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Posts Tagged ‘FPÖ’

European extremists strengthening ties

Monday, February 1st, 2010
Vona

Jobbik leader Gabor Vona flanked by a black-shirt

Austrian media is reporting that the FPÖ and Jobbik have started to strengthen their ties.

Anti-extremist web-site Engage writes:

“Serious papers maintained that the FPÖ will reject racism and Anti-Semitism and would refuse to collaborate with the NPD in Germany, the National Front in France or Jobbik in Hungary. They were wrong.

Jobbik is openly and explicitly anti-Semitic while the FPÖ strives for social acceptance. Jobbik hallucinates about Jews wanting to occupy Hungary. Unlike the Nazis Jobbik does not maintain that biology prevents Jews from changing their behaviour; they even have a few ‘good’ Jews in their ranks, which serve as fig-leafs against the accusation of Anti-Semitism. Yet Jobbik is explicitly racist, to the point that its program proposes between other measures also the “segregation” of young Roma.”

Nick Griffin MEP also dined with the extremist FPÖ, Jobbik and Front National officials for a Burns Night supper in Brussels. Chris Beverley – chief of staff to Andrew Brons MEP – (see video of Beverley here) also met with FPÖ, Jobbik and FN officials a few weeks ago at Brons’ offices.

jobbik

Beverley with Jobbik and FN officials

 

Maurice Cousins

BNP Chris Beverley on foreign exchange

Saturday, January 16th, 2010
Chris Beverly, chief of staff to Andrew Brons MEP

Chris Beverly, chief of staff to Andrew Brons MEP

An interesting insight into the growing levels of collaboration between European nationalists at the European Parliament on Andrew Bron’s recent blog.

Chris Beverley, chief of staff to Andrew Brons MEP, writes in detail about his meet-up with fellow European fascists in the European Parliament.

According to Beverley, his new friends include Dietmar Holzfeind, parliamentary assistant to Andreas Mölzer (FPÖ), and officials from Front National and Jobbik.

Over the past few years, the BNP have been building up a significant amount of contacts with neo-fascists across the EU including Hungary, Belgium, France, Germany, Austria, Czech Republic, Spain and Sweden. 

It is ironic that parties that oppose EU membership are using EU tax-payer money to form a pan-European popular nationalist movement.

Maurice Cousins