North Wales Police out in force for tiny EDL protest against Shotton Islamic centre

Shotton EDL protestAbout 100 members of far-right group the English Defence League descended on Shotton to protest against plans for a new Islamic cultural centre in the town.

Dozens of North Wales Police officers were out in force on Saturday (January 22) to ensure the protest passed peacefully.

EDL campaigners marched through the town centre to the site of the former Shotton Lane Social Club, where the proposed centre would be built if the Flintshire Muslim Cultural Society successfully raises the £150,000 needed to buy the venue.

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EDL racists fined over anti-Muslim abuse

Three English Defence League supporters have been ordered to pay more than £350 each after being found guilty of subjecting rail passengers to serious racist abuse. Tracey Hurley (33), Stuart Parr (28) and a 17-year old youth, who cannot be named for legal reasons, appeared at Wigan Magistrates’ Court on 20 January for trial.

The court heard that, on Friday 25 June last year, the trio had attended an EDL march in Bradford and had been on their way home when they travelled from Manchester Victoria to Wigan on a Northern Rail service. During the journey they became abusive and intimidating, subjecting several passengers to a torrent of racist abuse.

The abuse began when the three sang songs relating to the EDL and Taliban. At Salford Crescent an Asian man boarded the train and was immediately targeted by the group who shouted derogatory remarks about Allah to the man.

PC Tony McGibbon, of British Transport Police, said: “The abuse continued for some time and was directed at anyone on board the train who the three perceived to be anything other than white British. The behaviour of the three was offensive in the extreme, completely unacceptable and made everyone on the train feel incredibly uncomfortable.”

Hurley, of Kingsley Avenue, Goose Green, was fined £150, ordered to pay £200 costs and a £15 victim surcharge after being found guilty of a religiously aggravated public order offence. Parr, of Golborne Place, Scholes, was fined £150, ordered to pay £200 costs and a £15 victim surcharge after being found guilty of a religiously aggravated public order offence. The youth, from Ashton-in-Makerfield, was fined £150, ordered to pay £200 costs and a £15 victim surcharge after being found guilty of a religiously aggravated public order offence.

British Transport Police media release, 21 January 2011

Birmingham is not a post-apocalyptic Islamic ghetto

Writing in the Telegraph Andrew Knowles takes issue with an article by an anonymous vicar’s wife that appears in the current issue of Standpoint magazine, and was seized on by Torygraph blogger Ed West to bolster the myth of Muslim ghettos.

See also ENGAGE, 19 January 2011

Update:  Ed West will be pleased to hear that his piece has been reproduced by the English Defence League.

Toronto: protests against Jewish Defense League solidarity meeting with EDL

vigil against jdl edlOn January 11, 2011, the alliance of the Jewish Defense League (JDL) and the English Defence League (EDL) was challenged by counter-protests from anti-racist and human rights activists.

The JDL and EDL alliance was supposed to be cemented in Toronto at an event held by the JDL in support of Tommy Robinson of the EDL, who addressed the Zionist group about his recent arrest.

In response to this JDL/EDL alliance, two separate counter-protests gathered, but organizers from both publicly expressed their solidarity with the other. One was an explicitly peaceful vigil outside Lawrence Square with candles and music, organized by the CUPE 3903 First Nations Solidarity Working Group and Christian Peacemakers Team and was also attended by several other groups. Another protest, more militant in dress and slogans but still simply a demonstration, was organized mainly by a new incarnation of Anti-Racist Action Toronto.

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Luton Council asks home secretary to ban EDL march

Luton Borough Council has written to the home secretary asking her to ban a proposed march by the English Defence League (EDL) in the town next month. In a statement the council said there was a real risk of disorder. “We recognise that a banning order on the EDL and counter demonstrators would not prohibit them from holding a static demonstration,” the statement said. “However a march is, in our opinion, provocative and not conducive to the public good at this time and would risk serious disorder.”

The council said that any march proposed by the EDL would need to travel through residential areas from the railway station and other access points into the town. “The presence of high numbers of demonstrators supporting rival and diametrically opposing views is not conducive to the wellbeing of our community and has the potential to spark tensions and community impacts which as a council we have worked so hard to avoid in recent years,” the statement went on to say.

