Posts Tagged ‘Neo-Nazism’

SPLC Intelligence Report: Neo-Nazi Building White Supremacist Compound in Idaho

Friday, November 30th, 2012

More than a decade after the headquarters of the neo-Nazi Aryan Nations was shuttered and demolished, a protege of the group’s late founder is building a new compound in Idaho that is already attracting white supremacists for Ku Klux Klan cross burnings, according to the Winter 2012 issue of the Southern Poverty Law Center‘s Intelligence Report, released today.

Shaun Patrick Winkler, 33, who studied the anti-Semitic Christian Identity religion under Aryan Nations founder Richard Butler, is building the compound not far from the site of the group’s former headquarters, which was a haven for white supremacists from across the country.

Winkler says he plans to allow families affiliated with the Klan or Aryan Nations to build residences on the property. Human rights activists are concerned Idaho may again serve as the epicenter of the white supremacist movement despite legal threats to Winkler’s plans.

“The Aryan Nations compound under Richard Butler was a place where terrorist plots were hatched and racist violence was spawned,” said Mark Potok, senior fellow at the SPLC and editor of the Intelligence Report. “So it’s quite disturbing that one of his acolytes now wants to re-establish that toxic environment.”

Butler’s 20-acre Aryan Nations compound in Kootenai County was auctioned off and its buildings demolished after an SPLC lawsuit resulted in a $6.3 million jury verdict in 2000 against the group, Butler and several members for terrorizing a woman and her son.

Also in this issue of the Intelligence Report:

“Massacre in Wisconsin,” the cover story, traces the path of skinhead Wade Michael Page from a North Carolina Army base that was home to a thriving neo-Nazi underworld in the 1990s to Oak Creek, Wis., where he attacked a Sikh temple and murdered six worshipers last August.

“The ‘Fourth Position’” examines how the American Front, a skinhead group whose leader was murdered last year, is now headed by a man who mixes racism with opposition to capitalism and globalism. In May, members of the group were arrested in Florida for planning acts of violence and preparing for “an inevitable race war.”

“Resurrection” profiles former Arizona sheriff Richard Mack, a hero of the 1990s militia movement. As founder of the Constitutional Sheriffs and Peace Officers Association, Mack has regained prominence on the radical right by spreading an antigovernment “Patriot” ideology to an audience that includes law enforcement officials and Tea Party groups.

“Aryan Brother” features a revelatory interview with John Greschner, a former “commissioner” of America’s most notorious white supremacist prison gang, the Aryan Brotherhood. More than 30 members of the gang’s Texas chapter were recently indicted by federal prosecutors in a racketeering case accusing them of carrying out murders, assaults and other crimes as part of an enterprise dating back to the early 1990s.

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In World First, Twitter Blocks Neo-Nazi Account in Germany

Saturday, October 20th, 2012

Using its country-specific content-blocking tool for the first time, Twitter has shut down access to a neo-Nazi group’s account in Germany.

“Never want to withhold content; good to have tools to do it narrowly & transparently,” Alex Macgillivray, Twitter’s general counseltweeted last night. “We announced the ability to withhold content back in Jan. We’re using it now for the first time re: a group deemed illegal in Germany.”

Dirk Hensen, a spokesman for Twitter, told The Associated Press on Thursday that the account @hannoverticker has been blocked only in Germany, where its content is considered illegal.

Twitter’s content-blocking tool is designed to enable the micro-blogging site to remove illegal content in a particular country, while allowing it to remain available for everyone else.

According to AP, the @hannoverticker account is used by a far-right fringe group—Besseres Hannover—which officials from the German state of Lower Saxony banned last month, saying it promotes Nazi ideals in an attempt to undermine Germany’s democracy.

Lower Saxony officials sent Twitter a letter, which the site posted, asking the site to “close this account immediately and not to open any substitute accounts for the organisation ‘Besseres Hannover.’“

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Far-right singer goes on trial for song praising killing of immigrants in Germany

Monday, October 15th, 2012

The lead singer of a far-right band is on trial for incitement for a song praising the killing of immigrants by neo-Nazis.

