The return of eugenics? Racist far right is fastest growing terror threat in UK

   

PublicEnquiry

 

Published on Sep 24, 2019

The return of eugenics? Racist far right fastest growing terror threat in UK

Far right poses fastest growing terror threat to UK, head of terror police says
Terror attacks can be sparked by ideology ‘anywhere along the spectrum’ of far-right groups
https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/terror-attack-plots-uk-far-right-wing-extremism-threat-met-police-neil-basu-a9112046.html

Lizzie Dearden Security Correspondent @lizziedearden

Right-wing extremism poses the fastest growing terror threat to the UK, the head of British counterterror police has said.

Assistant Commissioner Neil Basu said around 10 per cent of 800 live investigations now involve far-right extremists – a “significant increase” on previous years.

“It’s my fastest growing problem,” he told journalists in central London.

However he added that Islamist jihadism was “still by far globally the biggest threat people face”.

“It has stabilised at a very high level of 30 per cent more than two years ago,” Mr Basu said. “The extreme right wing is starting from a very low base but a 17 per cent rise in hate crime should make us all pause for thought.”

Mr Basu said that rising Islamophobic, antisemitic and racist abuse can be seen as a “proxy” for increasing extremism, and must be tackled to reduce the terror threat.

Of the 22 terror attack plots foiled by British security services since March 2017, seven have been linked to right-wing extremism.

Mr Basu admitted that future attacks could slip through the net, saying it was “impossible to create a society in which you could spot every threat coming and stop it in time”.

He added: “The lone actor threat is the biggest problem. My biggest concern that is we have seen cases when people both in Islamist and right-wing space where people are radicalised in days or weeks, so how do we intervene earlier?”

The most recent attack came in the Surrey town of Stanwell in March, when a racist inspired by the Christchurch attack went on a rampage with a baseball bat and knife, attacking non-white and Muslim victims.

The Finsbury Park attack, where a Tommy Robinson supporter rammed a van into Muslims leaving Ramadan prayers, also left one man dead in 2017.

The previous year, white supremacist Thomas Mair murdered Jo Cox in the run-up to the European Union referendum, and in 2015 a National Action neo-Nazi tried to behead a Sikh man in Wales.

Counterterror police warned that the terror threat comes from all strands of right-wing extremism, even those that do not openly call for violence.

They gave the English Defence League and Football Lads’ Alliance as examples of “cultural nationalism”, which is dominated by anti-Islamic and anti-immigration views.

CCTV footage shows far-right terror attack in Stanwell
Darren Osborne, the Finsbury Park attacker, was radicalised by that level of extremism and the same sentiments can be found on mainstream platforms, police said.

White nationalism is the next category drawn up by counterterror police, including the pan-European Generation Identity group and others who spread the “great replacement” conspiracy theory that inspired the Christchurch attack.

The most serious category is defined as white supremacism, including banned group National Action and other neo-Nazis who openly call for the eradication of non-whites and Jews.


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