Tuesday 19 June 2012

BNP Charity at stansted House Garden Show.


This from Lentil Eating Lefty.


Sandwiched between the RSPB and a hardware stall, SOTS appeal for donations and sell wristbands. The two men in the photo were running the stall.

The Stansted Park Garden Show which took place over this last Weekend can only be considered a success by its organisers and exhibitors. Despite the threat of rain, the Show had a good turnout and I imagine people made a fair bit of money. However, while shrubbery and gnomes were sold, Soldiers off the Street were collecting donations.

The charity aims to help soldiers who have been made homeless after tours of duty. While nothing may be wrong with this to the average reader, the charity has been to have links with the fascist British National Party. The Charity was founded by former-BNP bigwig Bill Murray, who was their former Secretary for Wales.

An Observer report demonstrates how the charity has not only failed to help soldiers, but those soldiers who raised concerns about their activities were subjected to hate campaigns.
In 2009, Nick Griffin said, “It’s politically beneficial for us to be seen with these organisations. We are also involved in other veteran organisations such as Help for Heroes and Soldiers off the Street. It definitely doesn’t hurt the party to be connected to these groups.
Nothing British, a conservative anti-BNP campaign group also claimed that the SOTS had links with the EDL.


When these links surfaced in the media, Bill Murray threatened to close the group if the negative coverage continued.
It is not known, but highly unlikely that the organiser’s of the Garden Show were aware of the links between SOTS and the BNP. An email has been sent to them notifying them of this, and any reply will be reported here.
From their Facebook group, it appears that they attend a few events such as this. If they are attending an event near you, contact the organisers to notify them of their links.

Sunday 10 June 2012

EDL in Rochdale. Another big flop.




On Saturday the EDL  protested in Rochdale again. Recent demonstrations they have held have been poorly attended.They were under the impression that this one could get more of a turnout.The recent trial in Rochdale and the media interest over "grooming " would have given them their best chance for a good crowd,so they thought.The Daily Mail amongst others had done much to stir things up.The reality was that for months there had been a slow drip of information emerging about the case  so that when the verdicts came through, and with it all the sordid details, that although depressing were hardly shocking.

In the end the 5-600 EDL that some people feared did not materialise.It was closer to half that number.It was the old guard bussed in and no local support.The lack of any local support is due to the sterling work done by anti-fascists in the locality,and further evidence of the inexorable slide in the EDL's support. 


Report by Unite Against Fascism :

The racist thugs of the English Defence League (EDL) shipped in some 300 of its supporters to Rochdale, Lancashire on Saturday 9 June as part of its ongoing attempt to stir up racism against Muslims.   

Apart from a few curious onlookers, locals shunned the so-called demonstration.
The EDL is shamelessly trying to exploit the Rochdale grooming case — where a gang of Asian men were found guilty of exploiting vulnerable young women for sex — to revive its flagging fortunes
This cynical move is not about caring for the victims of crime, but an attempt by the EDL to push its agenda of hatred, division and fear.

Arrests

Ten members of the EDL were arrested after they tried to break out of the police pen to attack two Asian youths who wondered by.
The thin numbers it mobilised for Rochdale shows the continuing decline of the EDL since its humiliation in Tower Hamlets in September last year. The thugs planned their “big one” with an attempted march on the East London Mosque, but never stepped foot in the borough following a huge counter demonstration.
Since then, the racist street movement has been dogged by splits and internal fighting, with one faction known as the “Infidels” distributing a leaflet that accused EDL leader Tommy Robinson (real name Stephen Yaxley-Lennon) of being a “pedophile” after he described a 15-year-old Muslim woman as “fit” on his twitter account.

The EDL demonstration in Rochdale consisted of marching around a roundabout in the pouring rain chanting offensive anti-Muslim insults.
Robinson hectored his supporters about the “evils” of Islam. Holding up a copy of the Koran, the Muslim holy book, Robinson screamed “shall we burn it” to the delight of his supporters.

