More on Saturday’s EDL demo (3)

EDL OLFA placards

This photograph from the EDL protest last Saturday has been widely circulated around the internet, with comments mainly focusing on the disparity between the EDL’s claim that the event was organised by “Angels” and the physical appearance of the individuals in the picture. However a more sigificant aspect of the photo is the placards they are holding, two of which jointly promote the EDL and the One Law For All campaign.

The EDL/OLFA placards were displayed prominently on the demonstration itself (see herehere and here). This not the first time that publicity for the One Law For All campaign has featured on a far-right protest – one of their placards was seen last year on an English Nationalist Alliance march – but it is certainly unprecedented for OLFA’s logo and slogans to appear on propaganda material produced by the far right.

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EDL falsely claims to have recruited Joey Barton

Stephen Lennon with Joey BartonThe English Defence League has claimed that Queens Park Rangers footballer, Joey Barton, has joined their far-right group.

A picture of Barton standing next to EDL leader, Stephen Yaxley-Lennon, has appeared on the EDL Support Group Facebook page with the caption “Joey Barton joins the EDL”.

However, Barton and the club strongly deny any links with the far right extremists. In a statement released by the club, Barton said “As a Premier League footballer it is common to pose for photographs with people you do not know, as is the case here. I had no idea who the person was. I simply agreed to his request for a photograph. I have absolutely no connection with such a group.”

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More on Saturday’s EDL demo (2)

Hel Gower EDL(2)video report of Saturday’s English Defence League and Unite Against Fascism demonstrations features Hel Gower, head of the EDL’s admin team and PA to the leadership.

Interviewed as she and her colleagues hand in their “EDL Angels are not sick” petition at Downing Street, Gower repeats the official line that the EDL’s women members are “wives, mothers, grandmothers, aunts”. This is no doubt true, but it doesn’t prevent the laughably misnamed “Angels” from also being racists and neo-Nazis.

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EDL falsely claims to have recruited Joey Barton

Stephen Lennon with Joey BartonThe English Defence League has claimed that Queens Park Rangers footballer, Joey Barton, has joined their far-right group.

A picture of Barton standing next to EDL leader, Stephen Yaxley-Lennon, has appeared on the EDL Support Group Facebook page with the caption “Joey Barton joins the EDL”.

However, Barton and the club strongly deny any links with the far right extremists. In a statement released by the club, Barton said “As a Premier League footballer it is common to pose for photographs with people you do not know, as is the case here. I had no idea who the person was. I simply agreed to his request for a photograph. I have absolutely no connection with such a group.”

Last year, a similar picture of Yaxley-Lennon standing next to glamour model, Katie Price appeared on the EDL’s Facebook page along with the claim that she also supported the group. At the time, a spokesperson for Price’s management company said “She is not and will not be associated with the English Defence League. Kate had no reason to suspect he had any connection with any group.”

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Far right flops in London and Leeds

EDL Angels London October 2011

The English Defence League Angels’ London protest today must have been a major disappointment for them. As you can see from the photo (courtesy of Tom Griffin) barely a hundred EDL turned up and most of them were men. Considering that the event was a national mobilisation and had been publicised for weeks in advance, this was little short of a disaster for the EDL.

Socialist Worker reports that the Infidels’ demonstration in Leeds was even smaller, as this photo (via Expose) confirms.

All in all, not a good day for the Islamophobic far right.

CRASBO for EDL member who attacked Islamic literature stall

EDL attack Islamic literature stall in Hyde ParkAn English Defence League member who become involved with a clash with Muslims in Hyde Park has been banned from attending future marches without notifying police in advance.

Brian Bristow, 38, of no fixed address, was one of three men who admitted threatening behaviour towards a man running a stall providing Islamic literature near Speakers’ Corner, in October last year. The victim was verbally abused and had his possessions thrown around.

Earlier in the day, the men had attended an EDL rally outside the Israeli embassy in Kensington, which ended in a confrontation between EDL members and anti-fascist campaigners in Hyde Park.

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EDL: not saluting but waving

A blog called European Son has an interview with James Cohen, the recently-appointed head of the English Defence League’s Jewish Division.

The bit that made me laugh was where the interviewer points out “there have been many, many photographs of EDL members giving Nazi salutes”, to which Cohen replies that “a lot of those pictures are just guys hailing taxis, and waving at friends”.

EDL nazi salute
‘Taxi!’ EDL member hails cab

Academic study finds ‘striking gap’ between EDL’s official propaganda and violent racism of its members

The Containing Extremism Research Briefing has an interesting summary of an article by two academics from the University of Leicester published in the British Journal of Criminology. The study is based on interviews with three young men involved in the English Defence League. CERB reports:

Consistent with the main public image of the EDL, the involvement of these men as described here consists entirely of contributing to violent disorder. In one case, the interview material presented gives no indication of the sources of the gross and chilling racism which apparently drove his violence. In the other two, however, there is some narrative pointing to why they hate the ‘Paki’ and the ‘Muslim’, terms apparently used interchangeably. For one it is linked to feared violence, as represented by 7/7 and by an attack which this man had apparently been subject to. For the other, the hatred is of what is experienced as the invading and swamping ‘Other’, of those who have created a ‘Jalalabad’ where he lives. For both, taking part in EDL demonstrations and striking young Asian men brings some sense of pride and self-determination.

There is a striking gap between these states of mind and the reasonable tone of much EDL rhetoric on its website.