EDL to protest outside Harrow Council over Halal school menus

A far right group that backed last year’s Harrow mosque protests looks set to demonstrate in the borough over Halal school menus. The English Defence League, which says it wants a peaceful protest, is demonstrating against Halal only meat menus in the borough’s schools, an issue that has already proved divisive among residents locally.

A statement on a Facebook event created by the group reads: “The English Defence League is against the inhumane slaughter of animals to produce Halal meat. The English Defence League is also against the rituals of Islam being forced upon our next generation without choice.”

Harrow Times, 28 October 2010

See also “English Defence League should ‘go home’, says Harrow MP Bob Blackman”, Harrow Times, 28 October 2010

Update:  See “Harrow Council tells EDL to cancel protest over Halal school dinners”, Harrow Times, 29 October 2010

Republican candidate who killed unarmed Iraqis welcomes Geller’s backing

Ilario_PantanoIlario Pantano, who is standing as a Republican candidate in North Carolina’s 7th congressional district in the US midterm elections.

The basic facts are undisputed: on 15 April 2004 Ilario Pantano, then a second lieutenant with the US marines, stopped and detained two Iraqi men in a car near Falluja. The Iraqis were unarmed and the car found to be empty of weapons.

Pantano ordered the two men to search the car for a second time and then, with no other US soldiers in view, unloaded a magazine of his M16A4 automatic rifle into them, before reloading and blasting a second magazine at them – some 60 rounds in total. Over the corpses, he left a placard inscribed with the marine motto: “No better friend, No worse enemy.”

Six years later Pantano is on the verge of a stunning electoral victory that could send him to the US Congress in Washington. He is standing as Republican candidate in North Carolina’s 7th congressional district, which was last represented by his party in 1871.

With the help of the right-wing Tea Party movement, and with the benefit of his image as a war hero acquired from what happened on that fateful day in 2004, he has raised almost $1m (£630,000) in donations and is now level-pegging with his Democratic opponent, Mike McIntyre.

Pantano is fighting the election on a national manifesto for change. He wants to cut back on government spending and clamp down on extremist Islam. He recently spoke at Ground Zero in New York where he opposes plans to build an Islamic cultural centre nearby. “America objects to what’s happening there. The folks in this district think it’s an abomination,” he said.

He has been endorsed by Pamela Geller, one of the leading opponents of the cultural centre who has built bridges between her group Stop Islamisation of America and the British far-right group the English Defence League. “I don’t have any anxieties about Pam Geller,” Pantano said. “She is a patriot. I’m thrilled to have her endorsement.”

Guardian, 27 October 2010

EDL defends Christmas against Muslims

EDL England Will Never be a Muslim StateA far-right group has vowed to “close down” any town that ditches British traditions and shows favouritism to Muslims.

The English Defence League said it has written to every council in the country threatening a mass invasion if they ban the word “Christmas”. It includes using the term “winter festival” in case Christmas upsets Muslims.

EDL leader Stephen Lennon said “working class people” in the UK were “at boiling point” over what he says is the “Islamisation of Britain”. His declaration comes after yesterday’s Daily Star poll found 98% of readers fear that Britain is becoming a Muslim state.

He said: “If the politicians aren’t going to stick up for us, we will make them, because we will cause so much fuss and so much noise they are going to have to listen. We will not back down or be beaten into submission. We don’t care if you call us racists. We are coming anyway.”

Daily Star, 26 October 2010

Three EDL hooligans charged with affray and public order offences

Members of the English Defence League (EDL) were joined by American Rabbi Nuchrem Shifren in a protest at Speakers Corner, Hyde Park, after an earlier protest outside the Israeli Embassy. London, UK. 24/10/2010Three English Defence League demonstrators have been charged with affray and public order offences after a scuffle with Muslim hecklers at Speakers Corner.

Shortly after their demonstration on Sunday outside the Israeli Embassy in Kensington, EDL supporters made their way to Hyde Park where Rabbi Nachum Shifren, the so-called “surfing rabbi” from California, gave a short speech. The rabbi had earlier called Muslims “dogs” and told the EDL “We will never surrender to the sword of Islam.”