Counter protest

Across town some 90 locals joined a counter protest organised by Rochdale Unity. The rally was supported by Sir Gerald Kaufman MP, Manchester Trades Council, Bolton Trades Council, TFGM Unison Branch Executive, UNITE Fujitsu Manchester reps committee, and Greater Manchester UAF. Picture: UAF rally
Rochdale Unity said in a statement:
“We condemn the cynical and dangerous attempt by racists and fascists in the English Defence League and British Nationalist Party to manipulate the horrific case of the sexual exploitation of young women in Rochdale in order to stir up Islamophobia and racial hatred in our community.”

Saturday 9 June 2012

Euro 2012: England humbled by Auschwitz pain and misery as Wayne Rooney vows it will never be forgotten

This report on the England squad visiting Auschwitz from the Daily Telegraph.

By

 

Wayne Rooney and the England players kept coming back to the 

same photograph, the image of the SS doctor, Heinz Thilo, 

standing on the ramp at Birkenau and signalling whether the 

distressed, disorientated souls stumbling from railway wagons

 would work or go straight to the gas chambers.   

 

 

Rooney stood transfixed in front of the picture. So did his fellow England team-mates Andy Carroll, Phil Jagielka, Jack Butland, Joe Hart, Theo Walcott and Leighton Baines in the Auschwitz Museum.
Roy Hodgson, his close friend Avram Grant and the Football Association chairman David Bernstein, whose father escaped from the Nazis, stared at the picture. Thilo’s arrogant stance, the way he was casually pointing an elderly Jew towards his death, symbolised the Final Solution.
“There was the guy who made all the decisions, whether they lived or died,” said Rooney, talking on the team bus after the seven players’ visit to this hell on earth. “He’s probably gone home after that, listened to music, and had dinner with his family as if nothing had happened. It’s crazy. It’s hard to understand.
“I’m a parent and it’s tough to see what happened there. You’ve seen the amount of children who died. You see the children’s clothes and shoes, it’s really sad. You have to see it first hand.”
From November 1942 until October 1944, Thilo was often the duty doctor on the ramp as the trains pulled in from all over Europe. “Look at the body language of the German officer,’’ said Grant. “It’s just a normal day at work. This photograph disturbs me more than any other here.”
Fifteen members of Grant’s family perished in Auschwitz. He returns every year for the March of the Living, and the picture of Thilo blithely ruling on the fates of innocents remains with him always.
A dignified figure, Grant had joined the players at their elegant Krakow hotel, the Stary, for this voyage into the heart of darkness.

They climbed aboard the team bus for the 50km drive. Some looked out of the window, watching the Polish countryside flash past. Baines read his William Boyd. There was none of the noise or banter associated with footballers aboard coaches.

They set the right, respectful tone throughout. On arriving at Auschwitz, they were met by their guide, Wojciech Smolen, and they hung on his every word for three hours. They walked under the gate cruelly claiming that Arbeit Macht Frei. “Pure irony,’’ Smolen explained.
Grant talked with Rooney, observing: “The Nazis were very clever. They gave you hope.’’ And then killed you, up to 1.5 million here.

Rooney, absorbed throughout, paused to read the sign on entering the museum: “The one who does not remember history is bound to live through it again.’’
Revealing far more hinterland as a person that hitherto perceived, Rooney added: “What happened here puts football into perspective. It’s good for us to try to understand this history.
“I did history at school but never really appreciated it at the time, so I wanted to understand more about what happened in the War. I watched the documentary The World At War last year, the night before away matches in Europe, and a lot of it is about what happened at Auschwitz. So I wanted to see it first hand.’’

So he listened to Smolen talk of how the Jews were taken to Auschwitz.

“These people were told they were simply leaving for a while to live in East Europe,’’ said Smolen. “Mothers were told to take toys for their children. Craftsmen were told to take their tools. They believed they would be returning in a few years. So they asked friends and neighbours to keep an eye on their properties. But for the SS, these people would die.’’