Daniel G., 42, went on trial Monday in Meppen administrative court in Lower Saxony. He faces a possible five years in prison if convicted for singing the “Doner Killer Song,” which appeared on a 2010 CD entitled “Adolf Hitler Lives.”

The song praises killings of 10 people, primarily Turkish small businessmen, between 2000 and 2007, known in German media as the “doner killings” after the popular Turkish food.

It was not known then that neo-Nazis were allegedly behind the killings. That came to light in November after two core members were found dead after a murder-suicide and the third turned herself in.

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Greek neo-Nazis in Astoria outrage de Blasio, electeds

Saturday, October 6th, 2012

The Greek neo-Nazi party, Golden Dawn’s Astoria chapter was the target of a protest led by Public Advocate Bill de Blasio and other elected officials, who want to see the right-wing group out of the city.

De Blasio held a press conference outside of Athens Square Park on Friday, denouncing the party’s viewpoints and demanding it take its U.S. headquarters out of Astoria and New York City.

“[Golden Dawn has] one of those wonderful euphemistic names that suggests something positive, but in reality what they’re about is something very negative,” de Blasio said. “Golden Dawn stands for something that is absolutely foreign to this great city. They stand for intolerance, they stand for division, they stand for a kind of negative attitude toward people who are not like them,”

The party’s Greek name, Chyrsi Avyi, is literally translated “Golden Dawn” but it has used slogans including “White Power” in its campaigns in Greece.

The organization, which was founded in the 1990s, rose to power in Greece in recent years in the wake of the country’s fiscal and economic crisis. Golden Dawn won 7 percent of the vote in parliamentary elections on May 6. Though it was the sixth largest party to win seats, the two major parties refused to its members in a coalition, forcing a second election a month later, when Golden Dawn still won 18 seats.

The party ran on a campaign against the euro and criticized the budget cuts of the previous government meant to protect the country from defaulting. The budget cuts caused riots and protests nationwide making the party’s anti-austerity and anti-euro agenda attractive to voters.

However, Golden Dawn’s leader, Nikolaos Michaloliakos — a member of the Athens City Council — has had a history of making controversial statements, including some allegedly denying the Holocaust. The party has also not been quiet about its anti-immigrant views and some supporters in Greece have had a history of making anti-Semetic remarks during protests, while some candidates running in Northern Greece in 2012 have expressed negative viewpoints toward Greece’s longtime nemesis, Turkey, including suggesting “taking Istanbul.”

Assemblywoman Aravella Simotas (D-Astoria), who immigrated from Greece as a child, said the party’s anti-immigrant stance is counter to what Astoria represents.

“We came here and people welcomed us,” she said. “And that is what the Astoria community is. It is a community that loves diversity, one that is tolerant. Astoria is a  community that was built by immigrants. To have a group like Golden Dawn come here and think that they’re going to establish themselves is very concerning to me.”

Golden Dawn has told a number of its supporters and said on its website that it has established its American headquarters in Astoria, but has not been specific as to where. Their presence in Astoria went unnoticed until members of the Golden Dawn went to The Federation of Hellenic Societies of Greater New York to help collect clothing for Greeks, according to Christos Vournas, first vice president of the federation.

“When I asked them if they’ve come to help, they said yes,” he said. “That was a lie.”

He said the Golden Dawn members labeled boxes of clothes “For Greeks Only” and took pictures of the federation’s office. Vournas said they went to Greek newspapers here to discuss what happened and Golden Dawn’s announcement of an office in Astoria was discovered. The party has also recently opened a chapter in Montreal, which was met with protests.

The party’s appearance in Astoria is not the first time a radical movement found its way onto the neighborhood. Councilman Peter Vallone Jr. (D-Astoria)  said when his father represented the neighborhood on the City Council in 1978, his office was firebombed by a neo-Nazi group after he led a protest against them. .