Rabbi Shifren was heckled by passers-by and scuffles allegedly broke out with EDL members. Bryan Kelso, 28, from Luton, Christopher Long, 38, from Roehampton and Brian Bristow, 37, from Doncaster were arrested and charged with affray and public order offences. The men have been bailed to appear at City of Westminster Magistrates’ Court on November 3.

Jewish Chronicle, 26 October 2010

‘Jews against EDL’ organiser explains why she opposes pro-Israel racists

On Sunday the English Defence League mobilised outside the Israeli embassy for a rally in support of Israel with the guest speaker being Rabbi Nachum Shifren of The Tea Party, USA.

When I found out about the rally, which I was told was organised by the small but particularly vocal Jewish division of the EDL, I was fuming.

I felt there had to be a counter demonstration. So a few friends and I started organised one.

The EDL said of the event “we sympathise with what Israel are going through, it’s the only country in the west that is tackling the issues we highlight”. They go on to say… “our fore-fathers fought a Nazi regime and won to protect our god given human rights, we cannot allow such fascist ideologies try to rule our streets once again using the same racist tactics”.

The EDL dare to use the language of anti-Fascism to legitimise their political agenda. Speaking as a Jewish person, the idea that they would attack minorities and say they are doing it in part to protect and honor Jewish history is obscene.

Siobhan Schwartzberg at Liberal Conspiracy, 26 October 2010

See also “Protesters: ‘EDL lies when it says it speaks for Jewish people'”, UAF, 25 October 2010

Interview with EDL’s ‘Tommy Robinson’

The Times interviews EDL leader Stephen Lennon, aka Tommy Robinson. He claims that Muslims sell heroin as “chemical warfare” aimed at undermining British society and get non-Muslim girls addicted to drugs in order to force them into “paedophilic prostitution”. But Lennon has no problem with EDL members snorting cocaine on buses taking them to demonstrations. “That’s different. It’s a social drug.”


‘There’s a lot of anger. It’s about to explode’

Times, 25 October 2010

Stephen Lennon is angry. Every taut sinew and muscle in his body exudes that rage. In a run-down pub on one of Luton’s most dilapidated and sprawling 1960s housing estates, his rant against Islam earned approving nods from his followers sipping beer as they listened while he was interviewed by The Times.

The 27-year-old former British National Party (BNP) member is the founder and leader of the English Defence League (EDL), a far-right group that is forging links with like-minded anti-Islamist organisations across Europe and, now, America.

It is the first time that Mr Lennon, a father of two, has given a newspaper interview and has been photographed without his trademark mask, emblazoned with the red Knights Templar’s Cross, concealing his identity.

As a heavyweight rottweiler patrols the backroom meeting, Mr Lennon reels off perceived injustices heaped on the English working class because of “failed” multiculturalism and the “Islamisation” of Britain.

As he vents his well-rehearsed rhetoric at a breakneck speed there is no room for compromise or middle ground. It is his speeches — made on the streets of cities and towns to hundreds, sometimes thousands of EDL supporters, many wearing masks — that have helped to fuel running battles with antifascist and Asian demonstrators. Many protests end in violence and arrests and invariably incur massive policing costs.

Mr Lennon is no stranger to violence. The Times can reveal that he was jailed for a year for actual bodily harm after punching and kicking an off-duty policeman during a domestic incident in 2004. He is banned from Luton Town football matches as part of his bail conditions, after being charged with affray and assault for two separate incidents this year. Mr Lennon denies both charges. He said he is also being investigated for money laundering, which he also denies.

He has many names; he once changed his name by deed poll to Paul Harris, has combined his parents’ and stepfather’s surnames and now claims he uses his stepfather’s name of Lennon. To most of the EDL’s rank and file, however, he is Tommy Robinson.

Wearing a leather jacket and jeans, and standing 5ft 7in tall, he cuts a stocky figure with the swagger of a man used to standing his ground amid the push and shove of the football terrace with the more volatile fans.

