Category: UK

  • Car Bomb Left Outside Belfast Police HQ

    Car Bomb Left Outside Belfast Police HQ

    A car bomb has been left outside the Policing Board headquarters in Belfast, though it has done no serious damage.

    Police HQ

    The 400lb car bomb partially exploded and the back of the vehicle caught fire, with two men seen escaping.

    Chief Constable Matt Baggott said: “It does appear to be a device that has partially exploded, around 400lb.

    “It is a reckless act not just in doing damage but also the potential loss of life.”

    A car was found burned out nearby in the staunchly Republican New Lodge area of the city and police are investigating whether there was any link.

    Mr Baggott added: “This attack is an attack on the well-being of everybody in Northern Ireland, this is not about an attack on policing or the Policing Board, this is an attack on young people and young people’s future.”

    Meanwhile, four people have been arrested after police exchanged gunfire with suspected dissident Republicans in County Fermanagh, Northern Ireland.

    The incident took place close to the border with the Irish Republic in Garrison. It is understood that the incident was an attempt to kill a police officer who lives in the village.

    Mr Baggott said that officers fired two warning shots, which are being investigated by Police Ombudsman Alan Hutchinson.

    He added that his officers had been fired at during the exchange.

    Northern Ireland Secretary Paul Goggins said: “When attacks like these happen it brings people together with the strong message that these dissidents will not succeed.

    “Policing will continue in Northern Ireland and progress will continue.”

    The Policing Board is made up of independent members of the community and politicians who hold police to account through regular public meetings.

    SKY Logo

  • Turkey steps up Fergie inquiry

    Turkey steps up Fergie inquiry

    Published Date: 21 November 2009

    TURKISH officials have stepped up their campaign to prosecute the Duchess of York for her role in a documentary filmed undercover in their country.

    Sarah Ferguson

    Sarah Ferguson’s lawyers have been served by police with a request from Turkey for information from her. She has been accused of violating the privacy of disabled children after she appeared in a programme that exposed harsh conditions in state-run orphanages.

    A police spokesman said: “A request for international legal assistance has been received. The legality of the request has been agreed.”

    The Scotsman

  • Racist Terrorism on rise, Businessman bankrolls ‘street army’

    Racist Terrorism on rise, Businessman bankrolls ‘street army’

    By Nick Lowles

    A middle-age, respectable looking man has emerged as a key figure behind the English Defence League. Alan Lake, a 45-year-old businessman from Highgate, North London, sees the EDL as a potential “street army” willing to be deployed against what they claim is rising Islamisation of modern Britain.

    EDL-Birmingham

    Lake, who claims to have made money through computers, runs a series of intranet services for far-right groups across the world. Addressing an anti-Islam conference in Sweden last month, organised by the far-right Swedish Democrats, he told delegates it was necessary to build an anti-Jihad movement. He spoke of the need for “people that are ready to go out in the street” and boasted that he and his friends had already begun to build alliances with “football supporters”.

    “We are catching a baby at the start of a gestation,” Lake later told The Guardian. “We have a problem with numbers. We have an army of bloggers [on the far right] but that’s not going to get things done.

    “Football fans are a potential source of support. They are a hoi polloi that gets off their backsides and travels to a city and they are available before and after matches.”

    In addition to funding materials and publicity, Lake has established a website that he hopes will become a clearing house for the EDL and like-minded organisations. He says that people in the movement must choose their roles. Some can debate on forums, some can be experts on the Koran. He is, however, quick to distance himself from fascist organisations and one of his only demands of the EDL in return for his funding is that it distances itself from groups such as the British National Party.

    Indeed, Lake appears to want to build alliances with all groups who might fall foul of the strict Islamic code, including lesbian and gay organisations, other religions and ethnic groups and supporters of free speech.

    Lake wants the message to be short and easy. At the Swedish conference he announced a manifesto based on four freedoms: free speech, democracy, equality in law and cultural tolerance, with no exemptions for any ideology or religion.