BBC News, 10 January 2011

EDL’s ‘political prisoner’ is a convicted sex offender

Richard Price EDLA leader of the English Defence League who was described as a “political prisoner” after being jailed for violence at a march had already been placed on the sex offenders register for downloading indecent images of children, The Timescan reveal.

The far-right group launched a campaign to free Richard Price, co-ordinator of the West Midlands division of the EDL, after he was jailed last month for violent behaviour. But Price, 41, had been convicted in June 2010 of making four indecent images of children, and possessing cocaine and crack cocaine. That conviction followed an earlier arrest in 2009 for public order offences believed to have been connected with EDL marches. Police were understood to have seized and analysed his computer, leading to the discovery of sexual images of children that he had downloaded. His home was also searched and the drugs were found.

Price admitted four counts of making indecent images of children and two charges of possessing cocaine when he appeared at Birmingham Crown Court. He was banned from owning a computer for a year, given a three-year community supervision order and ordered to sign on to the sex offenders register for five years.

Price, from Quinton, Birmingham, and Collum Keyes, 23, also from Birmingham, were among 12 people arrested when they surged through police lines during a protest in Aylesbury, Buckinghamshire, in May 2010. When that case came to court in December, Price admitted using threatening behaviour. He was jailed for three months and given a ten-year Criminal Anti-Social Behaviour Order banning him from attending marches outside Birmingham. Keyes, who admitted disorderly conduct, was fined £150.

When Price was jailed, EDL members launched a campaign urging supporters to write to the Prime Minister and MPs to try to “win justice for Richard Price, EDL”.

The Aston Villa supporter, who has also been linked to football hooliganism, was even likened by his supporters to a modern-day John Bunyan, the Puritan Christian preacher and author of Pilgrim’s Progress who was jailed for continuing his sermons without the permission of the established Church in the 1600s.

But today’s revelation that one of the EDL’s leading members has been convicted of sex offences will come as a huge embarrassment to a group that has struggled to shrug off its reputation as a new version of the National Front.

In recent months, particularly following the political demise of the British National Party, the EDL has begun to attract more support. Its leader, who had previously used the alias Tommy Robinson, was traced by The Times and gave his first interview using his real name. Stephen Lennon has vehemently denied that the group he started in Luton, Bedfordshire, is racist, saying that it has even set up a gay and lesbian division and given a prominent role to a Sikh supporter opposed to Islamic extremists.

Supporters of the EDL had claimed that Price became a political prisoner after he, along with Keyes, was banned from organising, controlling or travelling to any open-air protest outside Birmingham for ten years. It was the first time a Criminal Anti-Social Behaviour Order, sought by Thames Valley Police in conjunction with the National Domestic Extremism Unit, had been issued to a demonstrator connected to the EDL.

Last month, a database of EDL supporters was published on the internet. Hackers had attacked the group’s database of those who had made donations to the EDL and people who had bought clothing from its merchandise wing.

Times, 4 December 2011


Read the defence of Price by Stephen Lennon (“Tommy Robinson”)here. According to Lennon, “Mr Price has no idea what these photos are and how they where [sic] on his computer.” Yeah, right.

You’ll note, by the way, that “Tommy Robinson” claims that “although Pricey is a trusted member, at no time has pricey ever been a leader of the EDL”. This is the same “Tommy Robinson” who just seven months ago wrote: “The EDL has only this Leadership, just for the record….Myself, Trevor Kelway, Marshy, Jack Smith, Joel Titus and Richard Price. We are the earliest founding members.”

Canada: JDL backs EDL

Yaxley Lennon arrestUnder the slogan “Take a stand against the forces of political Islam” the Jewish Defence League of Canada is holding a rally at the Toronto Zionist Centre in support of English Defence League leader “Tommy Robinson” which will feature a live video link with Stephen Lennon himself. It takes place on 11 January, the day before Lennon’s return to court on a charge of assaulting a police officer at an EDL demonstration in November.

