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25 February: More on Mark Collett
The
Loneliest Jukebox has criticised my observation that Mark Collett of
the BNP boasts of having come to far-right politics through the Leeds
'Free Speech Society', which began as a front for an ostensibly left-wing
party called the RCP. Jukebox suggests that the RCP could not be blamed -
it folded in 1996, 3 years before Collett arrived at uni. But when the RCP
closed, it continued in Spiked
online, which took over the politics of the RCP, plus most of the
contributors to its former publication Living Marxism. RCP groups outside
London continue to organise into the late 1990s, chiefly taking people to
events organised by Spiked. Was the Free Speech society at Leeds still run
by former RCPers in 1999? If it was, that would surprise me not one bit. On
Dead Men Left,
meanwhile 'Anti-Nazi' argues that Collett's account of his political
awakening is made up: Collett had reached Leeds already a member of the
NF. If Collett is lying: there is an interesting phenomenon at work. It
was clear from the trial that he lies to himself about things he claims to
have seen, stories which can be traced back to a sort of draft Turner
Diaries that he wrote at university, in an attempt to explain why
everyone (even most other members of the BNP) detest him so.
I also note that Aaronovitch
Watch has retitled my book When
we touched the sky 'When Lefties Were Good',
or 'How
Taking Drugs Stopped Fascism'.
Catty as they may be, these alternative titles are so good, I wish I'd
thought of them myself!
16
February: Redefearn v Serco
I
understand that the Court of Appeal will be hearing the case of Readfearn
v Serco on March 28 and 29. To people who've not been following the
case, I would say that it is potentially just as important as the recent
trial of Nick Griffin. It concerns a man who was a British National Party
candidate in local elections. Workmates complained about being employed
alongside someone they judged to be racist, and Redfearn was sacked. The
Employment Tribunal upheld this decision, but the Employment Appeals
Tribunal reversed it, arguing that if Redfearn was sacked for being a
racist, then he was sacked 'on racial grounds', which would be an
automatically unfair dismissal. Taken logically, the EAT decision would
seem to be mean that if one person A at work was involved in prolonged
acts of racial harassment against another person B, and if that person A was disciplined for those acts, then
A would have the protection of the
courts against their punishment. As I say, the case comes before the Court
of Appeal at the end of March: I hope and trust that the EAT decision will
be reversed.
2 February 2006: Why Nick Griffin and Mark Collett won - and
truth lost
I've
jotted down a few thoughts on why I think the jury in Leeds
acquitted Nick Griffin and Mark Collett. I only spent a brief
period in the court, but I think there are some useful points to
be drawn out for future occasions when anti-fascists come into
contact with the law. This is especially important if, as now
seems likely, the Crown Prosecution Service insists on a retrial
of those charges remaining where the jury failed to reach a
decision. First of all, it's worth remembering why Griffin and
Collett were in court. Following various speeches made in Bradford
in early 2004, they were charged with various counts of using
words or behaviour intended to stir up racial hatred. John
Tyndall, the founder of the BNP, was also charged, but died before
reaching trial. Some of the various quotes from the original
speeches have received wide coverage in the press, including
Griffin's claim that the Koran sanctions mass rapes against white
women, or Collett's fantasies that Asian Britain was about to rise
up and slaughter the white majority – 'there won't be a
Britain', Collett had predicted, if immigration continued. It was
'the beginning of the end of the white race'. He described asylum
seekers as 'cockroaches'. One of his speeches had seen Collett
declare 'We're not going to push them around', and a voice
respond, 'twat some Pakis'. Another speech had ended with the
phrase, 'Let's shows these ethnics the door in 2004.'