    He also stressed the urgency of the issue, claiming that within 40 years Muslims would be in the majority.

    Lake’s offer to finance the EDL appeals to the Luton division, who remain at the EDL’s core. What began as a local reaction to the protest by a handful of Islamic extremists at a parade by the Royal Anglian Regiment in March has mushroomed into a national network that has increasingly been under the media spotlight due to several clashes in cities around the country.

    Violence has already occurred in Luton, Birmingham and Harrow and further EDL events are planned for Manchester, Leeds, Swansea and Glasgow.

    The EDL is run by 15 key people across the country who co-ordinate activists via email and social networking sites, such as Facebook. The group lacks a coherent message or vision, and even within its core, the EDL means different things to different people. Indeed, none of the 15 so-called leaders appears to have actually met all the others.

    The EDL seems to have become an umbrella name for a number of existing anti-Islam groups, such as the Birmingham-based British Citizens Against Muslim Extremists, the Welsh Defence League and March for England.

    While the group will claim to be open to anyone it remains centred around the football hooligan network and in particular gains support from the football gangs of Luton, Aston Villa, QPR, Southampton, Bristol Rovers, West Bromwich Albion and Wolves.

    It has become apparent that some in Luton EDL have become uneasy over being linked to the BNP and far-right politics. For some this is a genuine aversion, while others might have been persuaded of this by Lake, who appears acutely aware of its negative impact on the group.

    However, it is also clear that some other EDL leaders, in different parts of the country, have no problem with being linked to rightwing groups. The newly formed Scottish Defence League has known fascists at its core, while the Swansea Division shares many of its followers with the Swansea Jack hooligan group, which in turn supplies activists to the local BNP.

    At the EDL protest in Birmingham fascists and rightwing extremists were clearly visible, some happily giving Nazi salutes. They included Chris Renton, a BNP supporter from Weston-super-Mare, who runs their website.

    As publicity about the EDL continues, the group is likely to grow across the country. New units will form and new activists will take to the streets. Whatever Lake’s wishes it is unlikely that he will be able to direct EDL philosophy and actions too tightly. By its very nature and its core activity – taking to the streets – the EDL will attract people not averse to violence, particularly around the football hooligan network, and hardcore racists keen to use the group to spread racial hatred.

    Hope Not Hate

  • Turkish police catch sex attacker

    Turkish police catch sex attacker

    A Plymouth landlord who went on the run after he sexually assaulted two vulnerable teenage tenants has been arrested in Turkey.

    Alfred Palmer

    Alfred Palmer, 52, owner of letting agency Palmer and Co, was first arrested in 2005 for a number of sexual offences dating back to the mid 1980s.

    In 2006 he fled abroad with partner Daniel Tapper, 53.

    Palmer was jailed for five years and Tapper, a director of the agency, for three years, in their absence in 2007.

    The arrests follow an appeal on the BBC’s Crimewatch programme which led to sightings of the pair in Turkey.

    Sold houses

    Palmer will now appear in court in Turkey to face an extradition ordering bringing him back to the UK to start his jail sentence.

    The first trial in 2006 heard how Palmer abused two teenage boys just out of social services care.

    Palmer even threw one out of his flat and threatened to have him beaten up after he repeatedly refused Palmer’s sexual advances.

    The trial was halted when police admitted both men had “left the force area to evade arrest and prosecution”.

    At the trial in the absence of the pair in 2007, Palmer was convicted of four counts of indecent assault and Tapper of one indecent assault.

    In February 2009 an appeal on Crimewatch led to sightings of the pair among the expat community in Turkey.

    Investigators found the pair had taken £300,000 with them after selling two houses and their cars.

    An arrest warrant was issued in September 2009.

    Investigating officer Det Con Sarah Lovatt told BBC News she was “thrilled” at the arrest of Palmer by Turkish police and predicted that the arrest of Tapper was “only a matter of time”.

    She said: “It will bring closure to the victims.

