BNP whips up hatred against Muslims in Loughton

BNP leaflet Loughton

The British National Party has been accused of whipping up racial tensions in the district after it issued an inflammatory leaflet about a local Muslim community group.

In the latest edition of the BNP’s Epping Forest Patriot, delivered to many households in Loughton, the group attack the use on Friday afternoons of the Murray Hall, in Borders Lane, for Islamic prayer sessions. Under a picture of a union flag being eaten away by the Islamic moon and crescent the leaflet says: “In parts of neighbouring Redbridge and east London the Islamification process is almost complete. We’ll do all in our power to prevent Islam creeping into our town.” The leaflet is headed in capital letters: “No mosques in Loughton!”

Noor Ramjanally, of Valley Hill, Loughton, who started the Islamic prayer sessions at the hall has already been subjected to threats and an arson attack, which the BNP deny knowledge of. He said: “I do find it worrying because of my wife and son. We don’t deserve to be going through all this stress, we just want somewhere to pray. It’s just from people who are basically idiots. They don’t know what my religion is about. We have the support of all the community.”

Epping Forest BNP group leader Pat Richardson said she had seen the leaflet and “didn’t disagree with it.” She added: “It shouldn’t be in a community centre and I don’t think it’s appropriate in a BNP ward. It brings all sorts of problems and we don’t want problems in this area.”

Epping Forest Guardian, 3 August 2009

Swedish far right split over land sale to mosque

A councillor for the xenophobic Sweden Democrat party is facing expulsion from his party – after preparing to sell land to people who want to build a mosque on it. The Sweden Democrats often express hostility against Muslims and the Islamic religion, and some in the leadership have proposed a ban against the building of mosques in Sweden.

But their councillor Jan Hansveden explained to local paper Helsingborgs Dagblad that the land sale involves “a scary amount of money” – around 850,000 US dollars. And that as far as he is concerned, it is his business who he sells his property to. The councillor sits in Landskrona local government council, one of the far right party’s biggest success areas.

But SD party leader Jimmie Åkesson has slammed the councillor as “greedy” and said that if the deal goes ahead, he’s not welcome in the party any longer.

Swedish Radio, 1 August 2009

When Griffin says ‘Islam is a cancer’ he doesn’t really believe that, apparently

jihad-book-final-cover-front.p65Shortly after his election to the European Parliament, BNP leader Nick Griffin told a television interviewer that there is “no place in Europe for Islam”.

He added: “Western values, freedom of speech, democracy and rights for women are incompatible with Islam, which is a cancer eating away at our freedoms and our democracy.” Griffin declared his agreement with the words of Flemish far right MP Jurgen Verstrepen: “We urgently need global chemotherapy against Islam to save civilisation.”

This was just the latest in a long series of Islamophobic statements by Griffin. In 2004 he told a BNP meeting that “this wicked, vicious faith has expanded from a handful of cranky lunatics about 1,300 years ago to it’s now sweeping country after country before it, all over the world”. He accused Muslim gangs of systematically raping non-Muslim women and claimed that this was authorised by the Qur’an: “go and buy a copy and you will find verse after verse and you can take any woman you want as long as it’s not Muslim women.”

During his resulting trial on a charge of inciting racial hatred Griffin justified these statements on the grounds that Islam is “a dragon … the terrible mortal enemy of all our fundamental values and something which, unchecked, will bring misery and disaster to this country”.

In 2005 Griffin explained the centrality of Islam in the BNP’s current political perspectives: “A generation ago the revival of the historic Islamic threat to Europe would have been unthinkable; now it is clearly destined to be the great issue and decision of our time. For us, the closely linked threats of mass Third World immigration and Islamification outweigh all other considerations.”

I could go on producing quotations from Griffin and other party leaders to further illustrate the point that Islamophobia is now a major plank in the ideology of the BNP. But then, nobody who has studied the BNP would dispute this, would they? Well, nobody except Edmund Standing, author of the recently published Centre for Social Cohesion pamphlet The BNP and the Online Fascist Network.

We have already replied to Standing here and here. In response, having first resorted to abuse, Standing then produced an attempted defence of his position. Trying to make sense of Standing’s incoherent exercises in self-justification is the intellectual equivalent of wrestling with a blancmange. But his main charge against critics like Islamophobia Watch and ENGAGE (see their comments on Standing here and here) seems to be that we accept the BNP leadership’s claim that the party has changed its character and has become a right-wing nationalist, rather than a racist and fascist, organisation.

