A vignette from violence in Luton and the formation of the English Defence League (EFL)
On
the eve of demonstrations in Britain to free Tommy Robinson, arrested
and sentenced within the hour for “contempt of court” I want to
address an episode that illustrates the mendacity of the British
Establishment which puts the blame for everything on the “racist
thugs” of the EDL.
This
is how a 2012 documentary, “Proud and Prejudiced” from Channel 4
describes the conflict between Tommy Robinson and Sayful Islam who at
the beginning of the docuentary is seen assaulting Tommy (although
noone seems to mind that).
If
you were to take things at face value you could be forgiven for
thinking that the police was just doing its best to keep two extreme
groups apart.
Read
the extract from Tommy Robinson’s autobiography and see that things
are a little diferent from how it is presented in this documentary.
Although
the prsentation is of two extremists facing off the bulk of the
criticism in the film is of Robinson. Note that Sayful Islam was
never arrested and those members of his group who were arrested were
soon let off with a caution. No such treatment for Tommy
Robinson.
The doco
gives a strong impression of violent football thugs but does not show
elderly Luton residents having bricks thrown through their windows or
reflect the support from Luton's black community or by members of the
police
This BBC documentary, if anything, is worse.
I think I could be forgiven for concluding this has a class nature to it - and is an attack on the English working class.
Now hear from the horse's mouth (emphasis is my own) and make up your own mind.
In this account, at least, I'll go with Tommy Robinson. It has the ring of truth about it.
The
powerful story of Tommy Robinson, former leader of the EDL and a man
persecuted by the British state, simply for standing up in support of
British troops. Tommy describes growing up on the streets of Luton, a
town plagued by Islamic extremism and criminal gangs and how his
livelihood was taken from him when he led a street protest against
it. Hounded through the courts and thrown to the Muslim underworld
which runs England's prisons, when Tommy refused to be broken the
police tried to blackmail him – into working for them.
"I can tell you everything about how it started however –and how the EDL never would have come into being but for the actions of the Bedfordshire Police. Take a bow boys, you played a blinder –and might ultimately have done the entire nation a service, despite your determination to stamp on the basic right of British people to protest.
People can thank our very own boys in blue for all of those marches and demonstrations up and down the land –with more than a little help from the politically correct idiots who run our town halls.
It all began on the day of the Luton homecoming of the 2nd Battalion of the Royal Anglian Regiment, recently returned from Afghanistan, when between them the bureaucrats and police managed to inflame an entire town.
It’s
easy to blame Sayful Islam and his extremist friends who screamed and
spat their hatred in the faces of our troops that day –but it was
the police and politicians who allowed and I would say even
encouraged them to do it. It didn’t have to happen.
And
even then, when those outraged ordinary Luton people then said they
wanted to express their support for our troops, it was the police who
turned a peaceful, well planned gathering, into a violent riot. So,
well done lads.
I
went into Luton on that morning of Tuesday, March 10th 2009 with Kev.
He’s actually my mum’s cousin and a good bit older –and
generally more sensible –than me. We would hardly leave each
other’s side throughout the EDL years, apart from when one or the
other of us was sat twiddling our thumbs in a jail cell. Or sometimes
both of us.
It
was probably a brave decision by someone to march the soldiers
through Luton given what we had going on in our midst with the Muslim
radicals, but the authorities did their best to keep the affair low
key. There was very little publicity about it in the local press and
scheduling it for a Tuesday, as opposed to a busy shopping day like
Saturday, was probably intended to make sure that it wouldn’t
attract big crowds.
But
the homecoming parade itself was the right decision, no doubt. We
send these lads off to fight in Iraq and Afghanistan and all kinds of
worldwide hellholes. If they can’t march back through a British
town in recognition of their service, then we really have lost the
war. Despite it being a Tuesday, a great crowd turned out.
The
streets were lined three and four deep and when the soldiers arrived
it was from the east end of town, the direction of the airport. They
marched through the pedestrian precinct then up and around the town
hall and down to form up in parade on St George’s Square to receive
the homecoming salute.
