Dutch broadcaster removes anti-Wilders cartoon after threats to staff

Wilders as Nazi

The website of a left-leaning public broadcaster has removed a cartoon depicting a plan by the far-right PVV party as a Nazi death camp following serious threats to its staff.

The cartoon, by Adriaan Soeterbroek and posted on the VARA’s Joop.nl site, ridiculed a PVV plan to create “hooligan villages”, likening them to a Nazi concentration camp with PVV leader Geert Wilders showing the inmates into a shower. Millions of people, mostly Jews and Roma gypsies, were killed in Nazi gas chambers masquerading as showers.

The VARA says it removed the cartoon after careful consideration, saying that while freedom of expression is a key right some of its staff felt too threatened to continue working. The broadcaster has reported the incident to the police.

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EDL Deeside division’s Facebook page slammed as ‘racist’ and ‘plain stupid’

EDL Shotton protest 2A Facebook group has been set up for the “Deeside division” of the far-right English Defence League.

The online group – which has about 120 members – was created in the aftermath of last month’s EDL protest in Shotton town centre over a proposal to turn the former social club into an Islamic culture centre. On the homepage the site administrator – the person who set up the group – says the EDL Deeside Division’s mission is to “stop the Islamification of Great Britain”.

But it has been slammed by the North Wales Race Equality Network. A spokesman for the group said: “There are about 200 Muslims out of a population of 149,000 in Flintshire, or about 0.13%, and just 3% in Great Britain. This group is really pursuing something that is a red herring, because the notion Great Britain, let alone Deeside, is to become a Muslim country is just plain stupid.”

The page states: “We are the Deeside division of the English Defence League. Why English Defence league and not Cymru Defence league? Well to be honest we chose this because of the success of the EDL protest in Shotton. Also there is a large amount of English people that live in Deeside. Nothing taken away from the Cymru Defence League, we are all brothers fighting the same cause. We are not racist, Islam is a religion not a race!”

The launch of the group has also angered Unite Against Fascism national officer Martin Smith, who said the contents of similar EDL pages usually showed racist comments. He added: “Where the EDL tries to claim it is not a racist organisation on groups such as these, you only have to look on the pages to see they are full of racist-type material.”

Plans for the Muslim centre provoked strong protests and about 100 members of the EDL marched through the streets of Shotton to voice their opposition. The BNP also co-ordinated a leaflet campaign against the proposals.

The social club, which has been closed since August, was destroyed by arsonists earlier this month, and a police investigation is ongoing. Flintshire Muslim Cultural Society (FMCS), the group behind the plans, says it will look for an alternative venue.

Flintshire Chronicle, 24 February 2011

Cf. BNP news report, 23 February 2011

Windows smashed and EDL graffiti left at Luton Labour HQ

EDL_Dudley2Bricks have been thrown through the windows and the initials of the racist English Defence League have been sprayed on the door of the Labour Party’s Luton office.

The incident follows a spate of similar attacks on homes, which began with EDL graffiti and broken windows at two homes on the edge of the Bury Park areas – where many of Luton’s Asian community live.

Now, the Luton and Dunstable Express reports that a total of seven buildings have been attacked, including the Labour Party office, in incidents that featured EDL grafitti and broken windows.

The paper quotes EDL leader “Tommy Robinson” – whose real name is Stephen Yaxley Lennon – denying members of his organisation had caused the attacks. He said: “Why would we do that? If we wanted to damage anything we would have smashed stuff up on Saturday and we didn’t.”

But the first two houses were vandalised just a few hours after the EDL’s demo in Luton on Saturday 5 February.

The EDL is an organisation of racist thugs – with links to the British National Party and other fascist groups – which mainly targets Muslims.

Bedfordshire police are investigating the incidents.

UAF news report, 22 February 2011

Protest and counter-protest over King hearings

Peter King protestA heated protest rally and counter-demonstration took place Tuesday outside the Massapequa office of US Rep. Peter King, R-Seaford, over his plans to hold Congressional hearings on homegrown Islamic terrorism. More than a hundred protestors on both sides of the issue gathered outside the Seaford Republican’s Park Boulevard office to voice their opinions on King’s controversial stance on American Muslims.

Opposing what they call the “demonizing of our Muslim American neighbors,” among the crowd gathered outside the office were the Catholic organization Pax Christi, the Islamic Center of Long Island, the Long Island Alliance for Peaceful Alternatives, the Interfaith Alliance of Long Island, and the Muslim Peace Coalition.

Sister Jeanne Clark of Pax Christi lead a group that delivered a letter to King’s office, signed by approximately 80 Long Island religious leaders, asking King to ensure his hearings are fair. “We’re here to stand in solidarity with the Muslim community on Long Island,” Clark said. “We think that Congressman King’s hearings are misguided…that they’re creating a more toxic atmosphere and alienating people.”

Imtiaz Rahi, a Muslim protestor, said he personally finds King’s allegations deeply offensive. “Peter King believes that Muslims and the mosque managements are not cooperating in the investigations,” Rahi said. “This is not true…we are loyal citizens.”

