Tag: BNP

  • BNP leader Nick Griffin could lose Euro seat as party faces bankruptcy

    BNP leader Nick Griffin could lose Euro seat as party faces bankruptcy

    By Tom Mctague
     
    Griffin could lose Euro seat as party faces bankruptcy
     
    nick griffin

    BNP leader Nick Griffin faces being axed as a Euro MP as he fights to avoid bankruptcy over his party’s soaring cash crisis.

    He is among top officials thought to be personally liable for the racist group’s £700,000 debts – which it admits it cannot pay.

    Anyone made bankrupt is legally barred from being an MP or Euro MP.

    The BNP’s money woes were laid bare by ex-chief fundraiser James Dowson in a letter seen by the Mirror.

    Mr Dowson told North-East printers who produced its newsletter that the finances were like “a shipwreck”

    He added: “Cash is in very short supply… [it is] impossible for the BNP and persons associated with it to pay outstanding bills in anything like a normal timescale, if indeed at all.” The “very grave” crisis meant it could only pay 20% of what it owed, he added.

    Its money problems have been made worse by having to settle a legal row after illegally using Marmite in an ad and the cost of fighting the Equality and Human Rights Commission over its whites-only admission rules.

    Meanwhile, electoral chiefs are still probing its 2008 accounts as they contain gaps that breach the law.

    The BNP’s debt meltdown comes amid a spate of defections and expulsions.

    Mr Dowson and media officer Paul Golding have left while campaigns chief Eddy Butler and London Assembly member Richard Barnbrook were recently expelled.

    Mr Griffin was not responding to our requests for a comment last night.

    , 3/11/2010

  • EDL men charged with Israel demo offences

    EDL men charged with Israel demo offences

    By Jessica Elgot
    Three EDL members charged with affray and public order offences during a “Tea Party” rabbi’s speech at Speakers Corner have had their case sent to Crown Court.

    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.”

    Bryan Kelso, 28, from Luton, Christopher Long, 38, from Roehampton and Brian Bristow, 37, from Doncaster were charged with affray and public order offences.

    They appeared today at Westminster Magistrates Court. No pleas were entered and the men were given conditional bail.

    , November 3, 2010

  • Wait and See Game for Turkey’s Enforcement of UN Sanctions on Iran

    Wait and See Game for Turkey’s Enforcement of UN Sanctions on Iran

    Dorian Jones | IstanbuL

    21 June 2010

    ahmedinajad erdogan 17may10 480 eng 300 eng

    Photo: AFP

    Iran’s President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad flashes the V-sign for victory as Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan looks on after the Islamic republic inked a nuclear fuel swap deal in Tehran (File Photo – 17 May 2010)

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    This month, Turkey voted against the United Nations Security Council’s fourth round of sanctions against Iran. With Turkey’s Islamic rooted government increasing its economic ties with Iran in the past few years, fears are arising that the pivotal Western ally is in danger of swinging eastward because of resistance in Europe to its bid for membership of the European Union.

    Despite growing international tensions over Iran’s nuclear energy program, the Turkish government has forged ahead with energy deals with Iran, expanding its dependency on energy with the nation.

    These deals put Turkey in a precarious situation: to enforce or not to enforce the UN sanctions imposed on its neighbor Iran.

    Turkey has long been seen as a bridge between East and West. But its belief that sanctions are ineffective and that there are dangers in pushing the Islamic republic into a corner is likely to change its relationship with Western nations.

    Earlier this month Turkish foreign minister Ahmet Davutoglu expressed concern over the existing sanctions against Iran.

    AP

    “Turkey and Iran’s trade volume is around $10 billion,” he says. “And it can rise to $30 billion if sanctions are lifted.”

    Iran’s energy resources are seen as important by Ankara to break its dependency on Russian energy.

    Iran expert Gokhan Cetinsayar of Sehir University says that in addition to its dependency on gas, there are other trade initiatives with Iran that are economically key to Turkey.