“People are at f***ing boiling point,” he said, sipping from a pint glass of vodka and lemonade. “There’s an undercurrent of anger from people living in towns like this. It’s ready to explode. And the Government needs to listen. Before we started, the working class across this country were ignored by the Government. We are bringing these issues to the forefront. They would have ignored us for another ten years if we didn’t do nothing.”

By his own admission, the EDL has adopted the tactics of the Islamic extremists, who unwittingly helped to spawn his group after disrupting a troops’ homecoming from Iraq by waving banners calling the soldiers “terrorists” and “butchers of Basra”.

What had been a few hundred, predominantly white, Luton Town football fans handing out leaflets stating “Ban the Luton Taleban” grew almost overnight into the EDL with so-called “divisions” linked to football clubs across England, Scotland and Wales.

To Mr Lennon it is a “war” with Islamic extremism. “We didn’t let the IRA recruit on the streets of England when we were at war with them. So why were Islamic extremists allowed to recruit in Luton? And I don’t agree with the war. It’s the most unjust war ever. But you have to support our troops.”

He insists that neither he nor the EDL is racist, despite often racist diatribes posted by some followers on the group’s Facebook page. “Islam is not a race, it’s an ideology. If you get the Koran there are elements to it that are racist towards us nonbelievers,” he continued, adding that he accepts that some divisions had been linked to Combat 18, a violent neo-Nazi group, but that a 17-month-old organisation without membership cannot control who claims to support it. He says that he has friends who are black, points to one of the most prominent EDL activists being Sikh and, as the London demonstration yesterday showed, the group supports Israel in its conflict with the Palestinians.

His claims are extraordinary: Muslims sell heroin as “chemical warfare” to weaken British society, as well as enticing drug-addicted British girls into “paedophilic prostitution”. He admits, however, that some EDL “activists” take cocaine on buses on the way to demonstrations (“That’s different. It’s a social drug. Brown [heroin] destroys communities.”).

While he has embraced technology with an official website, social networking and YouTube videos, he knows that EDL’s strength lies in its ability to wreak disorder and chaos through demonstrations. He said that “reluctantly” he uses the threat of a demonstration as “blackmail” to ensure that councils do not pander to Islamic pressure groups to change British traditions. “We are now sending letters to every council saying that if you change the name of Christmas we are coming in our thousands and shutting your town down.”

Despite the vacuum left by the failure of the BNP at the ballot box, the EDL will not try to enter mainstream politics and will remain an “anti-Islamist” pressure group. “If we build a support base across the country, the Conservative and Labour Party will start to accept what we are saying,” he said.

“If the politicians aren’t going to stick up for us we will make them, because we will cause so much fuss and so much noise they are going to have to listen. We will not back down or be beaten into submission. We don’t care if you call us racists. We are coming anyway. We are going to continue doing it until someone listens.”

Referring to how politicians held meetings with the Muslim Council of Great Britain after the terrorist attacks in London, he said: “The Government can now do deals with us. Before you make decisions in towns and cities, people had better think ‘what is the EDL going to say?’ ”

Asked if he can envisage a time when the EDL would end its activities and live in peace with the Islamic community, he said: “Of course I can. If they agree to stop taking the piss across this country and swear allegiance to the Queen, this country and the flag, and then live side by side. That’s what we want.” He added that anyone breaking that allegiance would be “booted out back to where they came from”.

Mr Lennon was born in Luton to Irish immigrant parents in November 1982. However, the couple split up and he lost contact with his father, Malcolm, at the age of 11. His mother remarried and he was brought up on a relatively prosperous housing estate in the Bedford area.

He attended Putteridge High School in Luton and went on to train as an aircraft engineer. But his brushes with the law in 2004 put an end to his career and he now works as a carpenter. Because of his criminal record he was recently turned away from JFK Airport in New York after flying there to attend the protests against plans to build a mosque near Ground Zero.

A lapsed Catholic, his activism began in 2004 when he joined the BNP (“I didn’t know they were racist”) and later set up the United People of Luton. He lives in a £200,000 home in a leafy suburb in Bedfordshire.