“He didn’t back down, the community didn’t back down then and we won’t back down now,” he said.

A public meeting against the Golden Dawn was held on Tuesday, Oct. 9 at 7 p.m. at the Church of the Redeemer, 30-14 Crescent St. in Astoria and is being hosted by a number of groups including the New York chapter of the Greek Left Movement and Occupy Astoria-LIC.

Greek citizens living in Astoria can and have voted in Greek elections, including the two held earlier this year. Simotas says there are about 16,500 registered Greek voters in the district who can cast ballots in elections at home. She said she did not know how many did in May and June, though total turnout was low for both.

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Benefit held for anti white racist Tinley Park 5

Friday, September 21st, 2012

A fundraising benefit was held Sept. 14 at the Turnerdome in north Philadelphia for the Tinley Park 5, anti-racist activists who are currently imprisoned for alleged participation in shutting down a neo-Nazi gathering of the Illinois European Heritage Association in May.

The IEHA, associated with fascist and white supremacist groups including Stormfront, the Knights Party and the so-called “Nationalist Socialist Movement,” was holding an “economic summit” at a restaurant in a Chicago suburb. The IEHA is part of the Pioneer Little Europe (PLE) movement which seeks to establish white supremacist enclaves throughout the U.S.

Eighteen white anti-racists, allegedly with weapons in hand, confronted the IEHA members. Ten people were reportedly injured. The confrontation took place on May 19, one day prior to the 15,000-person protest against the North Atlantic Treaty Organization Summit in Chicago. While the Chicago police and the Department of Homeland Security were busy wiretapping and arresting anti-NATO activists, they let neofascists, who openly promote the extermination of people of color and Jewish people, meet publicly.

The anti-racist activists are supported by the Hoosiers Anti-Racist Movement. Five who were captured by the police on May 19 include brothers Jason W. Sutherland, Cody L. Sutherland and Dylan J. Sutherland, along with Alex R. Stuck and John S. Tucker. While 13 others allegedly escaped and are still being sought by police, the five are still locked in prison, held for $900,000 bail combined.

The Philadelphia benefit, billed as an anti-fascist “Show of Unity,” included performances by Erik Petersen from Mischief Brew, Corporate Hearts, The Adults, Mean Streets, Dying and Autocracy East. Organizations including HARM, One People’s Project, Anti-Racist Action, Philly Antifa, Food Not Bombs, Wooden Shoe Books, Free The Streets and the Philly Jail Support Collective participated with information tables. All proceeds went to support the TP5 legal costs.

They say they are anti racist but what they are is anti white

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Plan B – Plan B: ‘I Made A Mistake Wearing Screwdriver T-Shirt For Magazine Cover’

Monday, July 23rd, 2012

The British hitmaker, real name Ben Drew, was criticised for wearing the neo-Nazi band’s shirt for a recent Shortlist cover shoot, but he has been quick to respond to rising Internet sentiment, insisting he was “ignorant” to the band and its music and he had no idea the image would provoke such a strong reaction.

In a statement released on Sunday (22Jul12), he writes, “I don’t listen to music like that so I wouldn’t know the names of bands that make that music. I was wearing a T-shirt I created using a photograph from the photographer Gavin Watson’s book Skins. I asked him if I could print shots from his book on to T-shirts. I made a number of these T-shirts.

“Gavin’s photos (of skinheads) are relevant to me because they represent the demonised youth of the past. Just like my generation of young people are demonised in the media to all be hoodie wearing thugs and chavs (British colloquial term) so were the skinheads in the 80′s.

“Not all of them were racist but, because some of them were, the rest were all tarred with the same brush. That is why I feel the images of the skinheads represented in Gavin’s work are relevant to me and this generation. Gavin is a friend and the people he took photos of were his friends who listened to reggae and ska music.