In fact, my own view of the BNP’s claim to have undergone a genuine political transformation is very much in line with this article, which states that “the public downplaying of anti-semitism by the BNP under Griffin’s leadership is just another tactical manoeuvre that does not affect the party’s basic ideology”, and argues that “the fact that the Griffin-led BNP has publicly dispensed with the Nazi trappings of the past does not mean that it has evolved into some sort of post-fascist right-wing populist party”.

I also agree with the article’s conclusion that the BNP is best described as “neo-fascist”, in the sense that it “draws its inspiration from fascist movements of the past while adapting its ideology and forms of organisation to the political situation in Britain today”. And the BNP’s adoption of paranoid fantasies about the imminent Islamification of the West is a clear example of that adaptation. As it was, the BNP leaders already held “beliefs about a well planned conspiracy by ‘international Jewry’ to destroy the white race through immigration and the promotion of race mixing”, to quote Standing himself. So it really wasn’t that much of a stretch for the fascists to embrace Eurabia-style theories about a Muslim plot to conquer Europe.

Just because Griffin and other BNP leaders remain at heart a gang of Nazi admirers and Holocaust-deniers who, in order to make the party electable, have chosen to cover up those aspects of their ideology and promote Islamophobia instead, it does not follow that they regard the latter as a mere sop to popular opinion, an opportunist attempt to “jump on the bandwagon” of anti-Muslim feeling, as Standing contends.

After all, Griffin’s “wicked, vicious faith” speech attacking Islam was not intended for public consumption. It was delivered at an internal BNP meeting, to an audience made up exclusively of party members and supporters, and obviously reflects the sort of political indoctrination that takes place within the BNP’s own ranks. It is hardly accidental that Arthur Kemp, the South African white supremacist whose latest book is entitled Jihad: Islam’s 1,300 Year War On Western Civilisation, is in charge of ideological education in the party.

Standing’s suggestion that the BNP leaders’ Islamophobic ravings are just a cunning political trick, and that “Griffin and co don’t really care about Islam”, is laughable. And Standing makes himself ridiculous by continuing to defend this position.

Postscript:  Some further points on British fascism and race, of which Standing presents a simplistic analysis.

If you look back to the 1930s you’ll find Arnold Leese of the Imperial Fascist League publicising pseudo-scientific racial theories and justifying the IFL’s incitement of hatred against the Jewish community on those grounds (see for example chapter 2 of Leese’s book My Irrelevant Defence). But Oswald Mosley, leader of the much larger British Union of Fascists, was unenthusiastic about such theories, and the BUF instead attacked “organised Jewry” on the basis of its supposed domination of national life, generally without attempting to relate this to spurious notions about the racial character of Jews.

Of course, this didn’t mean that the BUF renounced racism. In October 1936, when thousands of Mosley’s Blackshirts lined up in Royal Mint Street for the demonstration that would end in the Battle of Cable Street, chanting “The Yids, the Yids, we’re going to get rid of the Yids”, it didn’t make any difference to them whether their organisation theorised its antisemitism in cultural or biological terms. They just hated Jews.

The BNP has its origins in the Leese rather than the Mosley wing of British fascism. Hence the stuff in the BNP constitution about the party representing the interests of “the indigenous Anglo-Saxon, Celtic and Norse folk communities of Britain and those we regard as closely related and ethnically assimilated or assimilable aboriginal members of the European race also resident in Britain”.

But the BNP’s turn to Islamophobia has led the party to adapt its theories accordingly. Thus Arthur Kemp is the author of the notorious book The March of the Titans: A History of the White Race, which promotes its white supremacist message through reference to “racial types”, explaining the rise and fall of civilisations “in terms of their racial homogeneity”. But, as noted above, Kemp has more recently written Jihad: Islam’s 1,300 Year War On Western Civilisation, which sidelines the categories of racial theory in order to present Islam as a threat to the West on the basis that it is historically proven to be a violent expansionist faith.

Contrary to Standing’s analysis, it is not the case that classic far-right racial theory is the only “true” ideology of the BNP. Rather, what you now have is a situation where the party’s traditional biological racism is complemented by a more up-to-date cultural racism.

Student hate group in Michigan gets new faculty adviser

WichmanMichigan State University (MSU) mechanical engineering professor Indrek Wichman made international headlines in February 2006, when, using his faculty E-mail account, he sent a blistering E-mail to the university’s Muslim Student Association, calling on Muslim students to either accept Western cultural standards or return to their “ancestral lands.”

