Carlisle United starts inquiry into claim that club stewards supported EDL protest

Carlisle United have launched an investigation following reports that Brunton Park stewards were among supporters of the man jailed for burning the Koran.

Andrew Ryan, 32, of Summerhill, London Road, Carlisle, was sentenced to 70 days in prison for intentional religious/racial harassment on Monday. He arrived at the city magistrates’ court flanked by men waving the St George’s Cross and shouting nationalist chants.

The English Defence League Carlisle Division had put out a call for members to support Ryan. A group gathered to parade through the city centre with him, carrying a flag with “EDL” written on it. It also bore the scrawled message: “It’s our country, we are taking it back.”

Yesterday the News & Star received reports that some of the men were stewards at Brunton Park. The club has now launched an investigation into their identity. United spokesman Andy Hall said:

“We would like to thank the News & Star for bringing this to our attention. Having just received the images we now have to carry out a full investigation and we will, in due course, be able to comment further on our findings.

“As has been shown recently the club will not tolerate any form of racist behaviour and, in conjunction with the FA and Football League ‘Kick it Out’ campaign, we are working strenuously to ensure that this issue does not arise at the ground.

“However, it would be wrong of us to make any further comment on this specific incident until a full and thorough investigation has been completed.”

News & Star, 20 April 2011

EDL youth facing jail over brawl

Joel_TitusA teenager from north-west London who is a prominent member of the English Defence League (EDL) is facing jail over his role in a pre-arranged fight between football hooligans.

Joel Titus, 18, [in centre of photo] took part in the bloody brawl between Brentford and Leyton Orient supporters outside Liverpool Street station in central London in May last year. The A-level student was captured on CCTV hurling objects at rivals and fighting over a wooden pole with another thug.

Titus had previously been cautioned for battery after punching a journalist at a right-wing demonstration against the “Islamification of Europe” in December 2009, the Old Bailey heard. Earlier this year he was found guilty of threatening behaviour after snarling “f*** off” at a police officer who tried to break up a fight.

He is reported to be a youth organiser for the EDL and has appeared on the BBC Newsnight programme talking about his role in protests.

Titus, of North View, Pinner, appeared in court alongside five other men, all of whom admitted a charge of affray at earlier hearings. All six were remanded in custody to be sentenced on Wednesday.

Press Association, 19 April 2011

Via Lancaster Unity

See also 24dash.com, 19 April 2011

Whether Titus is still involved in the EDL is questionable, but the fact is that he was earlier a key figure in the organisation, not least because his mixed-race origins were useful in deflecting attention from the reality that the EDL is made up overwhelmingly of white racists. The downside, from the standpoint of the rest of the EDL leadership, was that he also reinforced the image of their movement as a mob of drunken violent hooligans.

Update:  See “EDL member jailed for Liverpool Street football brawl”, BBC News, 20 April 2011

Joel Titus Harrow
Titus punching photographer Marc Vallée at a Stop Islamisation of Europe protest
outside Harrow Central Mosque in December 2009. (Photo: Jonathan Warren)

EDL supporter jailed for burning Qur’an in Carlisle city centre

Andrew_RyanA Carlisle man who set fire to the Koran in an act of “theatrical bigotry” has been jailed. Andrew Ryan, 32, shouted abuse about Muslims as he set the book alight in the city centre in January. Yesterday he was sent to prison for 70 days by district judge Gerald Chalk.

Ryan, of Summerhill, off London Road, Carlisle, claims to be a member of the English Defence League. He arrived at Carlisle Magistrates’ Court flanked by flag-waving supporters. Carrying the St George’s Cross, they were shouting “We love you England” and a variety of other nationalistic chants. Some followed Ryan into the building and when his sentence was passed they stormed out, shouting abuse as they left the courtroom.

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Extra police called in as EDL’s Halifax protest turns ugly

EDL Halifax April 2011

Up to 50 officers were policing the protest in Halifax town centre on Saturday afternoon but, as trouble escalated, around 150 more officers had to be quickly brought in.

Roads into Halifax were closed and as chanting protesters roamed the streets police urged businesses to close immediately and lock doors. Terrified shoppers went home while others sought safety behind the locked doors of town centre businesses. Acting Superintendent Martin Lister said later a “minority seemed intent on causing disorder”.

Members of the Far-Right protest group broke away from the Bull Green area where police attempted to contain them. Police on horseback and others with batons drawn prevented breakaway EDL members from leaving the town during confrontations which lasted around six hours. Fourteen men, mostly EDL supporters, were arrested for public order offences.

Police said the EDL protest involved around 150 people and a separate protest by the Muslim Defence League, which centred on People’s Park, attracted around 50. Shoppers and those gathered to watch the afternoon’s FA Cup football left for home as large groups of EDL members and police took over the Bull Green area.

Teacher Beth Harvey, 22, said: “I was having coffee in a cafe when, on police advice, the owners locked the door and brought all the street furniture in from outside. It was nerve-wracking. We were locked in for about half an hour and nobody else was allowed in. I decided to go home as quickly as possible because things were turning ugly. As I walked back to the car they were chanting and shouting and I didn’t know what they might do.”

