Cambridge: Venue for anti-fascist meeting threatened with ‘trouble’

A charity which is hosting a meeting to discuss how anti-fascists can combat the rise of the English Defence League (EDL) received a menacing phone call telling it to cancel the booking or face “trouble”.

Bosses at Squeaky Gate in Norfolk Street have vowed not to cave in to the threat but police will be on the scene tonight to make sure there is no trouble.

The meeting, organised by Cambridge Unite Against Fascism (UAF), will be attended by trade unionists, political parties and faith groups.

Olga Plocienniczak, an administrator at Squeaky Gate, told the News the call came from a private number and that the speaker told her there would be “trouble” if the meeting was not cancelled, warning far-right activists were planning to turn up. The caller refused to reveal their identity.

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Police check of veiled woman sparks clashes near Paris

Police fired tear gas and rubber bullets to disperse an angry crowd in a town on the outskirts of Paris where clashes erupted on Wednesday night after they questioned a woman wearing a full facial veil, which is banned in France.

A police source, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the trouble started when police stopped a 25-year-old woman in the centre of Argenteuil, a suburb north-west of Paris, who was wearing a full-face Muslim veil, or niqab.

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Defend no platform – complain to BBC

UAF_logoUAF is urging members and supporters to complain to the BBC after Tommy Robinson, leader of the English Defence League, was interviewed on Radio 4’s flagship Today programme on Tuesday 11 June.

On the programme Robinson admitted that the organisation has “completely questionable” tactics and went on to say “it’s not going to end pretty”, although none of this was sufficiently challenged.

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Facebook user called on supporters to ‘target’ Grimsby mosque

Grimsby Islamic Cultural Centre arsonA hate-filled Facebook user posted racist abuse and insults – and called for supporters to “target” a Grimsby mosque because it “wants burning”.

Matthew Tyson claimed the mosque had got his “blood boiling”, a court heard. The father-of-two’s comments were made in the days following the horrific murder of soldier Lee Rigby, in London.

Tyson, 23, insisted he and others were not racists but “patriotic racists”, claiming he had “always hated” the people he was writing about – and that this was a chance for him and others to get their town “heard”. The comments were spotted by the police and he ended up in court – where he said: “I have never felt such an idiot in my life.”

Tyson, of Rosemary Avenue, Grimsby, admitted sending an offensive or menacing message between May 22 and 25 – just days before Grimsby’s mosque was set on fire. In the wake of that attack, the police issued warnings to people using social networking websites that they were being monitored.

Rebecca Dolby, prosecuting, told Grimsby magistrates that Tyson posted messages on a Facebook forum shortly after Drummer Rigby was attacked by two men near the Royal Artillery Barracks, in Woolwich, on May 22. Tyson’s comments included: “What if we do beat **** out of them? It’s all of us people on this page that gets our town and names heard and show the ******* what true British is. I will show them how much us Brits want the scumbags out.”

The comments included a reference to the Grimsby Islamic Cultural Centre, on Weelsby Road, Grimsby. It read: “Target that place for start. A British church into a mosque. Now that’s got my blood boiling.” This was a reference to the fact that the mosque was on the site of the former Weelsby Road Methodist Church, said Miss Dolby. Tyson also wrote: “That’s all they say to me too, mate – you racist. No, we ain’t racist. We’re patriotic racists. The place needs burning. I’ll go under cover down Weelsby mosque. LMAO.”

Tyson later told police he used strong words because he “wanted to express” himself but he claimed he did not want anyone to “go out and do anything”. He claimed: “I’m not a racist” but insisted he was glad he had expressed his feelings. “I was angry,” he said. He was not a member of the English Defence League but was “against Muslim extremists”, he added.

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EDL member jailed for threatening Muslims with ‘insane violence’

Tony Croydon with gunA boxer who threatened Muslims with acts of “insane violence” on Facebook on the day Drummer Lee Rigby was hacked to death was jailed for four months today (Weds).

Tony Perrin, 28, was arrested close to his south London home after he posted his vile threats with a photo of himself wearing a balaclava and pointing a gun at the camera.

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EDL dismissal warning for soldiers

Stephen Lennon armed forces support Edl

Serving soldiers have been warned that taking part in any English Defence League activities could result in their dismissal.

Defence minister Mark Francois, in a written Parliamentary answer, said that the Army chain of command had been contacted with clear instructions to ensure all service personnel refrained from engaging in any political behaviour, after photos emerged showing what appeared to be serving soldiers brandishing firearms against a backdrop of EDL propaganda.

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Fifth arson arrest over Darul Uloom School fire

A fifth teenager has been arrested by police investigating the suspected arson attack on an Islamic school in south-east London. About 128 pupils and staff were evacuated from Darul Uloom, a boarding school in Foxbury Avenue, Chislehurst, on Saturday.

Police said an 18-year-old man was arrested in Greenwich on Tuesday. He and the other four teenagers arrested on suspicion of arson are bailed to return to police in August. The investigation into the circumstances of the fire continues.

BBC News, 12 June 2013

‘Cabbie slasher’ Michael Enright pleads guilty to Muslim hate attack

Michael Enright in courtCrazed film student Michael Enright pleaded guilty Tuesday to slicing the throat of a Muslim cab driver in a hate-fueled 2010 attack, with the promise of a 9½-year sentence.

A stone-faced Enright, 24, pleaded guilty to attempted murder and assault as hate crimes for the shocking attack on Ahmed Sharif, a Bangladeshi father of four, who picked up his would-be killer at E. 24th and Second Ave. on the evening of Aug. 24, 2010.

The boozed-up former School of Visual Arts student insulted Sharif’s religion, then lunged into the front seat with a knife and started hacking away at the driver’s neck. He also cut the cabbie’s face, arms and hands, prosecutors said.

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