“I counsel you dissatisfied, aggressive, brutal, and uncivilized slave-trading Moslems … [i]f you do not like the values of the West – see the 1st Amendment – you are free to leave,” Wichman wrote. “I hope for God’s sake that most of you choose that option.”

Although Provost Kim Wilcox formally admonished Wichman, the anti-Muslim professor remained on the MSU faculty. Now, he’s apparently taken on a new role in the MSU campus community: faculty adviser for the MSU chapter of Young Americans for Freedom, or MSU-YAF, an extreme-right student organization. The Southern Poverty Law Center has designated MSU-YAF a hate group for its hosting of white supremacist lecturers and repeated bigoted statements against Muslims and Latinos, among other groups.

According to the MSU Department of Student Life guide for the upcoming academic year, Wichman has replaced William Allen, a professor of political philosophy, as MSU-YAF’s faculty adviser.

Wichman’s association with MSU-YAF dates back at least to February 2008, when he was scheduled to give a lecture on “How Muslims Suppress Free Speech” at an MSU-YAF event that was booked at the Holocaust Memorial Center in Farmington Hills, Mich. That lecture was canceled after Holocaust Memorial Center administrators learned of MSU-YAF’s background, including that MSU-YAF had previously sponsored a lecture on the MSU campus by Nick Griffin, a Holocaust denier who heads the racist British National Party.

Southern Poverty Law Center, 29 July 2009

Prosecutors press for action against BNP leaflets

BNP changing face of london leafletSenior prosecutors are calling for the laws on race hate crimes to be strengthened to counter the threat posed by the British National party.

The threshold for securing a conviction is so high that far-right activists are able to evade prosecution for material that many people would consider to be threatening and racist, according to sources at the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS). Several BNP leaflets have been referred to the CPS over the last five years – some by senior police officers and one by a judge – but no further action has been taken.

Peter Herbert, the chairman of the Society of Black Lawyers and a part-time judge, submitted a complaint last year over a leaflet called The Changing Face of London that had two pictures, one depicting an all-white street party from the 1950s, the other showing three Muslim women wearing a niqab, one of whom is making a V-sign towards the camera.

Under the law, it has been extremely difficult to mount a prosecution against extremism and hate speech,” said Herbert. “But with the rise of the BNP, and the subsequent rise in racist attacks and the fear the party’s leaflets can provoke, it is essential we are given the tools to deal effectively with this threat.”

Guardian, 29 June 2009


Of course, the main obstacle to a successful prosecution of the BNP over its incitement of Islamophobic hatred is that Muslims are legally defined as a multi-ethnic faith group. They are therefore covered not by the racial hatred laws but by the 2006 Act dealing with incitement to religious hatred. The latter requires not only that the offending material should be explicitly “threatening” but that the prosecution should prove subjective intent, which in practice means that the religious hatred law is completely useless as a means of combating the BNP.

Standing reality on its head: the BNP and Islamophobia

CSC BNP pamphletHarry’s Place contributor Edmund Standing, whose report The BNP and the Online Fascist Network was recently published by the right-wing anti-Muslim propaganda organisation the Centre for Social Cohesion (blandly characterised by Standing as “a non-partisan independent think-tank”), has offered us some more of his thoughts on the BNP in an article for eGov monitor.

Standing’s latest piece is characteristic exercise in political evasion and confusion. Adopting the diversionary tactic of throwing his opponents’ accusations back in their faces (rather as the BNP accuses its enemies of being racists and fascists) he claims that Sunny Hundal and other critics of his CSC pamphlet have demonstrated “a complete failure in understanding of the true nature of the BNP’s anti-Islam campaign”.

In fact almost everything Standing has written about the BNP has been designed to downplay the significance of the fascists’ turn towards inciting hatred against the Muslim community. Elsewhere he has dismissed this turn as “little more than a superficial political trick” and he now asserts, bizarrely, that “the reality is that Griffin and co don’t really care about Islam”.

Anyone who has followed the endless stream of anti-Islam propaganda on the BNP’s website will be left rubbing their eyes in disbelief. Is Standing asserting that the BNP leadership don’t actually hate Islam, but are simply pretending to do so, as a cunning political manoeuvre?

Trying to make sense of Standing’s argument, he seems to be saying that the BNP’s Islamophobia is a mere epiphenomenon of traditional colour-based racism and that anti-fascists should concentrate on resisting the latter. He writes: “The truth is that the BNP hates Muslims because they are predominantly brown skinned. In ‘white nationalist’ ideology, everything ultimately boils down to an obsession with race.”