    “They are still struggling with what happened to them all those years ago.”

    BBC

  • Race attacks force Turkish couple out of home in York

    Race attacks force Turkish couple out of home in York

    Race attacks force Turkish couple out of home in Windsor Garth, Acomb

    By Jeremy Small

    City of York Council flats in Windsor Garth, Acomb
    City of York Council flats in Windsor Garth, Acomb

    A TURKISH woman today claimed she and her husband had been forced out of their York home by a racially-motivated campaign of vandalism that ended in her car being torched.

    Burcu Kaya-Gurer, who is married to Hasan Gurer, said she feared for her life after her car was vandalised and set alight, the couple’s satellite dish was destroyed, and Mrs Kaya-Gurer was subjected to intimidation.

    Mrs Kaya-Gurer, 30, a team leader with a York-based company, said she and her husband had now quit their City of York Council flat in Windsor Garth, Acomb, and had moved to live in private rented accommodation elsewhere in the city, despite having to pay a much higher rent.

    She said of the thugs: “They have won. They have forced me out because I was in fear of my life.”

    Mrs Kaya-Gurer said the ordeal began in June when the satellite dish was broken. She said she reported the incident to the council and the police, but they both told her there was nothing they could do because there were no witnesses.

    She claimed that, earlier last month, a gang of people tried to pull cables off a replacement satellite dish the couple had put up. “When they saw me they ran away laughing,” she said. “There are many satellite dishes outside – why mine? They know I’m Turkish.”

    She said the police told her they could not do anything because nothing had actually been damaged. She said she later saw members of the gang near her car, only to discover the following day that the plastic covering one of the wing mirrors had been pulled off.

    Mrs Kaya-Gurer said the council gave her an application to move to another council home but told her it might be “ages” before the couple could be rehoused. She claimed her Vauxhall Corsa car was set on fire on Monday October 26, and in the early hours of the following morning, someone who looked like one of the gang was banging on her front door demanding she retract the statement she made about the fire to the police. “I was so scared,” she said. “I was crying; my eyes were red.” She said she then telephoned the council, but claimed she was told there was insufficient evidence for her to be rehoused straight away. “I said ‘What more do you need? Do you want to see me on fire?’” She said the council tried to sort the problem out, but it was too late. “They could have helped me a long time ago. I was ignored. I want a normal life again. I never deserved any of this.”

    A police spokesman said after the car fire, two men aged 18 and 20 were arrested on suspicion of racially aggravated criminal damage. He said they had been released on police bail while inquiries continued.

    He said: “The issue of hate crime is something that North Yorkshire Police takes extremely seriously. Any incident of hate crime is thoroughly investigated whenever it is reported to us.

    “If people are nervous about contacting us directly, for any reason at all, we have recently launched Hate Crime Reporting Centres.

    Full details of these are on our website (northyorkshire.police.uk/hatecrime).”

    A City of York Council spokeswoman said: “We are treating Mrs Kaya-Gurer’s concerns very seriously. We are working closely with the police and other partners to try to resolve the issues.”

    Source:  www.yorkpress.co.uk, 5th November 2009

  • Exposés:Highlights the organisational set-up, the secret locations and the people running the fascist party

    Exposés:Highlights the organisational set-up, the secret locations and the people running the fascist party

    Jim Dowson: How a militant anti-abortionist took over the BNP. Part I of a three part investigation.

    Through the keyhole

    A

    Today we start a serialisation from the current issue of Searchlight Magazine which features a special investigation into the heart of the BNP. We highlight the organisational set-up, the secret locations and the people running the fascist party. We expose how the running of the party has been outsourced to a rabid Loyalist anti-abortionist in Belfast and we reveal that this man is receiving European Union money for peace and reconciliation.

    We have also been busy working with the media. Many of the revelations and exposés we have read in the newspapers over the past few weeks have originated from Searchlight.

    Forty-seven years after Searchlight was first formed we are proving that we are still ahead of the game.