Update:  See “Controversial anti-Islamic group plans rally in Toronto”, National Post, 5 January 2010

EDL-supporting rabbi deludes himself that Jonathan Sacks would be interested in debating him on Islam

Nachum Shifren with Carroll and LennonThe rabbi who spoke at an English Defence League rally two months ago has apparently challenged Chief Rabbi Lord Sacks to a televised BBC debate on “Is Islam a religion of peace?”

Californian Nachum Shifren was the speaker at the far-right group’s October rally outside the Israeli Embassy. He called Muslims “dogs” and criticised British community leaders and rabbis for speaking out against him, saying: “To all my Jewish brothers who have called me a Nazi… I say to them they don’t have the guts to stand up here and take care of business.”

Now Rabbi Shifren, who lost a bid for a Californian state senate seat, claims he is planning a TV debate with the Chief Rabbi on “the Islamification of Britain, cultural Marxism in western liberalism, multiculturalism and its effect on the host society”.

In an email seen by the JC, Rabbi Shifren says he has set rules for the debate structure, to be followed by the Chief Rabbi and the BBC – despite no known interest in such a programme from either party.

He demands that the debate should not be moderated or edited, with no “extraneous commentary.” He adds: “The programme should not be advertised or announced using such inflammatory labelling as ‘far-right ‘extremist.’ i.e. not served up in terms that suit the Marxist-Islamist agenda of the BBC. This is strictly a bout between two combatants from which the listener and viewer may draw their own conclusions.” He also requests that no audience be present at the debate to avoid “Trotskyist structures.”

No-one from the Chief Rabbi’s office was available for comment.

Jewish Chronicle, 31 December 2010

EDL members accused of attempted insurance scam

Caris coachAlmost 80 far-Right extremists are trying to claim for whiplash injuries after a coach crash – when there were only 25 people on board the vehicle and just 57 seats.

Supporters of the English Defence League have been accused of attempted insurance fraud after dozens sought compensation for neck injuries.

The claims were lodged after the coach carrying members to a rally was in a collision in which it sustained minor damage. Driver Christopher Cartwright said he would be amazed if any of those on board were hurt, adding: “There was not much more than a scratch on the back corner.” But days after the accident during a journey from Gateshead to Preston last month, the claims for injuries allegedly caused by the crash began to flood in from EDL supporters.

Coach firm bosses said only 25 people were on the vehicle, but more than three times that many claims had been made. Maria Caris, of Caris Coaches in Gateshead, said she is considering legal action amid fears that EDL members are trying to cheat her company. She said: “They must think we’re idiots. There are 78 claims in so far and the phone is still going with people asking for our insurance details. They are all saying they were on the coach.”

The rally in Preston ended in violent clashes with the police, who arrested 14 people for public order offences and drunk or disorderly behaviour. Mrs Caris said: “These ‘whiplash injuries’ could have been caused when they were fighting with the police in Preston.”

Daily Mail, 27 December 2010


But what else can you expect from the EDL? After all, their leader Stephen Lennon told an EDL protest in Peterborough earlier this month that Muslims make up 10% of the population, when the real figure is around 3%. Maths clearly isn’t the EDL’s strong point.

As for Caris Coaches, some of us might think they brought this on themselves. The moral of the story is – don’t hire out transport to ignorant racist hooligans with criminal records.

Bishop of St Albans urges Christians to ‘stand firm’ against EDL

Rt Rev Alan Smith 3The Bishop of St Albans spoke of the need to “stand firm” against racism in society. The Rt Rev Dr Alan Smith used his Christmas sermon in St Albans Cathedral to warn against “destructive powers which try to divide communities, races and religions”.

He acknowledged “hatred and unrest” could be found within Britain, using the example of the controversial marches undertaken by far-right group the English Defence League (EDL), which provoked clashes in town and cities during the year.

He said: “But hatred and unrest is not just found in far away places. In the past year we have seen racist marches on our streets in London and Bolton, in Dudley and Peterborough, in Aylesbury and Bradford, led by individuals who want to stir up unrest.

“Even as I speak, demonstrations are being planned in Luton in six weeks’ time which could seriously undermine community relations. Some people are even trying to commandeer Christianity to support their cause.”

Press Association, 25 December 2010