It is of course true that the BNP’s hatred of Islam is inseparable from the fact that the overwhelming majority of Muslims are not white. But racist ideology is not based solely or even primarily on the physical characteristics of members of the victimised minority community. These days it is more often justified in cultural terms. When the BNP denounces Islam as “alien” to “Western values”, and rants on about the threat to European civilisation posed by a “barbaric desert religion”, this isn’t reducible to a hatred of Muslims because they are brown. The far right really does despise and fear Islamic beliefs and religious practices.

As for Standing’s assertion that Griffin is “may be an odious figure, but he’s not a complete idiot, and knows very well that Britain is not on the verge of turning into an Islamic State”, what Griffin has in fact argued (the quote is from a 2005 interview on the Think-Israel website) is this:

“We are deeply concerned about the mainly – though not exclusively – French elite project to morph the EU, Turkey and the Maghreb into ‘Eurabia’. Bat Ye’or is 100% right about this. If this now far-advanced scheme comes to fruition then it would in turn lead to the Islamification of the whole European continent. A generation ago the revival of the historic Islamic threat to Europe would have been unthinkable; now it is clearly destined to be the great issue and decision of our time. For us, the closely linked threats of mass Third World immigration and Islamification outweigh all other considerations.”

If we accept Standing’s analysis, the BNP leadership doesn’t believe a word of this. Griffin is stupid and bigoted enough to embrace paranoid fascist fantasies about Jewish control of the media (see his 1997 pamphlet Who are the Mindbenders?) but apparently he’s too intelligent to imagine that the “liberal elite” are complicit in a plan to facilitate the Muslim takeover of Europe. Indeed, according to Standing, Griffin has a far more sophisticated understanding of this issue than a mainstream right-wing commentator like Melanie Phillips, who clearly does hold the view that the Islamification of Britain is an imminent threat.

Standing goes on to say that the right-wing tabloid press, by giving disproportionate coverage to unrepresentative nutters like Anjem Choudary and his followers, has whipped up an atmosphere of anti-Muslim bigotry that provides favourable conditions for the growth of the BNP – which is true enough. But he omits to mention the role played by writers who claim to be liberals, leftists or progressives in promoting hostility towards the Muslim community and its representative organisations. Indeed, Standing himself is a good example of this. Thus his article concludes with the following passage:

“Another important factor that is undoubtedly greatly assisting the BNP in its promotion of anti-Muslim sentiment is the problem of largely self-appointed Muslim ‘community leaders’ and organisations and their very vocal and, to the majority of Britons, unreasonable lists of demands of how British society should change to accommodate what is presented as Islam and the ‘rights’ of Muslims.”

Leaving aside the question of who the unnamed “self-appointed Muslim community leaders” might be – perhaps this refers to the Muslim Council of Britain with its 500 affiliates and elected national committee and officers? – Standing might ask himself how he would react to someone explaining fascist antisemitism on the basis that it had been encouraged by “self-appointed Jewish leaders” posing “unreasonable lists of demands” about “how British society should change” in order to accommodate “the ‘rights’ of Jews”.

Standing would undoubtedly condemn the writer as an antisemite. And he would be right.

Update:  See also ENGAGE, 30 July 2009

Anti-Muslim bias in the media? Not according to Harry’s Place

Harry's Place banner

“There’s a funny little spat going on. So last week Mehdi Hasan from the New Statesman wrote an article highlighting the different way the media treats a Muslim terrorist and a non-Muslim (far-right in this case) terrorist. Pretty obvious I thought. But Brett at Harry’s Place took umbrage on behalf of all people who feel white people are being victimised equally and there’s no bias obviously.

“I mean it’s not like there’s a media panic about Muslims is there? It’s not like there’s been stories of Muslim bus drivers chucking people off the bus so he could pray. Obviously there’s not been any on Muslims drawing up a hit-list of prominent Jews to get them back over Gaza. No one could ever imagine a story of Muslim youths attacking a soldier’s house after Afghanistan.

“You certainly would not believe that these stories would make the front page AND they turned out to be lies. That would never happen because our media is so balanced. Neither would you see prominent right-wing columnists writing about Eurabia and the ‘coming Muslim threat and all that’. Our press is the paragon of equal treatment to all nasty people. In group bias? That would never happen!”

Sunny Hundal at Pickled Politics, 22 July 2009