“Gavin did not know I had printed that image on a T-shirt and I was not aware of the significance of it. The minute I found out what the words on the T-shirt meant I was angry with myself for not questioning them. The T-shirt is not official nor is it on sale anywhere. It was of my own doing and therefore it is my mistake, but that is all it is.”

The rapper has also hit back at reports suggesting the image on his T-shirt in the picture features violent neo-Nazi Nicky Crane.

He states, “The boy on the image (sic) is Neville Watson. Neville is Gavin Watson’s brother.”

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Calls for Exclusively Greek Blood Drive Spark Outrage

Sunday, July 15th, 2012

Greece’s neo-Nazi Golden Dawn party has, once again, made headlines for its blatantly racist policies by calling for an all-Greekblood bank.

In the neighborhood of Loutsa, Golden Dawn members hung posters encouraging Greeks to donate their blood specifically for fellow Greek citizens. It was reported that several citizens donated blood at the local Sotiria hospital, requesting that their blood only be given to Greeks.

The party released a statement saying “All the bottles of blood we collect will be handed over to patients we choose and to no one else. This right to choose belongs not just to Golden Dawn members, but to all volunteer blood donors.”

Head of the hospital Yiannis Stefanou said that these requests would not be tolerated and asserted that all blood donations would be “available to any patient in need regardless of race, color, and party.”

The National Association of Hospital Doctors (EINAP) also issued a statement stressing that the “sacred character of the donation process and disposal of blood” must be safeguarded according to universal and international standards.

The extreme-right political party has campaigned on an anti-immigrant platformunder the slogan “so we can rid this land of filth.”

Its leader has publicly claimed that Nazi concentration camps did not use ovens and gas chambers to exterminate the Jews during the Holocaust.

Shortly after the party gained an electoral foothold in Greece’s Parliament earlier this summer, members riding motorbikes and armed with wooden poles drove through the suburb of Nikaia, The New York Times reported.

“They said: ‘You’re the cause of Greece’s problems. You have seven days to close or we’ll burn your shop — and we’ll burn you,’” said Mohammed Irfan, a legal Pakistani immigrant who owns a hair salon and two other stores.

A new report by Human Rights Watch warns that xenophobic violence has reached “alarming proportions” in parts of Greece, and it accuses the authorities of failing to stop the trend.

The party claimed 18 of Parliament’s 300 seats in the elections last month, even after Ilias Kasidiaris, the party’s spokesman, repeatedly slapped a female rival during atelevised debate.

As Golden Dawn tries to expand its sphere of influence, many Greeks are becoming increasingly alarmed by the ultra-right ideology.

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Trial Date Set For Boy Accused of Killing Neo-Nazi Father

Friday, July 6th, 2012

A Riverside County judge set an October trial date for a 12-year-old boy accused of murdering his Neo-Nazi father.

The boy, who was 10 at the time of the 2011 killing, admitted to police that he shot his father, Jeff Hall, as he slept on their living room couch.

According to court documents, the boy told police he was tired of his father, Jeffrey R. Hall, beating him and his stepmother.

The boy grabbed the family’s Rossi .357 revolver from a closet and then “he went downstairs with the gun, pulled the hammer back, aimed the gun at his dad’s ear while he was asleep and shot him,” Riverside Police Det. Greg Rowe wrote in a court declaration filed Tuesday.

The boy “then went upstairs and hid the gun under his bed,” Rowe wrote.

Document: Read the court papers

The declaration was filed to support allegations against the boy’s stepmother, Krista F. McCary, 26, who was charged Tuesday with 5 counts of child endangerment and failure to properly store a firearm.

Hall was the California director of the National Socialist Movement, the nation’s largest neo-Nazi group.

According to McCary, Hall routinely took the 10-year-old target shooting while they patrolled the Mexican border.

The boy is currently undergoing mental health evaluation and is being held at Riverside Juvenile Hall.

If convicted, the boy can be held in juvenile detention until he is 25.

