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Teenage Facebook birthday party invite brings 3,000 and riots

Posted at 10:16 PM, Sep 22, 2012
and last updated 2012-09-22 22:16:51-04

(CNN) – Hundreds of police confronted rioters in a small Dutch town where a 16-year-old girl’s birthday party invitation on Facebook spawned a large gathering that turned destructive, authorities said Saturday.

Video of the incident showed rioters hurling glass bottles and other debris at security teams in Haren, which is located 115 miles northeast of Amsterdam and is home to about 20,000 residents.

Prosecutors said 34 people were arrested Friday night and Saturday morning after rioters torched at least two cars, threw stones and smashed storefront windows.

At least 36 people were injured, including one police officer, according to police spokesman Paul Haedanus. One man suffered a broken jaw, he said.

“Last night, scum wreaked havoc in our community,” Haren Mayor Rob Bats told CNN affiliate NOS. “Haren woke up this morning after a dramatic evening and night.”

Bats said the incident had a “tremendous impact,” even though authorities had been preparing for it.

Earlier, the mayor had convinced the birthday girl’s family not to hold the party, authorities said, and unsuccessfully urged revelers not to attend.

Prior to Friday’s mayhem, Oscar Dros, the town’s chief of police, said he had contacted authorities in Germany to discuss their own experiences with riots.

“An incident like the one in Haren last night is unprecedented in the Netherlands,” Dros told the station.

Prosecutors said revelers began arriving Friday afternoon, though some appeared “ready and prepared for confrontation.”

Authorities estimate that at least 3,000 people turned up for the event, and that specific “ring leaders” had contributed to the destruction.

News of the party had gone viral on social media before Friday, authorities said. There were multiple mentions of an American film called Project X, in which three high school seniors throw a birthday party that spirals out of control.

On Saturday, a group called Project Clean-X Haren emerged on Facebook, which posted video of organizers wielding shovels and carrying flowers.