The
question before the jury was this: was the tenor of the original
speeches abusive or insulting, was the intention to stir up racial
hatred, or were the speakers reckless that this could be their
effect? Collett and Griffin responded in various fashions. They
accepted that they and their party had been racist in the past,
but denied that they were still. They claimed that their speeches
had been truthful and fair, Collett insisting that he had been
'100% factual', 'I believe the truth of what I said'. They
accepted making attacks on some Asians, on Islam, but insisted
that their real target had been Asian criminals or Islam, not
Muslims. They tried to turn the case towards the government,
accusing Labour or the courts of seeking to ban free speech.
In
court, the prosecution had little difficulty in showing that
several of these claims were pure fantasy. Collett had said that
he was against only Asian criminals. But he had also quoted a
letter in one of his speeches, purportedly sent by an ordinary
Asian man in Blackburn, 'we know we're not welcome here'. When
Collett had read out that message to his BNP audience, the crowd
applauded. They were not clapping because this man was a criminal,
but because they thought with his departure they would be closer
to their goal of an all-white Britain. In another speech, Collett
had maintained that at the time of the Bradford riots; there had
been a mosque in whose basement there was a shooting range on
which terrorists practised with AK-47s. He produced no real
evidence, in court, to substantiate this ludicrous claim. The
point of Collett's speeches had evidently been to stir up hatred.
When Griffin had shared platforms with him, he had made no attempt
to distinguish his position from Collett's, but had added his own
malicious fantasies about Islam.
In
the context, the surprising thing is that neither man was
convicted. To explain that gap, there are three points I want to
make. The first two are very general, the third relates to the
specifics of the case.
1)
There are many underlying ways in which the British criminal
system is designed to privilege people like Griffin and Collett.
The law has a deep concept of reasonableness, which reflects the
collective interests of the sorts of people who becomes judges.
They in turn are still largely white men in their fifties, people
who own some property, who read the Telegraph or the Times.
Behaviour can be judged consistently according to their test:
would a reasonable man approve? Violence is unreasonable, and
strikes are unreasonable. Racism is unreasonable, but so are
protests against racists. Typically, the judge began the case by
denouncing both the BNP and the people demonstrating against them
outside the court.
When
the counsel for the prosecution was describing his case, he shaped
his idea of what the law allowed and forbade repeatedly towards
this idea of reasonableness. The BNP were right to discuss
immigration, he argued, there were perhaps too many foreigners in
Britain. Many reasonable people disliked asylum seekers. It was a
healthy phenomenon that people could discuss the rights and wrongs
of Islam as a religion. The point he was trying to make was a
subtle one, well designed for the 'reasonable man' of the British
court system. The prosecution meant to say that Griffin had
overstepped the mark, that he had taken reasonable arguments to an
unreasonable place, that he had been rude, abusive and offensive:
this was his offence. One of the prosecution's key criticisms of
the BNP was not that their anti-asylum message was inherently
racist, but that it was impractical. Here were politicians
denouncing refugees, he said, but they had no policy to explain
how the problem of asylum could be dealt with better. Here, as
elsewhere, he seems to be accepting large parts of the BNP case.
For
people who live in their own homes, who have the freedom to
control their own lives, who vote for David Cameron, this idea
that somehow the BNP just takes the right ideas a little bit too
far, has real meaning. It's the legal equivalent of the old phrase
that Oswald Mosley was the only surviving Englishman to remain
'beyond the pale'. Note that in this definition a worker can't be
'an Englishman', nor can any migrant, first or second generation.
For
people who live on estates, whose lives are squashed right on top
of each other; the idea that rudeness is criminality makes far
less sense. A different prosecutor might have tried to break with
the middle-classness of the law, to approach the case in a way
that a jury would understand. But for a lawyer to do that requires
a real effort of will directed against the logic in which lawyers
are trained. The prosecutor in this case didn't even try.
2)
Because the law is stacked in many ways against unions and against
the left, so when our movements have tried to influence the
outcome of a case we have done so by trying to mobilise large
numbers of people. Public pressure rarely has a direct effect:
many good trade unionists have been sent down despite
demonstrations of hundreds of supporters outside the courts.