    “75,000 trucks going on between Turkey and Iran every year,” said Cetinsayar. “Now there are energy deals. You know how important the Iranian natural gas and all other agreements and initiatives are economically important for Turkey.

    With large families usually depending for their livelihoods on cargo trucks, its estimated as many a million Turkish people depend on Iranian trade.

    With its increasing economic ties with Iran, there are growing fears that Turkey will balk at enforcing the UN sanctions against Iran.

    Turkish foreign minister spokesman Burak Ozugergin says Turkey has already paid a heavy economic price for UN policies with another of its neighbors, Iraq.

    “At the beginning of the 90’s, the Turkish volume of trade with Iraq was around the 15 to 20 percent mark of our total volume of trade. The next year, after the imposition of sanctions, this trickled down to almost zero,” said Ozugergin. “Money is not everything. But at least if it did work then we might be able to say to our public, ‘look it was for a good a cause.’ But can we really honestly say that looking back? For Iran again we don’t think it will help to solve the nuclear issue and perhaps may work against it.”

    The new sanctions on Iran are expected to cut into the present $10 billion trade volume. It could possibly undermine its energy policy as well. But political scientist Nuray Mert of Istanbul University say some western nations may now not be able to depend on Turkey.

    “I was inclined to think that at the end of the day Turkey will join the club when it comes to realization of these sanctions,” she said. “But nowadays I can see the government is planning to avoid these sanctions. Because now we have Turkey signing a lot of economic agreements, against the policy of sanctions.”

    For now Turkey has remained circumspect over enforcing new sanctions. One foreign ministry official said “you will have to wait and see.” Analysts say Iran would probably reward any breaking of sanctions with lucrative energy deals. But the political cost could be high because of Turkey’s aspirations for joining the EU. The coming weeks will see Ankara facing a difficult a choice.

  • BNP fights extremism strategy

    BNP fights extremism strategy

    Party leaders seek to ‘derail’ government scheme to combat violence

    By Brian Brady and Jane Merrick

    bnp
    The anti-extremism strategy was intended to prevent another 7/7 bombing

    British National Party leaders were under fire yesterday after it emerged that they were plotting to “derail” a government programme aimed at quashing violent extremism throughout the UK.

    A leaked email to BNP councillors revealed that the party is running a secret campaign to destabilise the Prevent strategy, set up three years ago to tackle “the specific problem of a small minority of young Muslims being attracted to violent groups”.
    The Home Office strategy, originally called “Preventing Violent Extremism”, pledged £45m for local initiatives designed to coax youngsters away from “individuals preaching hatred and violence in the name of Islam” and integrate them into their communities.
    However, it was “rebranded” last year to take in wider issues, including the threat from political extremism, following complaints that the programme stigmatised the Muslim community. Councils have now been ordered to establish their own Prevent strategies to combat extremism in their areas.
    The Secretary of State for Communities, John Denham, said: “At the current time, the greatest terrorist threat remains that from al-Qa’ida-linked violent extremism. At the same time, we also need to tackle other potential support for violent extremism, including that from racist and fascist groups.”
    The BNP has complained that the modified strategy is now allowing councils to target the party and it members – and it has enlisted its councillors in an attempt to undermine the strategy.
    In a councillors’ bulletin last month, the BNP councillor liaison officer, James North, told colleagues: “Due to complaints that [Prevent] was picking on Muslims they widened it out to include all extremism and implied that they were also targeting right-wing extremism. In some areas they focus their energy on areas where we are active – eg target wards.
    “If you have any knowledge of a Prevent strategy in your area could you please send information back, so we can build a more widespread picture of areas that are affected and then we can get local groups active to derail it before it takes hold.”
    Mr North said yesterday that the BNP wanted to “derail attempts by the Labour regime to link the BNP to right-wing violent extremists”. He added: “The email asks BNP councillors for details of all Prevent attempts to link the BNP to extremists so that the BNP can take measures to circumvent these false allegations and smears.” But the anti-fascist organisation Searchlight called on the BNP to explain why it was trying to destabilise a government policy.
    “This project protects the public from terrorists and violent extremists,” a Searchlight spokesman said. “The fact that the BNP is trying to undermine it speaks volumes about its organisation and its membership. If it is a truly peaceful and democratic organisation, what is it afraid of?