Shaik Ubaid, co-chair of the New York chapter of the Muslim Peace Coalition, said he just wants balanced and impartial treatment for his people. “King is painting the Muslim community with a broad brush,” he said. “We want the hearings to be held in a very scientific way, instead of inviting Muslim-bashers to come and say stupid things.”

In turn, an equally passionate counter-protest gathered outside of police-erected barriers, yelling anti-Muslim and pro-American slogans at demonstrators and waving Gadsden flags high in the air.

The famous yellow flags, displaying a coiled snake and the phrase “Don’t Tread On Me,” have recently become known as an adopted symbol of the American Tea Party movement and at least one sign at the protest referenced the Tea Party, although the counter protestors Patch spoke declined to say if they were affiliated with any organization.

“We’re here to support Peter King, and those people are against Peter King,” said one of the counter-protesters, who declined to be named. “He wants to investigate the people who are behind the mosques, and find out who all these people are, and he wants to question where all the money’s coming from, and these Muslims are against that.”

Another King supporter, who asked to be identified only as Janet, said that this has been a long time in coming. “I think Representative King is doing the right thing, investigating the radical Muslims,” she said. “They’re here…they have terrorist cells, and this should have been done a long time ago. I was wondering why it wasn’t since 9/11. It doesn’t make sense.”

The two opposing groups shouted at each other throughout the protest, and while the situation was tense at times, the presence of Nassau County police officers kept things peaceful.

The Muslim Peace Coalition’s Shaik Ubaid alleged that many of the angry and vocal counter-protesters were, in fact, not local residents. “We expected it – these are people who are bussed in,” he said. “In a climate of fear and insecurity, it’s very easy to hate-monger.”

King remained defiant in the face of the protest. “The Long Island region has a population of almost three million people, barely 100 showed up to protest the hearings,” he said in a statement. “I will not be intimidated, I will not back down, the hearings are going forward.”

Patch.com, 22 February 2011

Lawsuit alleges FBI violated Muslims’ freedom of religion

An FBI informant who infiltrated a California mosque violated the constitutional rights of hundreds of Muslims by targeting them for surveillance because of their religion, the ACLU and a Muslim group said in a lawsuit Tuesday.

The lawsuit, filed against the FBI and seven of its agents and supervisors, focuses on the actions several years ago of Craig Monteilh, a paid FBI informant. Monteilh has said he was instructed to spy on worshipers at an Irvine mosque in a quest for potential terrorists, allegations that prompted fierce criticism of the FBI from some Muslims in Southern California and nationwide.

The lawsuit alleges that Monteilh was ordered by his FBI handlers to conduct “indiscriminate surveillance” of Muslims, violating their First Amendment right to freedom of religion. Filed on behalf of three Muslim plaintiffs, the 64-page document seeks class action status, unspecified damages and a court order instructing the FBI to destroy or return the information Monteilh collected.

“The FBI should be spending its time and resources investigating actual threats, not spying on every American who happens to worship at a mosque,” said Peter Bibring, a staff attorney for the ACLU of Southern California, which filed the complaint along with the Los Angeles office of the Council on American-Islamic Relations.

Washington Post, 22 February 2011

See also “Lawsuit contends FBI violated rights of hundreds of Muslim Americans”, L.A. Now, 22 February 2011

Nearly half of Australians are anti-Muslim: study

A decade-long national study has found that nearly 50 per cent of Australians identify themselves as having anti-Muslim attitudes.

Researchers from universities across the country polled thousands of people about their attitudes to different cultures and whether they had experienced racism. The research found around one in 10 Australians identified themselves as prejudiced against other cultures.

About one-quarter of those surveyed said they had anti-Semitic or anti-Asian attitudes, while a slightly larger number were prejudiced against Aborigines. Anti-Muslim sentiment was even higher, at 48.6 per cent.

Lead researcher Professor Kevin Dunn from the University of Western Sydney says recent political rhetoric has not helped. “If you continue to speak about a group as a problem, whether that be asylum seekers or Muslims, that will [be] cast within the public mind,” he said.

ABC Online, 23 February 2011

See also Michael Brull, “Islamophobia, not Islam, is the real threat”, ABC Online, 23 February 2011

EDL protestors in Barnsley ‘intent on causing disorder’ say police

EDL BarnsleyAbout 60 English Defence League supporters from across the north came to Barnsley “intent on causing disorder”, said Barnsley’s commanding police officer.

Ch Supt Andy Brooke admitted the force was surprised by the arrival of the EDL group, which marched to Churchfields where a Unite Against Fascism parade was congregating.

Mr Brooke said officers acted quickly to contain the EDL and prevent disorder. He said: “About 60 or 70 EDL arrived in the Courthouse car park. They marched en masse towards the UAF intent on confronting them and causing disorder. Officers put a cordon in place and dispersed them. It was extremely problematic because there were a few officers and a significant number of EDL.”

There were no arrests but a number of public order offences are being investigated.

Barnsley Chronicle, 21 February 2011


The UAF march was in fact against the British National Party, and the EDL intervention against UAF was in solidarity with the BNP. See “Barnsley: antifascists march as EDL’s links to BNP exposed”, UAF news report, 19 February 2011