BNP challenges alleged Loughton Moslem knife-point kidnap story
Yesterday, Nothing British reported that a Muslim community leader was abducted at knifepoint. He was bundled him into a car and the attackers threatened his life unless he stopped running prayer sessions in a community hall that has been the target of a BNP campaign.
The BNP’s rebuttal unit has swung into action with an official response that the claims are “a fantasy driven by a desire to stir up racial tension.” The BNP claim that the victim, Mr Ramjally, has fabricated the story as part of his campaign to drive whites out of the Loughton area of Essex.
“There are almost no Muslims in the area, and starting ‘prayer group’ meetings is an obvious attempt to form a bridgehead into a BNP area by setting the seed for a fully fledged mosque.
“Once a mosque is established, whites generally leave the area, and this is clearly the aim Mr Ramjally has in mind. Now he has produced these ‘flight of fantasy’ stories to try and hype up his presence in the area.”
Anti-Catholic sentiment in the BNP
Hat-tip to Lancaster Unity for their post on anti-Catholic BNP propaganda maestro Shane Sinclair, described by BNP leader Nick Griffin as: “the nationalist movement’s best ever propagandist”.
Shane Sinclair was once responsible for developing the BNP’s political strategy, taught leading BNP officials the tactics of community politics and helped establish the BNP’s Swansea branch. But the article highlights his violent past, association with football hooligan gangs and his association with anti-Catholic terrorist groups such as the Ulster Volunteer Force, a designated terrorist organisation.
Read the full post at Lancaster Unity.