If found to be insane, he could be held in a psychological facility.

 

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How neo-Nazis are making money from YouTube advertising

Thursday, June 21st, 2012

Extremists post videos to exploit Google Adsense and share revenues from advertisers such as Virgin Media, BT and O2

Neo-Nazis are using YouTube’s revenue-sharing system on adverts to obtain payments from companies such as Virgin Media, BT and O2 without their knowledge or consent.

By putting videos on YouTube, extremist groups including Blood & Honour and Combat 18 have been benefiting from the automatic addition of ads to their videos. Revenue-sharing agreements under Google’s Adsense programme allow YouTube members posting non-copyrighted videos to benefit from ads that appearin a panel to the right of the videos.

 

Some of the ad revenue is paid to the video owner and extremist groups have used this aspect of Google’s business model to generate funding. When it was alerted to this, Google deleted the videos – but there is no indication it has put in place any protections to prevent a repetition.

Videos uploaded to neo-Nazi channels often appear to have the intention of rallying support by inciting hatred against minority and ethnic groups, despite YouTube’s rules stating: “We do not permit hate speech (speech which attacks or demeans a group based on race or ethnic origin, religion, disability, gender, age, veteran status, and sexual orientation/gender identity).”

Google said the volume of uploads – with 60 hours of video uploaded every minute – meant nearly 10 years’ worth of content was uploaded to the site every day. It does not screen content; instead it relies on users of the website to flag inappropriate videos as a form of self-regulatory crowd-sourced control.

“YouTube’s community guidelines prohibit hate speech, and we encourage our users to flag material that they believe breaks the rules,” a Google spokesperson said. “We review all flagged videos quickly, and we promptly remove material that violates our guidelines.

“Videos with ads showing because of content claims created by YouTube’s automated content ID system are subject to the same removal policies after they’ve been flagged by users.”

However, Combat 18 members or sympathisers who view the video would have no incentive to flag the content, so repeated viewings would benefit the group through revenue sharing. Under the terms of AdSense, if non-copyrighted videos prove popular the user is invited to join Google’s partner programme. YouTube channels are used to provide links to extremist materials and neo-Nazi websites, where discussion groups and literature can be accessed.

Included in these links are: the Turner Diaries, linked to a number of hate crimes such as the Oklahoma City bombing in 1995 by Timothy McVeigh; and the diaries of the white supremacist Kevin Harpham,sentenced to 32 years in prison in December for planting a backpack bomb on the route of the Martin Luther King Jr Day parade in Washington.

German police have been investigating the YouTube account of one of the National Socialist Underground members arrested in February concerning the murder of 10 Turkish immigrants in a series of racist killings spanning almost 10 years. David Copeland, theLondon nail bomber, and Anders Breivik, who carried out the 2011 Norway attacks, are known to have sourced ideas and suspected to have received support from online communities.

When told its ads were being associated with neo-Nazi content, Virgin Media said: “Virgin Media has a strict policy on its ad placement, so we are concerned about ads appearing against unrelated and unsuitable content on YouTube. We are currently engaged with our advertising partners and Google to understand what measures can be put into place to prevent these occurrences going forwards.”

In December, the actor and TV presenter and writer Stephen Fry – whose mother’s aunt and cousins died in Auschwitz – tweeted: “Disturbing that such blue chip companies are, in a way, supporting neo-Nazi YouTube content.”

Robert Levine, the former executive editor of Billboard magazine who writes about copyright technology, says it is an ethical problem: “I’ve looked at these videos. It’s very disturbing stuff.

“Like Google in general, YouTube hides its corporate irresponsibility behind freedom of speech. But there are times when it seems more interested in its own freedom to sell advertising.”

The science fiction author and columnist Cory Doctorow argues against intervention. “I don’t know if I agree with the underlying ‘dangerous and irresponsible’ premise. I’m a free speech advocate, and I believe that the answer to bad speech is more speech,” he said.