Yorkshire Post, 18 April 2011

Norwegian Defence League’s anti-Islam demonstration flops

Lena Andreassen
Lena Andreassen of the Norwegian Defence League addresses the masses

The failure of far-right Islamophobes in Norway to build a united organisation modelled on the EDL is covered in this month’s issue of Searchlight. And now Exposing the English Defence League has drawn our attention to a demonstration against the “Islamic occupation of Norway” organised in Oslo on 9 April by the EDL’s official sister organisation, headed by one Lena Andreassen. As Andreassen explained to Aftenposten, that specific date was chosen to mark the German invasion of Norway on 9 April 1940, in order to draw a parallel between the occupation of the country by the Nazis and the current supposed invasion by “extreme Islam”.

Alas for Andreassen, her Oslo protest turned out to be a farce. It drew between 10 and 15 participants, one of whom was Darren Lee of the EDL, and was reported in Dagbladet under the mocking headline “Søren, det er jo flere pressefolk her enn oss” (translated by Exposing as “Bugger! There’s more journos here than us!”). An anti-racist counter-demonstration, by contrast, was attended by between 700 and a thousand people.

Darren Lee in Oslo
EDL representative Darren Lee speaking at the Oslo demonstration

Demo against Norwegian Defence League
Anti-racists demonstrate against the Norwegian Defence League


Infighting wrecks attempts to form Norwegian Defence League

Searchlight, April 2011

By a special correspondent in Oslo

ATTEMPTS TO create a Norwegian version of the English Defence League have run into trouble. Far-right activists clearly thought that what seems to work in England would also succeed in Norway. Instead several factions and aspiring leaders have set up nine different Facebook groups, three with only one member, all claiming to be the true Norwegian Defence League.

The first attempt at doing more than creating a Facebook group came from Åge Strern Sundvor, a long-time loner on the extreme right who has tried to set up several mass movements and churches on the internet, all of which ended up with him and his dog, Garm, as the only members.

After securing the backing of the nazi group Vigrid, Sundvor called for a demonstration in Oslo on 26 February. Anti-racists responded by applying for a demonstration permit and took over the venue of the planned NDL stunt.

Another attempt at forming a Norwegian Defence League came from Ronny Alte from Tensberg, who with some friends created a Facebook group of more than 500 members, including convicted nazis and exiled Russians belonging to the banned Slavic Union.

One of the Russians is Vjoteslav Datsik, who earned his 15 minutes of fame last year when he walked into an Oslo police station and applied for political asylum while waving a handgun. Datsik is in custody awaiting extradition to Russia, where he is wanted by the police after absconding from a mental hospital.

After claiming to have thrown out all the nazis, Alte had difficulty explaining why his group still included Datsik, as well as the convicted nazi bank robber Werner Holm and violent nazi thugs such as Johnny “Light” Olsen”, Morten Andre Serensen and Dariusz Arnesen, all previously connected with the now defunct Norwegian Blood and Honour.

In western Norway, Remi Huseby from Haugesund sounded unconvincing when urging the followers of his NDL to support Israel, bearing in mind his past connection with the rabidly antisemitic Vigrid group. His fellow trade unionists were even less impressed and kicked him out of the Norwegian Transport Union.

Lena Andreassen from Oslo did better. Formerly connected with the circles around the defunct nazi Bootboys group, Andreassen has paid several visits to the EDL in Britain. Alte and Huseby stepped down after Andreassen produced a letter signed by Hel Gower, the personal assistant of the EDL leaders, stating that the EDL had chosen Andreassen’s faction to form a Norwegian sister organisation. The letter also appointed Andreassen’s friend Havar Krane to lead the NDL pending an election.

After this slap in the face, the Sundvor faction closed down its website, urging all its followers to join Stop Islamisation of Norway. Several leading SIAN members have joined Andreassen’s NDL at the same time as giving support to Huseby’s efforts to have his trade union expulsion lifted.

Krane and Andreassen also claim to throw out nazis and run a background check on everyone trying to join their latest Facebook version of the NDL, but this is a lie. The NDL’s “non-racist” alibi, Jon Rosenberg Hagen, a freelance photographer who was adopted from Korea, has been seen hanging out with the Slavic Union. As Hagen is allegedly responsible for security in the NDL, he might have a problem with his credibility.

Unluckily for him, his Russian nazi friend, Evgenij Dyakonov, has published a picture of himself in a friendly pose with Hagen in a restaurant. Dyakonov also poses as a journalist and has been seen around Oslo with his camera, most recently when he ended up in a brawl with anti-racist protesters outside a nazi tattoo studio.

With SIAN activists joining the NDL and activists from the different NDL factions flowing into SIAN, the stage is set for even more vicious skirmishes, even in SIAN whose leader, Arne Tumyr, is considered too old and soft by some of its younger members.

