Stephen Lennon denies links to BNP, claims EDL kicks out racists

Stephen Lennon with Richard Edmonds
Lennon (left) listens to veteran fascist Richard Edmonds at a Luton BNP meeting in 2007

Claims in an academic report that the English Defence League has “sustained connections to the BNP” have been denied by the group’s leader, Stephen Lennon.

The report, by Dr Matthew Feldman and Dr Paul Jackson at Northampton University’s Radicalism & New Media Research Group, says that the EDL’s leaders and followers have “neo-Nazi methods” and connections to the BNP and other extreme-right groups. The academics also accuse the EDL of “engaging in doublespeak that powerfully questions their claim to be a single-issue, non-racist movement”.

But Stephen Lennon, who was last week convicted of assaulting a man at a rally in Blackburn in April, said he doubted the strength of the academics’ research. “All this academic research has been done on the internet and on Facebook,” he said. “They haven’t spent any time with the EDL, they haven’t come to any demos. If they want to get involved then fine.

“They haven’t got a clue at all. We’re not linked to the BNP. I was a member of the BNP for a year in 2004 but I left when I saw what it was all about. Yes we have members who are ex-BNP but they joined the BNP out of desperation. Don’t get me wrong, I’m not going to say that there aren’t any racists in the EDL but we find out who they are and we kick them out.”

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EDL Angels are not sick?

EDL Angels demoThis Saturday the English Defence League will be holding a demonstration in Downing Street to protest against David Cameron’s attack on the EDL in the House of Commons last month, when he observed that he had described some sections of society as sick and added that “there is none sicker than the EDL”.

In an evident attempt to soften the EDL’s public image as a mob of violent Nazi-saluting racists, Saturday’s protest has been organised by the women’s section, known as Angels, who have been collecting signatures for an online petition headed “EDL Angels are not sick” that they will be handing in at Downing Street. As we have pointed out previously, the flaw in using the EDL’s women members to front the campaign is that the Angels themselves have a well-established record of violence, racism and fascist sympathies.

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EDL members targeted Hartlepool mosque and Shotton Colliery store

Steven Vasey and Anthony SmithTwo former English Defence League (EDL) members daubed “racially offensive” material on a mosque and two Asian-run businesses in revenge for the burning of poppies by an extreme Islamic group.

Steven James Vasey, 32, and 24-year-old Anthony Donald Smith were yesterday jailed for a year for their attack, which followed incidents at a war memorial in Luton on Armistice Day last November.

Days later, on the eve of the Muslim Eid festival to mark the end of Ramadan, the masked men, along with an accomplice, climbed a fence after dark at the Nasir Mosque, in Brougham Street, Hartlepool. The initials EDL and NEI – North-East Infidels – as well as the words “no surrender”, the cross of St George and figures of red poppies, were sprayed before two figures were seen fleeing the premises.

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‘Anti-Islamist political party’ to be launched this year, says EDL leader

A supporter of the English Defence League gestures during a demonstration in LutonReuters has an article marking the 75th anniversary of the Battle of Cable Street which draws parallels with the threat from the far right today.

The article closes with a quote from EDL leader Stephen Lennon: “There will be an anti-Islamist political party forming this year. Britain’s primed for it.”

This confirms the Gates of Vienna report of discussions at the London “counterjihad” conference in September.

‘Counterjihad’ meeting in London

There’s an interesting report at Ned May‘s Gates of Vienna blog on a recent conference of the international “counterjihad” movement:

On the morning of Saturday September 24, a Counterjihad leadership meeting convened in central London. A number of people associated with ICLA were present, including Paul Weston, Aeneas, Gaia, Elisabeth Sabaditsch-Wolff, KGS of Tundra Tabloids, Henrik Ræder Clausen of Europe News (English), Liz of Europe News (Deutsch), and other activists from North America and Western Europe. There were representatives from Austria, Canada, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Italy, Norway, Sweden, the UK, and the USA.

The importance of the meeting was underscored by the presence of several leaders of the English Defence League. Tommy Robinson, Kevin Carroll, and Jack Smith were among those who conferred for the first time with a cross-section of the European Counterjihad.

The most important topic of discussion concerned the current political situation in Britain. The unprecedented repression directed at the EDL and other dissidents demonstrates that the authorities are frightened by mass opposition to Islamization and sharia, and are determined to use any means to suppress dissent.