Walcott looked at the haunting photograph of a group of women arriving at Birkenau, one of them staring straight at the camera, total confusion in her eyes.
Carroll listened attentively as Smolen told how the unwitting Jews were ushered towards the gas chambers.
Bernstein shook his head in disgust as Smolen related how prisoners were ordered “to memorise the number of the hook” they hung their clothes on before entering the “showers”. “The intention was to deceive up to the very last moment,” said Smolen.
These strong sportsmen, their worlds built around self-belief, found it tough. Hart needed a few moments to look pensively out of the window, inhaling deeply, after walking through the rooms crammed with the shoes, hair, glasses and household items.
As a father of two young children, Jagielka turned away, the emotion in his eyes, as he looked at a suitcase belonging to Petr Eisler, a two year-old, whose life was snuffed out by the evil likes of Thilo.
Jagielka, one of the squad’s most thoughtful individuals, has Polish ancestry and was deeply affected by all he saw. So many suitcases, their names still clear of Klara Fochtmann, Herman Pasternak, Benjamin Lazarus as well as poor Eisler. Bernstein kept shaking his head.
When the players then walked into the grim, bricked structure housing the gas chambers and ovens, Jagielka read aloud the sign by the door.
“You are entering a building where the SS murdered thousands of people,” recited Jagielka.
Smolen continued: “They were told to take off their clothes. Some were given soap to give the impression that were going into showers. Then the Zyklon B was dropped in and in 20 minutes they were dead.’’ As Smolen spoke, Carroll looked up, instinctively pointing to the hole in the roof in disbelief.

“The Zonder Kommando came in and cleared the bodies out,’’ added Smolen. “They shaved the hair and pulled the teeth out. The bodies were then burnt in a furnace. Sometimes there were so many bodies, they took them outside and burned them there.’’
Outside the chamber that claimed so many of his relatives, Grant gave a short but emotional speech to the players. “It’s very important you came here; it’s so good that you came here. It’s important to talk about this and spreads the message of what happened here.’’

Climbing back in the coach, the players were then driven to Birkenau, to the industrial-level killing fields. Jagielka walked and talked, unable to absorb the sheer enormity of events that had occurred in this patch of Godforsaken land. All the players stopped at the “selection”, working out where Thilo had been pointing. Butland kept checking the direction, imagining the line of condemned humanity stretching towards the four gas chambers at the end by the birch trees from which Birkenau takes its name. Hart wanted to know whether any had tried to escape. The guide pointed to the watchtowers, where SS guards would just pick off any one who stepped out of line.
Yards away, Grant stood where his forefathers had spent their last minutes on earth, and related a story to Rooney and Carroll. “Over there are the changing rooms,” he said, “not for football but to die”.
Rooney looked at the huts that once housed so much misery. “You don’t realise how those who lived there to work managed without food, without water. It’s a form of torture and then they died. The others got murdered.’’
Then came a very moving ceremony. Hodgson and Bernstein put on skull caps, lit candles and placed them gently on the railway tracks that had carried so many cargoes of pain.


“Everyone should come here to understand what happened,” said Hodgson.


His players will never forget Dr Thilo. They will never forget their visit to Auschwitz-Birkenau.
“We will speak of what we have seen,” Rooney promised. “If that helps a few more people to understand what happened at Auschwitz then that’s good. It will never be forgotten.”









Thursday 7 June 2012

Golden Dawn MP assaults two women on live TV.


Video: Golden Dawn spokesman attacks 

left-wing politicians on live TV

 

 

Far-right politician faces arrest after

 assault of Communist Party member on 

talk-show.



    Golden Dawn party members march on parliament.
Golden Dawn party members march on parliament, May 2012. Photograph: Getty Images 
An arrest warrant has been issued for a member of Greece's extremist far-right party Golden Dawn (Chrysi Avgi) after he assaulted two left-wing politicians on live television this morning.

During a heated discussion on a political talk show, Ilias Kasidiaris threw water over Rena Dourou, a member of the radical left Syriza party, after she referred to a pending court case pending against Kasidiaris (in which he is accused of being an accomplice in the mugging of a student).
He then jumped out of his seat to slap Communist Party member Liana Kanelli, after a disagreement about whether there were oil reserves south of Crete. The show quickly went off air after Kasidiaris hit Kanelli, but some reports suggest that scuffles continued after the cameras were off.


Golden Dawn, which won nearly 7 per cent of the vote on 6 May, is frequently described as a neo-Nazi party, a label it rejects. Members have been accused of being behind recent attacks on immigrants, a charge which the party denies.
Although Kasidiaris was elected to parliament on 6 May, he will not be protected by parliamentary immunity - the House has been dissolved so that elections can take place.