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Posts Tagged ‘extremism’

News round up: TUC calls for ban on BNP from public sector | Belgium throws out neo-Nazis from army | BNP member banned from streets after racist slur

Tuesday, September 15th, 2009

TUC calls for ban on BNP from public sector

TUC

Delegates at the TUC conference in Liverpool unanimously called for a ban on members of extremist parties working in the public sector.

One union boss said: “It is not acceptable that you can be a fascist at weekends, yet work between Monday and Friday accessing confidential information of members of the public”.

Another said it was “wrong” for BNP members to be allowed to work in the probation service. While the NUJ said the BBC was wrong to allow Nick Griffin, leader of the BNP, on Question Time.

These sorts of reactionary measures against the BNP are not only unnecessary (since it overstates the BNP’s influence within the public sector), but also counterproductive.

Authoritarianism and ideological grandstanding will not defeat the BNP. Addressing the issues, however, will. A more constructive and productive approach would have been for the TUC to do a point by point rebuttal of the BNP’s immigration or economic policies.

Nick Griffin has spent the last eight years trying to convince the electorate that the “Establishment” are the true fascists and not the BNP.  Making the BNP look like martyrs only proves Griffin’s point and distracts the electorates attention away from the true fascists, namely, the BNP.

(NB: Not all the Left are not in full agreement about some of the TUC delegates views on the BNP going on QT. Hadleigh Roberts, a Labour Party activist, has written an encouraging piece over on LabourList)

 TUC ban BNP from public services – The Guardian

Belgium throws out  Neo-Nazis from army

Eight soldiers have been thrown out of the Belgian army after it was discovered they had links to “Blood and Honour”, a neo-Nazi organisation with strong links to the BNP. (Many of its leaders are BNP members and Blood and Honour nazi bands have raised money for the BNP. Also see Europol report)

Belgium’s Federal Prosecutor Daniel Bernard said: “There was no evidence of an imminent attack, but from the documents the authorities had seized it was clear that the group wanted to attack the structure and institutions of the state”.

A bomb capable of blowing up a car was just one of the items seized in the raids on five barracks and 18 homes in Flanders. “We found an enormous amount of ammunition. All manner of weapons from hunting rifles to military guns, detonators and above all extreme right and even neo-nazi propaganda,” added the Federal Prosecutor.

The arrests were the result of a two year investigation. Sources claim the group had used army grounds for paramilitary exercises, shooting practice, as well as the spreading of neo-nazi ideology.

According to a report by the US Department for Homeland Security, neo-Nazi organisations are attempting to recruit and radicalize veterans and currently serving members of the armed forces in order to exploit their skills and knowledge derived from military training and combat.

Belgium police foil alleged neo-Nazi plot – Euro News

BNP member banned from streets after racist slur

John Chappell, a 60-year old Cambridge member of the BNP, has been banned from his local streets after he declared himself to be “BNP and proud” and subjecting neighbours to racist abuse.

Chappell told a Cambridge-born man with Caribbean origins to “go back where he came from”, a court heard.

He admitted to the charges of racially aggravated harassment, racially aggravated common assault and disorderly behaviour. 

Magistrates made an exclusion order banning Chappell from going to his victims local area for six months. He was also ordered to pay them £75 each in compensation and made the subject of a six-month community order and a six-month supervision requirement, including that he tackles alcohol issues.

The Judge said: “This sort of behaviour is entirely unacceptable, and we are particularly concerned that this was witnessed by a 9-year-old girl.”

BNP supporters ban from street after racist slur – Cambridge News

News round up: EDL, UAF and Asian Gangs in Harrow | Jack Straw to go on QT | Further Welsh fury at BNP | UK Unemployment to worsen

Monday, September 14th, 2009

EDL, UAF and Asian Gangs in Harrow

English Defence League thug

EDL thugs were caught shouting, "We hate Paki's more than you!"

Friday saw more more violence break out between the violent ultra-nationalist English Defence League, Unite Against Fascism and gangs of Asian youths, outside Harrow Central Mosque.

In scenes reminiscent from the 1970s, EDL skinheads raised Nazi salutes and chanted racist slogans such as “I hate Pakis more than you”.

A worrying development is the news that the EDL want to enlist football fans for a Mussolini “March on Rome”-style event. (On the basis , according to insiders, that “you need an army for a war”.)

The EDL are a rag-tag bunch of racists and football hooligans. UAF, however, should know better. After previous clashes we have said that UAF must restrain themselves more as their actions are counterproductive and actually heighten tensions.

It would appear that senior members of the Muslim community also agree. On Friday the General Secretary of Harrow Central Mosque expressed his anger at UAF for holding a counter protest (against the advice of the police) outside the mosque.

Violence and provacative behaviour will not help solve the problems of social cohesion in Britain. Dialogue, serious attempts at addressing alienated voter’s concerns and undistracted police work, however, will.  

See Sky news report from Friday (note Martin Smith from UAF seen clearly walking alongside trouble causers – 35″)

“English Defence League: chaotic alliance stirs up trouble on the streets” – The Guardian

Jack Straw to appear on QT against Griffin

Gordon Brown is considering putting Jack Starw up against Nick Griffin MEP on Question Time.