     

    From rags to riches

    By Gerry Gable

    Ten years ago Jim Dowson (pictured) was a down-at-heel anti-abortion campaigner and hardline Protestant, who had marched with a loyalist band that played songs in praise of the convicted loyalist murderer Michael Stone (pictured below).

    B

    His luck changed when he formed an alliance with Justin Barrett, a far-right Catholic lawyer and leader of the notorious Irish anti-abortion group Youth Defence, which had previously stormed buildings in Dublin in their crusade against a woman’s right to choose. In 2000 Barrett had attended a rally of the German nazi National Democratic Party, where he met Roberto Fiore, the Italian fascist friend and mentor of Nick Griffin, the BNP leader. The trip was arranged by Derek Holland, one of Griffin’s old colleagues from the days of the National Front Political Soldiers.

    Barrett attracted attention as the lead spokesperson of the successful Irish campaign against the Nice Treaty in 2001 and money started to flow from far-right anti-abortionists in the United States.

    In 1999 Dowson had formed Precious Life Scotland and it was through cooperation between his group and Youth Defence that he met Barrett. The link proved beneficial when Barrett pitched £50,000 into Dowson’s organisation to pay for the production of anti-abortion CDs and video tapes to be distributed to schools and churches in Northern Ireland and Scotland.

    Dowson was a “rent-a-cause” extremist who had been kicked out of the Orange Order. He has a list of criminal convictions including breach of the peace in 1986, possession of a weapon and breach of the peace in 1991 and criminal damage in 1992. Although a Protestant, he was happy to sell thousands of photographs of the Pope at inflated prices to Catholics in the Irish Republic.

    Barrett faded from the public arena after the Nice Treaty vote was rerun and went the other way. His political demise was hastened after the publication of his book The National Way Forward, in which he described immigration as “genocidal”. He also became increasingly antisemitic, influenced by the nazi leaders he had met in Germany.

    In contrast, Dowson’s campaigning activities grew. He turned his sights on gay people and encouraged his followers to abuse and threaten people who attended or worked in abortion clinics.

    This resulted in Dowson parting company with some of his Precious Life fellow activists, but he was now in a financial position to go it alone, turning his faction into the UK LifeLeague. He never looked back.

    Dowson, 45, started working with the British National Party late in 2007, and he quickly revolutionised its fundraising. His first appeal, launched at the time the BNP was tearing itself apart in an internal rebellion, was carried out as a free sample to show the party what he could do, but since then he has worked on a percentage commission.

    His work for the BNP grew to encompass the provision of manage-ment training in Spain and revamping the party’s administration. Early in 2009 he set up the Belfast call centre, piggybacking it on his successful fundraising for the LifeLeague, thereby cutting costs and perhaps giving doubtful BNP officers the impression of a larger operation than it actually is.

    Over the past two years he has clearly raised huge sums for the party, although it remains financially strapped. Partly this is the result of scams, such as the truth truck, which Griffin claimed had been bought with thousands of pounds of supporters’ donations. It turned out still to belong to Dowson’s private company, Adlorries.com, and, like much of the other equipment the BNP claimed to have bought, it was only leased by the party.

    Today Dowson practically owns the BNP, which he briefly joined to placate his critics but left as soon as the heat was off him. He remains at loggerheads with many senior party officers and employees. One, whom he sacked in spring, is heading for an employment tribunal.

    B1

    Griffin’s claim that the BNP is being flooded with donations via Dowson’s call centre is a lie. Income is down to a trickle and membership is a mere 8,000 or so. People are not queuing up to join after the end of the three-month moratorium on membership, they are leaving in droves, especially since the latest membership list leak from Dowson’s Belfast bunker.

    All this comes on top of the party’s forced climbdown over its racist constitution, the non-appearance of its 2008 accounts and concern over the number of senior party officers who have been put on the European Parliament payroll as staff of the two BNP MEPs.

     

    Hope Not Hate