BNP chief told pub rally of 'Muslim rape gangs'.

Blackleaf

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Oct 9, 2004
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The Times January 18, 2006

BNP chief told pub rally of 'Muslim rape gangs'
By Andrew Norfolk



THE leader of the British National Party claimed in a speech that Asian men were seducing and raping white girls as part of a Muslim plot to conquer the country, a court was told yesterday.

Nick Griffin told a meeting of party supporters that Muslim teenagers were encouraged by the Koran to make white girls pregnant “so that the faith can expand”.

Mr Griffin, 45, of Llanerfyl, Powys, Wales, is on trial at Leeds Crown Court, where he denies four offences of conduct intended to stir up racial hatred.

The charges against the BNP chairman and eight similar charges against Mark Collett, 24, a senior party member, are linked to speeches made by the two men that were secretly recorded by the BBC.

Speaking to a rally at a pub in Keighley, West Yorkshire, in January 2004, Mr Griffin said that Asian crimes against whites, including paedophile drug rapes, had turned Britain into “a multiracial hell-hole”.

Muslim violence would expand to cover the UK, he claimed, “as the last whites try and find their way to the coast”. A vote for the BNP would “ensure the British people realise the evil of what these people have done to our country”.

Opening the case for the prosecution, Rodney Jameson, QC, told the jury of eight men and four women that they were not being asked to pass judgment on the politics of the BNP or of the two defendants.

“Your decision will not be a mini-referendum on what you think about the BNP,” he said.

He said that the Crown did not claim that people should not be allowed to debate the “very sensitive issues” of race or immigration. “It is not the purpose of this prosecution to stifle legitimate political debate,” he said. But the law did not allow the use of threatening, abusive or intimidating words with the intention of stirring up racial hatred, or whereby racial hatred was likely to be stirred up.

The jury were told that they would be shown film footage of the speeches by the two men in West Yorkshire, between January and May 2004, which went “far beyond robust comment”.

Mr Jameson said that Mr Griffin tended to refer to his targets as Muslims, not Asians, because he was aware that inciting religious — as opposed to racial — hatred was not a crime. “You may conclude that Griffin uses the words Asian, Muslim, and occasionally Paki, interchangeably, and that his target is the Asian Muslim community throughout.”

During his speech in Keighley, Mr Collett, of Rothley, Leicestershire, said that people in Bradford and Keighley were “living in hell” because of rapes and muggings by Asian gangs. “They don’t go looking for Asian victims, they go straight to the whites,” he said. “They are the racists and they’re trying to destroy us. If you want to get these people out and stop asylum-seekers coming in, vote for the BNP. Let’s show these ethnics the door in 2004.”

In another speech, Mr Collett called asylum-seekers cockroaches. “They multiply rapidly and they take everything. A high proportion of them are actually terrorists,” he said.

Mr Jameson said that the speeches aimed “to build a fear and resentment of Asian people”. He acknowledged that Mr Griffin commented on “legitimate matters for public consideration”, but urged the jury to look at how and why Mr Griffin said what he said. “Freedom of expression is an important right but it cannot be unfettered. No society can permit disapproval of another race to be expressed in such strong terms that hatred be stirred up against people on the basis of race or ethnicity.”

The two men deny the charges. The trial continues.


THE SECRET AGENT INQUIRY

*The charges against Nick Griffin and Mark Collett came after an investigation by West Yorkshire Police, which was prompted by the screening on BBC One of a television documentary called The Secret Agent

*Jason Gwynne, an undercover reporter, joined the BNP in Bradford in December 2003, posing as a supporter. Over the next six months he attended many BNP meetings and events and on several occasion covertly filmed speeches and conversations

*Excerpts from what he recorded were included in the documentary, which was broadcast on July 15, 2004

*The police began an investigation the following day. Mr Collett was arrested on December 13, 2004, and Mr Griffin was arrested the day after. Both men were interviewed at length but neither was prepared to answer police questions

timesonline.co.uk
 

Dunkin

New Member
Jan 18, 2006
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Calgary
www.pissed.ca
RE: BNP chief told pub ra

The BNP are hardly fascists. More like a right winged party for native englishment.

The leader is currently in trial for hate speeches.
 

Doryman

Electoral Member
Nov 30, 2005
435
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St. John's
Re: RE: BNP chief told pub ra

Dunkin said:
The BNP are hardly fascists. More like a right winged party for native englishment.

The leader is currently in trial for hate speeches.

Well, they're a hard-right wing nationalist party with a pretty racist ideology. Those are some prime ingredients for a Fascist party.


This is what pisses me off; there is a problem with Western authorities being hesitant to prosecute immigrants who are ethnically diverse from the local population, because of a visceral fear in our society of being called racist. A lot of crime and hatred goes on in large cities that is slightly more tolerated in some immigrant communities than would be among a caucasian host community (because of a history of racist and imperialist tendencies in the past).

Buuuutttt... one can never actually talk about this type of issue, because the crazy skinhead racist groups are the first to jump up with retarded "race-war" claims. Holy Crud cows!!! I'ma gonna kill me some Crap-Wits!!!!