Sometimes, however, pressure does have the right result,
especially when it is clear that the public watching the court is
all of the same mind. To some extent that very pressure was felt
here: were it not for the original 'Secret Agent' programme,
Griffin and Collett would never have been in court. Were it not
for Unite Against Fascism, the public campaign against the BNP,
the general sense that they are a violent set of political
extremists, there is no way that the police or the Crown
Prosecution Service would have taken action.
During
the two weeks of the trial, there were spaces for 35 people in the
public gallery. The press normally took 3-4, and sometimes there
would be one or two other young people who looked like
anti-fascists. For most of the days of the hearings, however,
Griffin had family with him, minders, and typically 25-30 BNP
supporters in the public gallery. You could see the judge
frequently casting his eye upon their ranks: most were men, he
saw, few were women, most were in their fifties, few younger.
There were so many people with skinhead haircuts and ill-fitting
C+A suits. In court, and misleadingly, it often seemed that
the BNP had turned out, and anti-fascists didn't.
To
really put pressure on the court; we would have needed to convince
even large numbers of people than we did to demonstrate outside.
3)
Inside the court, the defense seemed more dynamic, the prosecution
too passive. Three small examples just from the final Monday
morning of the trial convey the problem. The previous week had
seen both Collett and Griffin themselves by arguing that all the
racist claims they had made in their speeches had been based on
fact. On Monday morning, the defense team showed up with a bundle
of new documents purporting to substantiate this claim. The
prosecution allowed the bundle to go to the jury unchallenged.
Another
new document, submitted by the defense, claimed to show that
Collett had been speaking the truth when in one of his original
speeches he had maintained that white people were ten times more
likely to be the victims of race attacks than black people. This
document, judging by the way it was described in the court, may
have been an article in a BNP or some other right-wing
publication, with a loose reference at the end to the British
Crime Survey. The prosecution allowed the document to be given to
the jury. They did not insist that it could not be sent unless it
was shown to be an accurate summary of BCS figures. The
prosecution commented on it just one arguing that its figures
didn't add up – said exactly that, no more, and moved on.
The
worst example that morning of defence lethargy was the decision to
allow jurors to be shown footage from a Channel 4 film, 'Edge of
the City', which purported to show evidence of Asian men grooming
young white women for paedophile sex. The prosecution had
originally insisted that the film could not be shown, as it had
appeared on television long after Collett and Griffin's original
speeches: it could not provide context to them. The judge
initially agreed. Yet after repeated complaints from the defense,
he relented. The prosecution made only the most subdued of
protests.
The
reason given for this change of heart was that one of Griffin's
speeches had contained a vitriolic reference to 'any young Paki
street thug'. The defense claimed that Paki was in Bradford a
commonplace term for people of Pakistani origin, more often a term
of love and never a term of abuse. The defense also claimed that
the Channel Four film gave evidence of the word being used by
Pakistanis themselves. When the judge finally agreed (with minimal
protests from the prosecution) and allowed long parts of the film
to be shown to the jury, it had the worst possible effect. Bad
enough, there were indeed brief references in it to white women
describing their boyfriends as 'Pakis'. Much more significant,
however, were the long periods of film showing Asian men with
their faces blackened out, the melodramatic music, the shots of
white interviewees. The message of the film was conveyed to the
jury - that paedophilia is indeed an Asian disease, and that
parties such as the BNP were right to point that out. The last
words of the film that jurors heard were 'Us Pakis are going to
have to watch what we do'. At that moment, if no other, the
lethargy of the prosecution seemed to concede the entire case.