“Despite having hailed from Canada, where we have hate speech laws, I’ve concluded that they’re generally worse than their alternatives, and are generally used by powerful people against people with less power and that actual ‘hate crimes’ are generally crimes per se and don’t need further ‘supercrime’ status in order to successfully prosecute them.”

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An eclectic rally crowd hails Greece’s neo-Nazi party

Sunday, June 17th, 2012

A spokesman for Greece’s neo-Nazi Golden Dawn party, Ilias Kasidiaris, rises to the podium in front of a few hundred cheering supporters at a final rally in an Athens suburb ahead of Sunday’s elections.

A surprisingly mixed crowd of skinheads, women and students applaud the elected ex-soldier who slapped a female communist politician on live television last week, after being elected to parliament in an inconclusive vote in May.

“Another punch for the lesbian!” supporters called out to general hilarity.

Martial music blares out at the rally as supporters wave blue-and-white Greek flags ahead of elections that could determine Greece’s future in the eurozone.

The site chosen for the gathering ─ opposite the Greek defence ministry ─ is also no coincidence for the tightly-knit, martial-oriented group.

Kasidiaris was speaking under the equestrian statue of Marshal Alexander Papagos, the leader of Greece’s forces against Fascist Italy in World War II.

He faces a trial for assault over his televised stunt, but is far from cowed.

“I have heard it said, from coffee shops to social media sites, why don’t we send Kasidiaris to talk to (German Chancellor Angela) Merkel?” he said proudly.

Once a tiny minority group regularly accused of racist attacks, the party entered parliament in the election last month with a vote of 6.9 percent.

Its supporters are hoping for a even better score in a follow-up ballot on Sunday in an ever more uncertain climate for Greece, which is suffering a fifth year of recession and painful budget austerity cuts foisted on it in return for bailout money.

“I think this election is going to be better for us than the last one… Maybe 10 percent,” said Vassilis Bardis, a tattooed 43-year-old security guard.

Behind him a placard reads: “Creditor Sharks, Hands Off Greece!”

Another rallying cry for the party has been immigration, a concern among many Greeks in this time of crisis. “We have nothing against immigrants but we believe we have to secure our country,” Bardis said.

Nearby Panos chants with vigour: “This is our country!” “Foreigners out!”

“(Former French National Front leader Jean-Marie) Le Pen is not as strong as we are. We’re more extreme,” the 30-year-old engineer said with pride.

Around him, there are a few skinheads but also many ordinary local residents and groups of young people who are tempted to vote for a politically extreme party at a time when almost half their generation is unemployed.

“I am not a fan of hooligans but I like this party’s ideas,” said a 17-year-old just old enough to vote, who declined to give his name.

“I don’t believe in barbary against immigrants but we don’t have jobs for all these people. We want Greece to be for the Greeks,” he said.

Stavroula, 22, said she was going round all the parties’ election rallies “to listen to what they have to say”. The nursing student said she could not exclude a vote for the ultra-nationalists despite the violence linked to Golden Dawn.

“There is no hope left for young people. I don’t know whether I will have to go abroad to find a job,” she said.

Asked if she was shocked by the slapping incident on television, she said: “There is always a reason for things to happen. I don’t really care.”

Another muscled lawmaker from the party, Ilias Panagiotaros, said the incident had had the effect of attracting voters instead of driving them away.

“He defended himself, he was attacked by this lady. A majority of Greek people blessed him for doing this. This has a ‘red bull’ effect on our party.”

When a journalist mentions the word “neo-Nazi” a thuggish-looking man with a shaved head behind him bristles threateningly and shouts: “We are not Nazis! Who is the idiot who said that? We’re nationalists!”

As the election rally draws to a close, the crowd intones the national anthem and hardcore supporters in the front row perform the Nazi salute.

Eva, a 22-year-old psychology student with an angelic face, makes no secret of her allegiance as she walks away: “They are totally right on everything.”

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