinded a man in one eye on a Belfast street.

Stephen Ogilvie was attacked on Kinnaird Avenue on the night of June 8 – and the video went viral before the blood dried.

Now Keir Starmer is calling it "sickening" – and Conor McGregor is telling the world exactly why Starmer is the problem.

The Attack Starmer's System Made Possible

Hadi Alodid, a 30-year-old Sudanese national, attacked Ogilvie with a kitchen knife, slashing his face, neck, and back – and destroying his left eye.

Bystanders risked their lives to stop it.

One man fought Alodid off with a hurling stick.

PSNI Assistant Chief Constable Ryan Henderson called those bystanders "heroic" and said their intervention likely saved Ogilvie's life.

Here's what Starmer's government did: Alodid walked through the open border between Ireland and Northern Ireland in 2023, applied for asylum, and was handed a five-year permit to remain – legal leave to stay in the UK until 2028.

Starmer called the attack "sickening."

He still hasn't explained how a man who went through the full asylum process ended up on a residential Belfast street with a kitchen knife.

McGregor Delivered the Verdict Starmer Won't

Conor McGregor posted on X the next day: "Ban all immigration from the 3rd world IMMEDIATELY."

Then he kept going.

"Close the borders. Enter IPAS centres militarily and remove all illegal entrants from this island. Inviting and financing mentally deranged people from the 3rd world is a hard no. Get them out. Stop them coming."

More than four million people saw those posts.

That's not a fringe reaction – that's Western civilization telling its governments something.

Belfast answered with fire.

The Northern Ireland Fire and Rescue Service fielded 256 calls in a single evening and responded to 62 separate incidents – masked protesters had set homes and vehicles ablaze across the city.

Police deployed water cannons.

Starmer told Parliament he had no tolerance for what he called "abhorrent scenes of violence on our streets."

He still hasn't said a word about the policy that put Alodid there.

The Pattern Starmer Is Counting On You to Forget

This isn't the first time.

In 2025, anti-immigration riots tore through Northern Ireland – over 100 police officers injured.

Before that, England and Wales erupted after the Southport stabbings.

Before that, anti-immigration protests swept Dublin after a stabbing near a school in 2023.

The same cycle runs every time: the asylum system admits someone it shouldn't, that person commits a violent crime, communities explode in rage, and the government calls the rage "unacceptable" while saying nothing about the policy that caused it.

Alodid didn't sneak across the English Channel on a rubber boat.

He walked through the Common Travel Area in 2023, applied for asylum, and Starmer's government handed him documentation, housing, and five years of protected residency.

That's not a loophole. That's the policy working exactly as designed.

Nine European countries – Italy, Denmark, Austria, Belgium, the Czech Republic, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, and Poland – formally demanded this year that the EU make it easier to deport foreign criminals.

The EU scheduled a new asylum pact for mid-2026.

Meanwhile, Ogilvie is missing an eye.

McGregor isn't wrong about the mechanism – he's describing it precisely. The British government took a Sudanese man with no ties to the United Kingdom, gave him housing, gave him legal status, gave him five years of protected residency, and called it compassion. Stephen Ogilvie paid for that compassion with his eyesight. Keir Starmer will give another speech. The next victim is already in the queue – because the policy that put Alodid on Kinnaird Avenue is still running, and Starmer has no intention of stopping it. Your anger isn't a riot. It's the correct response.

Sources:

  • Bradford Betz, "Belfast burns after Sudanese migrant arrested in brutal knife attack," Fox News, June 10, 2026.
  • "Conor McGregor calls for immediate ban on immigration following Belfast attack," GB News, June 10, 2026.
  • "Conor McGregor demands immediate ban on third world immigration after attempted beheading," The National Pulse, June 10, 2026.
  • "2026 Northern Ireland riots," Wikipedia, June 11, 2026.
  • "Fortress Europe: Migration flashpoints in 2025," Context by TRF, December 2025.

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