24 January: More on Nick Griffin / BNP trial
One
correspondent has written to express his disbelief at my account
of the attack on Jeff Porter, the Labour candidate in last year's
Beacontree by-election, who claims to have been assaulted by BNP
supporters just days after rescuing
people from the nightmare of the London bomb attacks. This
was how the attack was reported in the Guardian:
"Tensions flared over the weekend and police were called to
an incident involving local Labour activist and councillor Jeff
Porter, who was reportedly hounded by a man distributing BNP
leaflets. Less than 48 hours before the incident took place, Mr
Porter, who is also a London Underground train operator, had been
driving a tube to Edgware Road station as one of last Thursday's
bombs ripped through a train 10 feet away." And
in
the Times:
'Seven days ago Jeff Porter led a thousand passengers to safety
after the Tube train he was driving into Edgware Road station was
rocked by an explosion, engulfing his cab in smoke and dust.On
Saturday he left home for the first time since the attack to do
some canvassing in the council by-election at Becontree, Barking,
where he is the local Labour Party chairman." I wanted to
clear my head but came across a group of bone-headed thugs from
the British National Party," he said. "One of them put
his fist into my face and asked me if I wanted a slap. I was
shaking and terrified. We had to get the police involved."'
22 January: More on Nick Griffin / BNP trial
The
BBC has posted a picture here,
which gives a good sense of the size and colour of the
anti-fascist demonstration last Monday. The Guardian's
coverage, meanwhile, leads with Griffin's attack on the murdered
black teenager Stephen Lawrence, here.
16
January: Nick Griffin on trial in Leeds
I
was in Leeds today for the first day of the
trial of Nick Griffin. Outside the court, there was a
demonstration, called by Yorkshire and Humberside TUC and Unite
Against Fascism. I would estimate that around 600 people were
there for all or some of the day (although numbers had fallen to
around half that by the end); the BNP contingent was smaller, but
coming largely from out of Leeds fluctuated less. There were never
less than 100 of them, and never more than 150. I had the pleasure
of speaking at the TUC rally afterwards. I've
put the text of my speech below:
Friends,
other people can speak about why the British National Party
represents a threat to our democracy, and a threat to social
democratic in Britain: a threat to our unions, a threat to our
hospitals, a threat to our schools.
I
want to speak about something much narrower, Nick Griffin, the man
who is in court today. You'll know that Griffin went to private
school and Cambridge University. There, he studied law: I guess
he'll need it.
Griffin left with the worst degree that his university could
award, short of actually failing him.
Since
then, Griffin has been a member of a number of neo-Nazi parties,
the National Front, the Third Position and now the BNP.
He
has been the British representative of the terrorist Robert Fiore,
the French fascist Jean-Marie Le Pen, and the Libyan leader
Colonel Gaddaffi.
Not
all these ventures were successful. We know about Griffin's
notorious trips to Libya. Expecting to be paid, of course, Griffin
returned with nothing other than a case full of Gaddaffi's Green
Books. For the next two years, he was selling them everywhere to
make a living.
Nick
Griffin is charged today with using words or behaviour intended or
likely to stir up racial hatred.
He's
been here before. In 1998, he published a magazine which denied
that the Holocaust had happened and argued that every newspaper in
Britain was owned by Jews. For that, he was given a suspended
sentence.
Lee
Barnes of the British National Party suggests that criminals
convicted of drugs offences three times should be subject to the
death penalty. What would happen if that policy was extended to
all criminal convictions?
I'd
like to see Barnes tell Griffin: that's two strikes Nick. If we
mean what we say, then three and you're out.
Violence
has been a constant theme of the BNP for years.
There's
Griffin who used to boast about how the BNP was 'a strong,
disciplined organisation … with well-directed boots and fists'
. There's
the former BNP bodyguard David Copeland who went on a bombing
spree in London.
There's
the other BNP bomber Tony Lecomber.
That's
history, the BNP says, ancient history. Don't believe them.
Do
you remember the terrorist attacks in London? Do you remember the
train-driver who worked to pull victims out of the rubble? He was
seen as a national hero. But not by the BNP. You see, the driver
was also a Labour councillor in Essex. Members of the BNP found
him and beat him up.
Our
message to Nick Griffin and the BNP is simple. We are here to
expose you for the fascists you are. We will continue to expose
you. And we will never give up.
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