Allison Pearson supports French niqab ban – now there’s a surprise

“The burka and the niqab should be banned in Britain. They are a barrier to integration, a statement of hostility to the host country. Poor women who have been brainwashed into hiding their faces are victims, not martyrs. The burka is a not a sign of religion, but of subservience.”

Allison Pearson in the Daily Telegraph, 14 April 2011

Still, at least we’re spared references to Muslim women “wearing nose-bags over their faces” or to Pearson’s sense of “burkha rage” against veiled women who are “taking the mickey out of our country and its tolerant ways”, or her more general complaint that Britain has done “too much” to “accommodate its immigrant groups”.

Update:  The EDL are impressed by the article: “Allison Pearson seems to have started to understand the nature of the 7th century Islam that has taken hold in our towns and cities”.

Further update:  See also ENGAGE, 15 April 2011

EDL to protest against ‘extremist Muslims’ … in Weymouth

Fears are mounting over a march through Weymouth by the right-wing English Defence League protesting at Islamic extremism.

The newly-formed Weymouth branch of the group organised the march following a TV programme that showed Islamic extremists on the streets of the town. They will be undertaking the protest in Weymouth on Saturday, April 30 at 1pm to protest the “entrapment of the youth of Weymouth by extremist Muslims”. A counter march by opponents of the EDL will take place at the same time.

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Islamophobia on the rise

Two letters in today’s Guardian on the French veil ban. One is from Liz Fekete of the Institute of Race Relations who writes:

The observation of French niqab wearer “Anne” (Facing the ban, 12 April) that the debate on the ban on the full-face veil has led to stigmatisation and hate is also true here.

On Monday I attended an anti-racist rally in London outside the French embassy, where peaceful demonstrators protested against the ban on the grounds that Muslim women should not be criminalised for what they choose to wear. We were attacked on two sides by members of the English Defence League.

Over the last few years we have seen how Islamophobia breeds a culture of suspicion. As that morphs into a culture of hate, one must fear for the future.

EDL thugs attack peaceful protest against French veil ban

French embassy niqab protest

Around 40 members of the racist English Defence League tonight attacked a peaceful protest outside the French Embassy, opposing the introduction of a ban on the niqab or face veil in France.

Young Muslim women were joined by students and trade unionists on the protest called by UAF and One Society Many Cultures and supported by the British Muslim Initiative, Islamic Forum of Europe, Islam Expo and the Enough Coalition.

They carried placards reading: “Defend religious and cultural freedom” and “Face veil – a woman’s right to choose”.

EDL thugs launched a physical attack on the peaceful protest before being surrounded by police and led away.

UAF joint secretary Weyman Bennett said:

It is unacceptable that a group of racist thugs has attacked a demo calling for freedom of religious and cultural expression for Muslim women.

We believe that by targeting Muslims with measures like the niqab ban, French president Nicolas Sarkozy is opening the door and providing dangerous encouragement to racist and fascist groups. Today’s events bear that out.

It is clear the EDL is building a street thug movement that aims to smash anyone who stands up against racism, fascism and Islamophobia. We will continue our efforts to oppose them.

The protest outside the French embassy was called to mark the day that the niqab ban came into force in France.

The ban contravenes Muslim women’s freedom of religion. We believe free and democratic societies should allow people to express their faith and culture however they choose.

Although there are no proposals to introduce such legislation in Britain, the ban on the niqab in France has provoked Islamophobic discussions and campaigns here in Britain.

Unite Against Fascism, 11 April 2011

See also “Londoners condemn France burqa ban”, Press TV, 11 April 2011

Update:  Over at the Casuals United blog you can find the EDL boasting about their unprovoked attack on the peaceful protest outside the French embassy.

EDL attack French embassy protestors

EDL protester starts jail term for affray

A man accused of launching a “flying kick” at a police officer while at the forefront of trouble at an EDL march in the Black Country was today behind bars.

Thomas Blackwell admitted a charge of affray during the EDL protest in Dudley on July 17 last year and was sentenced to one year in prison. A DVD shown at Wolverhampton Crown Court yesterday showed Blackwell, aged 25, of Bird Street, Lower Gornal, wearing a white stab vest in the front few rows of protesters at the march as they confronted police.

Judge Michael Challinor told him the DVD showed he had “clearly” been at the forefront of the violence which erupted in Stafford Street on the day. “You attended this demonstration with the intention of causing disorder and violence,” he said. “This is clear from the fact you were wearing protective clothing in the form of a stab vest. In the course of this disorder you tackled a police officer by using a flying kick to his protective shield.”

Judge Challinor said he had considered the fact that Blackwell would lose his job and as a result, his home if sent to prison but added: “This type of violent behaviour so often prevents law-abiding citizens from protesting peacefully.”

Mr Stephen Thomas, prosecuting, told the court Blackwell had been near the front of the group of EDL protesters who had thrown bottles and bits of metal at police, before launching the “flying kick” at a police officer’s riot shield and swearing at him.

Express & Star, 7 April 2011