Participants from the Continent gave their own perspective, relating the struggle against repression in Britain to the larger European struggle against the illiberal regime in Brussels. Opposition to the European Union goes hand-in-hand with resistance to Islamization, because the immigration regime that is destroying European nations is guided and encouraged by the EU.

Everyone agreed that we are now at a hinge of history. What happens in the next few months or years is crucial to the future of liberty, democracy, and European culture. Prompt action is required, because the worldwide financial crisis will soon reach a climax and limit our choices.

Various programs were discussed, including novel forms of protest, and – given the ideological bankruptcy of Labour, the Lib-Dems, and the Tories – the possible formation of a new political party in Britain.

The EDL leaders described the various hardships that they have had to endure at the hands of the authorities, both individually and as an organization. They also talked about their future activities, including a planned demonstration in Afghanistan. Now that’ssomething I’d like to see.

Me too. I can just imagine the EDL stumbling through the streets of Kabul brandishing cans of lager and chanting “Allah is a paedo”. They would no doubt be assured of a warm welcome from local people.

More interesting is the discussion about the “possible formation of a new political party in Britain”. This is a move that the EDL wereconsidering earlier in the year, encouraged by the Daily Star. Perhaps a planned turn to electoral politics explains why the EDL is currently making efforts to acquire a veneer of respectability.

However, the electoral gains made by the BNP over the past decade were based on Nick Griffin’s “suits not boots” strategy, which recognised that the far right’s traditional identification with violent street protests repelled voters. It’s difficult to see how a political party associated with a movement whose public image from the start has been that of a gang of drunken football hooligans is going to get many votes.

Postscript:  And just to add, Ned May (for we must assume it is he) also reports that at the Saturday evening dinner and the Sunday 25 September sessions the assembled counterjihadists were joined by representatives of the British Freedom Party. Among those attending were Lee Barnes, who for years was the legal officer of the BNP, Simon Bennett who used to run the BNP’s website, and former BNP regional organiser Peter Mullins. So much for the EDL’s claim to have no connections to the far right.

EDL supporters who vandalised Hartlepool mosque are sentenced

Masjid Nasir HartlepoolThe EDL Facebook page reported earlier this afternoon that Anthony Smith and Steven Vasey, who pleaded guilty in August to conspiring to commit racially aggravated criminal damage after daubing graffiti on an Ahmadiyya mosque and two Asian-run businesses in Hartlepool, have both been jailed for 12 months.

This has now been confirmed by a BBC News report, which adds that the third EDL member in court over the mosque attack, Charlotte Davies, received a 12-week suspended sentence.

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Norway: police want to interview Alan Lake over Breivik killings

Reuters reports:

Police in Oslo say they want to interview Alan Lake, whom they believe is a key figure in Britain’s anti-Islamist English Defence League EDL, to find out if he may have been an ideological source of inspiration to Breivik.

“Alan Lake is an obvious person we would like to speak to,” Oslo police prosecutor Paal-Fredrik Hjort Kraby told Reuters. He added: “At this point in the investigation there is no indication that anyone knew about his (Breivik’s) plans.”

The English Defence League said in an email to Reuters that Lake had “absolutely nothing to do with the EDL”. Lake could not be reached for comment but has previously denied being a senior member of the EDL.

The claim that Lake has “absolutely nothing to do with the EDL” is disingenuous to say the least. The EDL leaders only dissociated themselves from Lake in the aftermath of the Oslo killings when his earlier rantings about executing political opponents became public knowledge. But even then they had to admit that Lake played “a role in the EDL during its early formation”.

Paul Ray, who was himself interviewed by the Norwegian police, has suggested that Lake was Breivik’s mentor, but without offering anything other than circumstantial evidence.

Bigots oppose Blackpool mosque – but they’re only concerned about parking problems, honest

Blackpool anti-mosque petitionA petition with 3,000 signatures has been handed over to council bosses as residents stepped up their protest against an “illegal” mosque.

Business owners on Waterloo Road, South Shore, believe the Noor A Madina Mosque is operating illegally as it was opened before planning permission was granted. Owners of the site, which was formerly a takeaway, have since applied for retrospective planning permission to change the use of the site. But local people think the mosque will cause huge problems with parking around the area.

Mike Rowe, landlord of the Waterloo pub, handed the petition in to Blackpool Town Hall yesterday. He said: “Local people feel very strongly about the mosque. We believe it is operating illegally and would like to see it closed down. There are also huge concerns about parking, it’s very busy already and we think the extra traffic will affect health and safety. Waterloo Road is a commercial area so it should be commercial properties which are being developed there.”

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