    www.independent.co.uk, 14 March 2010

  • Protesters and police clash in Nottingham

    Protesters and police clash in Nottingham

    Police have clashed with members of the English Defence League during a protest in Nottingham, with 11 people arrested.

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    Some 300 demonstrators from the EDL marched through the city centre shouting: “We want our country back.”

    Earlier there was a stand-off between the EDL and Unite Against Fascism, who held a counter protest in the city.

    Mounted police held back demonstrators with batons and punches were thrown at police. One female officer and a protester suffered minor injuries.

    Many of the EDL demonstrators had their faces covered with hooded tops and scarves and shouted anti-Islamic slogans.

    ‘Kicked police dog’

    Other protesters had Union Jacks and St George’s flags which they either waved or wrapped around their shoulders as a police officer shouted instructions at the crowd from a helicopter circling overhead.

    Some of the group waved placards with slogans such as “Protect Women, No To Sharia” and “No Surrender”.

    The EDL insists it is not a racist organisation and has no links to the BNP and is simply standing against the threat of Islamic extremism.

    A spokesman said they had planned the demonstration for Saturday as the Second Battalion the Mercian Regiment was holding a homecoming parade in Nottingham following a recent tour of Afghanistan.

    The EDL and UAF exchanged hostile words in the city’s Old Market Square but large numbers of police officers managed to keep the rival demonstrators apart.

    Nottinghamshire Police said they had deployed more than 700 officers, including some drafted in from Derbyshire, Lincolnshire, Leicestershire, Northamptonshire, the West Midlands, West Yorkshire, South Yorkshire and Humberside.

    The force said a 29-year-old Nottinghamshire officer received an arm injury while policing the cordon and was taken to Nottingham’s Queens Medical Centre for treatment but the injury was not thought to be serious.

    One of the 11 men arrested on suspicion of minor public order offences was also taken to hospital, with police saying it was believed he kicked a police dog, which then bit him.

    The BBC’s Ben Ando said the arrests came when a small number of EDL protesters clashed with police who were containing them near the city’s main railway station.

    ‘Anti-British’

    Thousands of Christmas shoppers gathered to watch 500 troops from the Mercian Regiment parade through the city in the morning.

    The homecoming parade followed a six-month tour of duty in the Helmand Province of Afghanistan, where the regiment lost five soldiers and dozens of its men were injured.

    A 43-year-old EDL member, a serving soldier who did not want to be named, said: “We came here to support our lads, and the UAF and other militants have turned up.

    “I think it’s disgusting. I look at their protest and there’s a Pakistani flag flying with a Muslim symbol. Their protest isn’t against the EDL, they’re protesting against the troops and it’s anti-British.

    “They haven’t got one Union Jack or St George’s Flag. I’m not a fascist, I’m not a Nazi but I am British.”

    Michael Vickery, from the UAF, said: “It’s not good enough not to have any kind of a response (to the EDL presence) because basically, if we don’t have a protest then it’s letting them come into town and say ‘this is our place for the day’, which it isn’t, it belongs to everyone in Nottingham.”

    After the rally missiles were thrown at a breakaway group of the EDL but no-one was hurt.

    The EDL marchers were led to the railway station by police and began boarding trains back to their homes at around 1630 GMT.

    Nottinghamshire’s Assistant Chief Constable Ian Ackerley said the force had faced a series of complex events but had achieved “a successful outcome to a very challenging day”.

    BBC