Some commentators feel there is a danger that Griffin may throw back at Straw the comments he made about Islamic veils in 2006.

Straw described them as a “visible statement of separation and difference” and called on women to cease wearing them. This allegedly led to ugly instances of yobs pulling veils off Muslim women in streets.

Gordon Brown wants Jack Straw to take on BNP on Question Time – Daily Telegraph.

Further Welsh fury at BNP 

THE BNP has been accused of hijacking the legend of Owain Glyndr by printing T-shirts bearing the image of the historic Welsh figure.

The image used on the BNP T-shirts is taken from a statue of Owain Glyndr on a horse that was presented to the people of Corwen, Denbighshire, the town where Glyndr was born.

Sculptor Colin Spofforth, who spent four years creating the statue, said: “I certainly did not give any permission for it to be used and I would never have done.”

Mr Spofforth added: “Whoever has done this obviously does not know their Welsh history or what Owain Glyndr was all about.

The Rev Geraint ap Iorwerth, of St Peter ad Vincula Church in Pennal, where a bronze statue of Glyndr stands in the Princes’ Memorial Garden, said: “Owain Glyndr would be turning in his grave if he knew the BNP were using him as one of their heroes”.

BNP accused of hijacking Owian Glyndwr – Wales Online

UK unemployment to worsen

The Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development warns there is a “distinct possibility” that weak economic growth and fears over a double-dip recession will lead to further redundancies in the coming years.

The CIPD says despite the UK falling into the worst recession since the Second World War, job cuts have not been as bad as in the 1980s or 1990s.

The Institute warns that unemployment could stay at 3.5 million for over a decade.

According to the US Department for Homeland Security, high unemployment has the potential to lead to alienation and statistically increases an individual’s susceptability to accept extremist ideas. The report cites a 2007 study from the German Institute for Economic Research, which says there is a strong association between a parent’s unemployment status and the formation of neo-fascist beliefs in children – specifically racism and xenophobia.

While the stock market and housing market may be coming out of the recession, hard working families are still suffering from the disastrous effects of the credit crisis on Britain’s heartland manufacturing and business support industries. As the head of the TUC has said today, the UK will only be fully out of recession when unemployment falls. So far, we believe that more needs to be done to tackle UK unemployment and re-tool our workforce.

“Unemployment could reach 3.5m and remain high for a decade, CIPD warns” – Daily Telegraph

Do the BNP act as “conveyor belt” to violent extremism?

Friday, September 11th, 2009
Neo-Nazi terrorists

Neo-Nazi terrorist

Does rising electoral support for racist parties like the BNP lead to more racial violence?

The conviction earlier this week of Neil Lewington, a neo-Nazi who planned a terror campaign in Britain, certainly raises that question.

Lewington is one of the nastiest (if crack-pot) potential neo-Nazi terrorists in recent history. In his summing up, the Judge said Lewington’s terrorist actions were “designed to intimidate non-white people … for the purpose of pursuing the ideological cause of white supremacy and neo-fascism, albeit in a rather unsophisticated way.” In Lewington’s bedroom police found a nail bomb factory and a notebook entitled “Waffen SS UK Members’ Handbook”.

During the trial the court heard about one of Lewington’s inspirations, David Copeland, the Soho nail bomber and former member of the BNP. (Another was Timothy McVeigh, the Oklahoma bomber).

Despite there being no evidence of Lewington’s involvement with the BNP (he appears to have been a lone wolf), his attempt to emulate the likes of Copeland raises the question: does the electoral success of the BNP lead to violent extremism?

The BNP is legitimate political party operating within the law. For that we should be thankful.

It does, however, hold many white supremacist and neo-fascist views which have direct lineage to Oswald Mosley, the German Nazi Party, the American KKK, Roberto Fiore and modern East European extremists like Jobbik. This is particularly true of leadership figures like Nick Griffin MEP, Andrew Brons MEP, Lee Barnes (Legal Director) and Mark Collett (Head of Publicity).

Whilst all parties have their rotten eggs, the BNP has more than its fair share of violent racists. Some like Robert Cottage (who stood as a BNP candidate three times) and Tony Lecomber were BNP activists. Others like  Copeland and Mark Bullman (who used a BNP leaflet to light his firebomb) were on the fringe. (More details here).

Certainly the pool of candidates is likely to grow. The election and consequent media promotion of Nick Griffin and Andrew Brons gives a certain level of legitimacy to the BNP and its ideals. This means disaffected people trying to find answers to their worries are more likely to turn to the politics of racism, segregation and intolerance and follow the examples set by the BNP’s high profile leaders and violent members.

And the temperature is likely to increase, particularly if politicians refuse to debate the issues that leave some of the population feeling angry, frustrated and dispossessed. Those issues include immigration, Britishness and joblessness.

Experts on Irish Republicanism and Islamism call this the “conveyor belt” to violence. It is too early for any clear evidence either way. But we fear that the election of a small number of weird, nutty and inadequate politicians legitimises the politics of racism and that, in turn, introduces an element of violence and intimidation to British society that changes the way we do politics forever.

See Nick Griffin defend neo-Nazi terrorists: