Prevent review expected to say Government-funded groups promoted extremism

Draft extracts of the long-delayed review into the Government’s counter-terrorism strategy have reportedly revealed that taxpayers’ money was handed to organisations that “had promoted extremist narratives”.

According to extracts in The Telegraph, key figures in organisations that receive funds from the Prevent programme are alleged to have supported the Taliban and even defended militant Islamist bodies banned in the UK.

The scheme’s aim is to safeguard vulnerable people from being drawn into terrorism.

The independent review by Sir William Shawcross, a former chairman of the Charity Commission, was delivered to the Home Office in late April but is still undergoing fact and legal checks.

The newspaper claims the review is expected to say that the “unacceptable” cases undermined Prevent’s ability to “effectively undertake counter-radicalisation” work and that “these findings raise serious questions about whether Prevent is knowingly taking this approach and, if not, whether it operates robust due diligence procedures and has an acceptable level of understanding of Islamist extremism”.

In the draft report, Sir William reportedly said he had examined the funding distributed by Prevent, finding that in some cases it went to organisations that had “promoted extremist narratives”.

The report reportedly cites four examples.

It also goes on to criticise the scheme for focusing too much on far-right extremism at the expense of the Islamist threat and for straying from its “core mission” of stopping people from becoming terrorists by putting too much emphasis on treating them as victims.

A Downing Street spokesman said: “The review will be published in due course. It remains right that we take the time to prepare and deliver a considered response.”

The spokesman also insisted Prevent “remains a vital tool for early intervention and safeguarding”.

The Prevent policy came under renewed scrutiny after it was revealed the home-grown terrorist who murdered Sir David Amess had been referred to the programme but continued to plot his attack in secret.

Prevent also featured in other recent cases, including that of Reading terror attacker Khairi Saadallah who murdered three men in a park and Sudesh Amman, responsible for stabbings in Streatham, both in 2020, as well as the 2017 Parsons Green Tube train attacker Iraqi asylum seeker Ahmed Hassan, among others.

The Home Office has been approached for comment.

The post Prevent review expected to say Government-funded groups promoted extremism appeared first on Faith Matters.

Categories: counter-radicalisation, Prevent review, Sir William Shawcross, Sudesh Aman

Prevent review expected to say Government-funded groups promoted extremism

Draft extracts of the long-delayed review into the Government’s counter-terrorism strategy have reportedly revealed that taxpayers’ money was handed to organisations that “had promoted extremist narratives”.

According to extracts in The Telegraph, key figures in organisations that receive funds from the Prevent programme are alleged to have supported the Taliban and even defended militant Islamist bodies banned in the UK.

The scheme’s aim is to safeguard vulnerable people from being drawn into terrorism.

The independent review by Sir William Shawcross, a former chairman of the Charity Commission, was delivered to the Home Office in late April but is still undergoing fact and legal checks.

The newspaper claims the review is expected to say that the “unacceptable” cases undermined Prevent’s ability to “effectively undertake counter-radicalisation” work and that “these findings raise serious questions about whether Prevent is knowingly taking this approach and, if not, whether it operates robust due diligence procedures and has an acceptable level of understanding of Islamist extremism”.

In the draft report, Sir William reportedly said he had examined the funding distributed by Prevent, finding that in some cases it went to organisations that had “promoted extremist narratives”.

The report reportedly cites four examples.

It also goes on to criticise the scheme for focusing too much on far-right extremism at the expense of the Islamist threat and for straying from its “core mission” of stopping people from becoming terrorists by putting too much emphasis on treating them as victims.

A Downing Street spokesman said: “The review will be published in due course. It remains right that we take the time to prepare and deliver a considered response.”

The spokesman also insisted Prevent “remains a vital tool for early intervention and safeguarding”.

The Prevent policy came under renewed scrutiny after it was revealed the home-grown terrorist who murdered Sir David Amess had been referred to the programme but continued to plot his attack in secret.

Prevent also featured in other recent cases, including that of Reading terror attacker Khairi Saadallah who murdered three men in a park and Sudesh Amman, responsible for stabbings in Streatham, both in 2020, as well as the 2017 Parsons Green Tube train attacker Iraqi asylum seeker Ahmed Hassan, among others.

The Home Office has been approached for comment.

The post Prevent review expected to say Government-funded groups promoted extremism appeared first on Faith Matters.

Categories: counter-radicalisation, Prevent review, Sir William Shawcross, Sudesh Aman

Paris shooting suspect wanted to kill migrants, prosecutors say

The man suspected of shooting dead three Kurds in Paris ahead of Christmas weekend told investigators that he had set out that morning aiming to kill migrants or foreigners and then himself, according to prosecutors.

The man, 69, killed three people outside a Kurdish cultural centre on Friday and wounded three others, and was then disarmed and subdued by one of the injured victims, the Paris prosecutor’s office said onSunday.

He was detained at the scene and transferred on Saturday to psychiatric care. His name has not been released.

If he is released from psychiatric care, he could face charges of racially motivated murder, attempted murder and arms violations.

The prosecutor’s office said in a statement that the man told investigators that a 2016 burglary at his home marked a turning point for him, sparking what he called a “hatred toward foreigners that became completely pathological”.

The shooting in a bustling Parisian neighbourhood shook and angered the Kurdish community, and stirred up concerns about hate crimes at a time when far-right voices have gained prominence in France and around Europe.

The man told investigators that on the morning of the shooting he took his weapon first to the Paris suburb of Saint-Denis with the aim of killing foreigners but changed his mind, the prosecutor’s statement said.

He then went to the Kurdish centre in Paris, which is near his parents’ home.

He opened fire on one woman and two men there, then entered a Kurdish-run hair salon across the street and fired on three men.

One of the wounded men in the hair salon managed to stop him and hold him until police arrived, the prosecutor’s statement said.

He told investigators he did not know his victims, and described all “non European foreigners” as his enemies, the statement said.

Two of the injured were still in hospital on Sunday with leg injuries.

Investigators are studying his computer and phone, but have not found any confirmed links to extremist ideology, the statement said.

On Saturday, members of France’s Kurdish community and anti-racism activists joined together in a demonstration of mourning and anger. The gathering was largely peaceful, with marchers holding portraits of the victims.

Some youths threw objects and set cars and rubbish bins on fire, and police fired tear gas to disperse the crowd.

A spokesman for the Kurdish Democratic Council in France said the violence began after some people drove by waving a Turkish flag. Some of the marchers carried flags of the Kurdistan Workers’ Party, or PKK.

In 2013, three women Kurdish activists were found shot dead at a Kurdish centre in Paris.

Turkey’s army has long been fighting Kurdish militants affiliated with the banned PKK in south-east Turkey as well as in northern Iraq. Turkey’s military also recently launched a series of strikes from the air and with artillery against Syrian Kurdish militant targets in northern Syria.

Turkey, the US and the European Union consider the PKK a terror group, but Turkey accuses some European countries of leniency toward alleged PKK members.

That frustration has been the main reason behind Turkey’s continued delay of Sweden and Finland’s Nato membership.

Turkish defence minister Hulusi Akar said on Sunday the violence in Paris was a result of lenience toward the PKK.

“The snake France fed is now biting them. Everyone should now see the real face of this terror organisation,” Akar said.

The post Paris shooting suspect wanted to kill migrants, prosecutors say appeared first on Faith Matters.

Categories: Kurdish centre, Kurds, Paris, Paris shooting

Arrests made after pig’s head dumped on mosque’s roof in Stockport

Greater Manchester Police made two arrests Wednesday morning (December 14) in connection to dumping a pig’s head on the rooftop of a Stockport mosque last Friday.

The arrests came after officers simultaneously executed three search warrants in the Stockport area.

Two men, aged 22 and 47, remain in custody for questioning.

The shocking anti-Muslim and Islamophobic hate crime caused great distress and fear to worshippers in interviews with the press.

Detective Inspector Gareth Beasley of GMP’s Stockport division said: “Hate crimes are abhorrent and have no place in civil society.

“Today’s action sends a clear message that GMP will leave no stone unturned in order to hold those responsible for such offences to account and demonstrates to our communities that hate crime will never be tolerated.”

Days earlier, Greater Manchester Police did confirm that the hate crime investigation was ongoing and encouraged communities impacted to contact their @gmvictim line for support.

Tell MAMA’s free counselling service is available to those impacted – we provide six free sessions over three months.

As protocol, we also encourage mosques and Islamic centres to keep our safety and security advice in mind.

We will continue to provide further updates where we can.

Anyone with information about this incident should contact GMP quoting 3246 09/12/22. Information can also be shared anonymously via the independent charity – Crimestoppers on 0800 555 111. Tell MAMA can also pass on information on your behalf.

 

 

The post Arrests made after pig’s head dumped on mosque’s roof in Stockport appeared first on TELL MAMA.

Categories: Greater Manchester Police, hate crime, mosque, mosques, News, pig's head, Stockport

Racist jailed for abusing and assaulting stewards and police during England friendly

A racist who viciously assaulted and abused stewards and police officers during England’s pre-World Cup friendly with Switzerland at Wembley received a 13-month prison sentence.

Jack Scotter, 27, from Plumstead, appeared at Harrow Crown Court on Friday (December 9) and pleaded guilty to four counts of racially aggravated common assault and two counts of assaulting an emergency worker.

A statement from the Metropolitan Police detailed how, when ejected from the game on March 26, 2022, a drunken Scotter subjected stewards to racist abuse before subjecting them to violence – spitting, punching, kicking and headbutting them.

When officers attended the scene, Jack Scotter spat in the eye of an officer before assaulting another officer by headbutting them.

Following Scotter’s jailing, the unit of the Metropolitan Police that deals with policing football tweeted: “As those of us lucky enough to have an evening off work look forward to England’s World Cup Quarter Final against France, one football supporter will be spending his first full day in prison after being convicted of racist violence during a pre-tournament friendly at Wembley”.

The post Racist jailed for abusing and assaulting stewards and police during England friendly appeared first on TELL MAMA.

Categories: hate crime, Metropolitan Police, News

Twitter suspends another white supremacist after Tell MAMA investigation

Twitter suspended a white supremacist account a week after Tell MAMA flagged several of their racist tweets.

Tell MAMA remains a trusted flagger on the platform, despite raising concerns previously about the potential direction it may take under the ownership of Elon Musk – owing to concerns about increased racism and hate on platform (which Musk denies).

Tell MAMA received an update today (December 8) confirming the account suspension following our initial reporting on December 1, 2022.

A member of the public flagged the @NoballsBobby weeks earlier, concerned about its racist targeting of the UK’s first minority ethnic prime minister Rishi Sunak, its promotion of Enoch Powell and anti-Muslim conspiracies about a so-called “Islamic takeover” of the Home Office.

Other racialised memes and tropes flagged to us had linked Muslims and refugees broadly to criminality, rape, and child sexual exploitation.
Twitter removed the above examples for breaching its policies on hateful conduct, which cumulatively resulted in a permanent account suspension.

Chillingly, the account propagated the racist conspiracy of a so-called “white genocide” – ideas that inspired various acts of white supremacist terror and violence.

Credit: Twitter.com

This is the second example in recent weeks of how we helped remove high-profile white supremacists from the platform – we previously reported on the suspension of an account that praised the Dover terrorist Andrew Leak.

When reporting such harmful and hateful materials, Twitter allows users to add additional context (280 characters) that might help explain why it breaches such policies. Twitter, however, cautions that it will “guarantee that we’ll take action based on the info provided here” – but it is a step we encourage users to consider when reporting. In addition, as a third party, Tell MAMA is happy to take this step if requested.

The option to add additional context appears towards the end of the reporting form when done via Twitter’s API.

Twitter also provides a more detailed reporting form via its website, allowing individuals to add more context than the API platform allows.

Get advice from our confidential and free helpline on 0800 456 1226. Or through our free iOS or Android apps. Report through our online form. Alternatively, please leave us a WhatsApp message at 0734 184 6086.

The post Twitter suspends another white supremacist after Tell MAMA investigation appeared first on TELL MAMA.

Categories: News, White Supremacy

German raids target alleged coup plotters – soldier among suspects

A German soldier was one of dozens of suspects detained on Wednesday during nationwide raids into an extremist group that allegedly aimed to overthrow the government, prosecutors said on Wednesday.

Raids involving around 3,000 police officers took place in 11 of Germany’s 16 federal states. Some 130 locations were searched.

The key suspects belonged to an unnamed terrorist movement linked to the so-called Reichsbürger (Reich Citizens) movement, prosecutors said.

Followers of the Reichsbürger movement do not acknowledge the existence of the German state.

An active soldier in the Bundeswehr’s Special Forces Command (KSK) and several Bundeswehr reservists are suspects in the case, a spokesperson for the Military Counter-Intelligence Service (MAD) told dpa.

The active soldier was assigned to the staff of the KSK, MAD said. According to information obtained by dpa, he is a non-commissioned officer.

The soldier’s house and his office in the Graf Zeppelin barracks in the state of Baden-Württemberg were searched as part of the raids.

Alleged links between some members of the German army and right-wing groups has been a highly sensitive subject in Germany in recent years.

Members of the Reichsbürger movement often refuse to pay taxes and amass illegal weapons. Some are convinced that Germany is run by members of a so-called “deep state” – a conspiracy theory also prevalent in other countries.

The movement in Germany is made up of smaller groups with names such as “Confederation of the German Reich” or “Kingdom Germany.”

Germany’s domestic intelligence agency estimates that the movement has around 21,000 adherents.

Twenty-two of those arrested on Wednesday are said to be members of a terrorist organization – as yet unnamed – linked to the Reichsbürger, according to the prosecutors’ office. Two of them are suspected ringleaders. Three others are suspected of being supporters of the organization.

In addition, there are 27 others accused in connection with the case.

The members had founded the group by the end of November 2021 at the latest, prosecutors said.

It was apparently highly organized, with a decision-making “council,” including departments such as justice, foreign affairs and health.

“The members of the ‘council’ had met regularly in secret since November 2021 to plan the intended takeover of power in Germany and the establishment of their own state structures,” the federal prosecutor’s office said.

A “military arm” was to “eliminate” the democratic constitutional state at municipal, district and commune level, the office said.

The members were aware and accepted that there would be deaths in the process, it said.

Some suspected members of the military arm had actively served in the Bundeswehr.

The alleged plans to topple the government revealed “the abyss of a terrorist threat,” according to Interior Minister Nancy Faeser.

The perpetrators were “driven by violent coup fantasies and conspiracy theories,” she said.

“Militant Reichsbürger are united by their hatred of democracy, of our state and of people who stand up for our community,” she said.

Parliamentary leaders of the three coalition parties – the Social Democrats, the Greens and the Free Democrats (FDP) – also condemned the movement in a joint press conference.

“We take what we have experienced today very seriously. Right-wing extremist terrorism is one of the greatest dangers to our democracy,” said Greens faction leader Katharina Dröge.

The officials noted that a former lawmaker of the far-right Alternative for Germany party was among the suspects. The FDP’s Christian Dürr said the party was interested only “in the destruction of parliamentary democracy.”

“And it is precisely as parliamentary party leaders that we protect this parliamentary democracy that is under attack,” he said.

The post German raids target alleged coup plotters – soldier among suspects appeared first on Faith Matters.

Categories: Confederation of the Reich, German soldier, Germany, Graf Zeppelin, Reichsburger, Right wing extremism

Trial sheds light on family’s alleged involvement in neo-Nazi music scene

An Essex family accused of links to the neo-Nazi music scene appeared in court accused of stirring up racial hatred via music.

Counter-terror police disclosed on November 22 that charges against 53-year-old Robert Talland included disseminating terrorist publications – a breach of Section 2 of the Terrorism Act. A further charge concerns an alleged offence to stir up racial hatred – a Section 23 offence under the Public Order Act 1986.

Robert Talland appeared at the Old Bailey alongside his 31-year-old daughter Rosie and his 33-year-old son Stephen. The children of Robert Talland face charges related to stirring up racial hatred after they allegedly performed in the neo-Nazi rock band Embers Of An Empire at a social club in Leeds last October.

The allegations draw attention to the activities of the record label Rampage Productions, linked to the infamous Blood and Honour neo-Nazi music scene.

The family members stand accused of conspiracy to distribute a recording of a track by the band Embers of an Empire between January 1, 2019, and October 10, 2020.

All three were granted conditional at the hearing, where they spoke only to confirm their names, with a provisional trial date set for October 23, 2023, at Woolwich Crown Court.

The Evening Standard revealed that they are banned from engaging with the yearly commemorative events for Ian Stuart Donaldson, of Britain’s most notorious neo-Nazi hate rock band, Skrewdriver – who died in a car crash in 1993. Donaldson also helped establish the Blood and Honour music scene in the 1980s.

A second bail condition imposed upon the Talland family prevents them from engaging, distributing or organising Blood and Honour or Rampage Productions-related events or music.

The post Trial sheds light on family’s alleged involvement in neo-Nazi music scene appeared first on TELL MAMA.

Categories: Blood and Honour, Essex, hate crime, Neo-Nazi, News, terrorism

Racist jailed for abuse and death threats towards teenage girl and family

A racist who abused a teenage girl and threatened to murder them and their family received a 5-month prison sentence at Teesside Crown Court.

The Northern Echo reported that 43-year-old David Walsh had targeted the family with threats and racist abuse whilst out on bail for a similar offence a fortnight earlier.

The targeted family filmed the second racist incident and threats on a mobile phone owned by the mother – capturing Walsh shouting the P-word and “P*** b*stards”.

Walsh threatened to “cut them up into pieces” and burn their house down, targeting the teenage daughter with racist and misogynistic abuse.

The Northern Echo report added that David Walsh pleaded guilty to a singular charge of racially aggravated harassment on May 22 and June 6, 2022.

A restraining order against Walsh will run for seven years after he leaves prison.

Tell MAMA has long-documented the racialised overlap of anti-Muslim hate and misogyny, where Islamophobic incidents involved threats, abuse, digital harassment, and being spat at and called a “f****** P*** sl*t”.

Get advice from our confidential and free helpline on 0800 456 1226. Or through our free iOS or Android apps. Report through our online form. Alternatively, please leave us a WhatsApp message at 0734 184 6086.

The post Racist jailed for abuse and death threats towards teenage girl and family appeared first on TELL MAMA.

Categories: Darlington, Durham, Durham Police, hate crime, News

Family in court over alleged neo-Nazi music

An alleged neo-Nazi music producer and his singing offspring have appeared at the Old Bailey accused of stirring up racial hatred through music.

Robert Talland, 53, his daughter, Rosie Talland, 31, and son, Stephen Talland, 33, were charged following an investigation by Counter Terrorism Policing North East.

The case centres on the defendants’ alleged activities in the neo-Nazi music scene in the UK and the record label Rampage Productions.

Stephen and Rosie Talland allegedly performed in a band called Embers Of An Empire associated with the music network.

All three defendants are charged with conspiracy to incite racial hatred between January 1 2019 and October 10 2020.

The charge alleges they conspired to distribute a recording of a track by Embers Of An Empire.

The second charge alleges that Stephen Talland, from Harlow in Essex, and Rosie Talland, with others unknown, incited racial hatred on October 21 2021 by performing songs at a club in Leeds.

The third charge alleges Robert Talland possessed racially inflammatory material in the form of sound recordings “with a view to it being distributed by himself or another” to stir up racial hatred.

Robert Talland, from Waltham Abbey in Essex, faces two further charges of disseminating a terrorist publication.

On Friday, the defendants appeared at the Old Bailey for a preliminary hearing before Mr Justice Sweeney.

The senior judge set a timetable for the case with a plea hearing on March 25 and a provisional trial from October 23 at Woolwich Crown Court.

The defendants, who spoke only to confirm their identities, were granted continued conditional bail.

The post Family in court over alleged neo-Nazi music appeared first on Faith Matters.

Categories: Music producer, Neo-Nazi, Old Bailey, Robert Talland, terrorist publication