“We’ve got to go,” he said, pointing out how he was off to meet the American rabbi and Tea Party activist, Nachum Shifren, who spoke against Sharia outside the Israeli Embassy yesterday. One of his mates joked: “Yeah, gotta go. We’ve got a war to start”.

Before leaving, Mr Lennon said: “To be honest, mate, I didn’t want this on my shoulders. I didn’t want to be the leader of the EDL. I want to be home with my missus and kids. I don’t want fatwas on my head and death threats. I don’t want to be the next f***ing Nick Griffin. But I am not backing down.

‘Surfing rabbi’ addresses EDL pro-Israel demo

Nachum Shifren at EDL demoAround 300 members of the far right organisation the English Defence League (EDL) were joined by a US Rabbi associated with the Tea Party at a demonstration “to oppose Islamic fascism”.

Speaking outside the Israeli embassy in London, Rabbi Nachum Shifren stressed he was not here to represent the Tea Party but came as someone “who loves freedom”.

Rabbi Shifren, who is standing for the California state senate, said: “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.”

The so-called surfing rabbi said the EDL were the only group in England with moral courage and that politicians would not admit that “because of the Arab petrol dollars”.

Rabbi Shifren added that Muslims “eat each other alive, like the dogs that they are”. He said: “We shall prevail, we will not let them take over our countries. We will never surrender to the sword of Islam.”

Jewish Chronicle, 25 October 2010

More photos at Demotix here and here.

Over at Atlas Shrugs, Pamela Geller hails the alliance between Shifren and the EDL as “part of the growing interaction between the EDL and the counter-jihad movement in the US that I enthusiastically support”.

Police prepare for EDL protest in Swindon

The chief of Wiltshire Police says the force is prepared to deal with a protest march planned by the far right English Defence League next month. Chief Constable Brian Moore says he had to respect the right of people to protest peacefully and hoped the event would not give rise to violence.

The English Defence League, an anti-Muslim group formed in 2009, says on its website that it is planning a day of protests in Swindon, Preston and the West Midlands on November 20. It is feared the EDL might be planning to hold the march in Manchester Road, one of the most multi-cultural areas of town and very close to the site of a proposed new mosque.

South West Trades Union Council regional secretary Nigel Costley said the TUC was joining with community and campaign groups to call for a ban of the EDL if rumours of the protest march in the town proved to be true.

He said: “The EDL is a toxic mix of right-wing racists and football hooligans. They pick areas with Asian communities to stir violent reactions. Plans for a new mosque on Manchester Road in Swindon will be exploited by the EDL to push their anti-Islamic views.”

Swindon Advertiser, 24 October 2010

EDL thug released early from prison

Bernard Holmes in chicken costumeA “dangerous” man who left his victim with a permanent brain injury has been released from jail early and is taking part in English Defence League protests.

Bernard Holmes, 25, formerly of Coleridge Street, Blackburn, was jailed for two years and four months, in February for causing grievous bodily harm to Shaun Baxendale. Mr Baxendale was left with “catastrophic” injuries and a change in personality in the unprovoked May 2009 attack. He had to have a piece of his skull removed.

However, because Holmes spent more than seven months in custody before his trial, he is now out on licence after technically serving half his term.

Under the nickname “Mr B”, he has been central to the Blackburn EDL’s recent demonstrations outside the KFC in Haslingden Road, Blackburn, dressed as a yellow chicken. Pictures on his Facebook site also show him and fellow members of the right-wing group, who call themselves the “Knuckledraggers”, at last weekend’s heavily-policed rally in Leicester.

When Holmes was jailed, Maggie Garth, 44, Mr Baxendale’s sister criticised the sentence and spoke out in favour of the Lancashire Telegraph‘s Consequences campaign, which aims to steer people away from drunken, spontaneous town centre violence.

She reacted to his release and activities with the EDL by saying: “The chicken suit is very apt for him. He’s a coward. I was physically sick when I heard he was out of prison. I don’t think the sentences handed out for these types of offences frighten the offenders. Shaun is still forgetting things and going through terrible mood swings. Yet Holmes can go out and protest over the very things that make us a free country.”

Lancashire Telegraph, 20 October 2010