It
was a simple mark of respect, of honouring our troops, but it turned
into a fiasco. It was a lovely spring day and me and Kev walked round
to find out what the plans were, which way the troops were coming,
that sort of stuff. We were standing by the town hall and noticed
groups of Muslims starting to congregate, two or three people at a
time, and then a group of some 30 women wearing burkhas.
It
was Kev who remarked about how many police there were. We saw
officers go over and talk to Sayful Islam outside the town hall about
a half hour before the soldiers arrived. Then as the troops came
marching through, the police ushered Sayful and his supporters, about
15 of them, inside the town hall –we thought they must be having
some kind of meeting. But then as the regiment came past us and went
up the left side of the town hall, to descend round the back and into
the square, we heard this big commotion and ran up to see what was
happening.
The
police had taken Sayful’s group through the building and outside
via a back door, then placed them where they were perfectly
positioned to shout their abuse at the soldiers. They had placards
calling our troops ‘Butchers of Basra’ and saying ‘Anglian
soldiers go to hell’.
And
the police had simply guided them to a vantage position where they
could hurl insults, while guarding them from people who were
understandably pissed off by it all.
Members
of the public were absolutely outraged, but the police were formed up
with their backs to the Muslims, protecting them. One old gent,
probably aged about 75 or 80, was shouting and gesticulating at
Sayful Islam and his group –and the police threw the old chap on
the floor.
As
the soldiers marched on to the square the police then escorted
Sayful’s cretins back through the town hall and across to where a
bigger group of Muslims were gathered, in their usual patch in the
Arndale centre.
There
were more and more Muslims turning up to join that group and, as word
got around, there were more and more Luton people coming to have a go
at them, blokes coming off building sites, turning up in their work
clothes.
It
was a bit of a stand off, with everyone shouting and bawling. One of
the chants going up from our side was that ‘Bin Laden’s mother is
a whore’ which would come back to haunt Kev Carroll at least, some
time later.
There
was one funny moment, when one of the lads disappeared into Marks and
Spencer’s and reappeared a few minutes later on the roof of the
Arndale, loaded up with about 25 packs of bacon, which he started
throwing down at Sayful’s mob. That got the biggest cheer of the
day.
There
were four people out of the group supporting the troops who were
arrested over that confrontation, but it was fully two months later,
when we were due to stage a demo of our own, that the police arrested
big Kev –mostly as a way of disrupting us.
A
couple of days later they arrested five of Sayful’s mob as well and
charged them with public order offences. I suppose they were trying
to balance things.
The
Muslims got conditional discharges for threatening behaviour,
although they were clearly puzzled at the fuss, because the police
hadn’t objected to their placards when they saw them. They probably
had a point.
The
Bedfordshire police chief expressed ‘disappointment that a small
number of people chose to cause a disturbance’. For fuck’s sake,
what did he expect? Couldn’t his officers read those placards? Did
they think people wouldn’t be offended by our troops being called
baby killers and butchers?
....We
were watching all of this going on, and word went out that the police
had been told to stop groups of white and black youths congregating
around the town centre. I was told by one copper that when Sayful
Islam and his friends were called in as driving around town, senior
officers said not to interfere with them.
He
said rank and file officers were angry at being told to police
different communities differently, although I reckon that’s
probably been the case for years in more towns and cities across the
country than you’d care to mention. It’s why so much resentment
exists between Muslim and non-Muslim communities, not that anyone’s
in a rush to accept that as being reality.
At
one police briefing they apparently put up a big picture of me on
screen in the station and the officer in charge described me as a
‘leading far right racist’. One of the coppers put his hand up
and interrupted. He’d known me since school and told him that no,
whatever ever else I was, I was not a racist, and not far right
either.
You
have to realise that a lot of those ordinary Luton coppers were
blokes from within our own families and communities. They knew what
was going on. They were frustrated at the way they were being used
and –as some saw it –abused, by their own senior staff.
And
so, after that, they brought the Metropolitan Police in to deal with
Luton’s ‘public order issues’.
P.S. After
staying willingly silent on Tommy Robinson’s arrest and thereby
colluding with the State Channel 4 came up with this hit piece more
than a week after the events
Finally,
here is a fine defence from an Irish presidental candidate
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