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"Сакаме да си ја повратиме земјата."
Ново движење кое наречено Англиска Лига за Заштита ветува дека летото и навистина ќе биде жешко. Сакаат да ги протераат муслиманите од Британија. Не се рабти за групи на скинхедси, ова е нова работа која ужива поддршка кај многумина кои не се со нив. Групата -- сега прераснува во движење -- се формираше како отпор спрема една исламистичка групација во Лутон.
Ветуваат судири со најекспонираните Исламски организации, а доколку доволно масовни и брутални, очекуваат сигурно да предизвикаат немири. Движењево се создава заради вакуумот, мешу другото, предизвикан со сериозните поделби во националистичките партии како Британската Национална Партија.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2010/may/28/english-defence-league-protest-bnp
English Defence League: new wave of extremists plotting summer of unrest
Matthew Taylor
Friday 28 May 2010
Forged on football terraces and targeting Muslim communities, rightwingers return to the streets in an increasingly violent form
In the back room of a sparsely decorated pub in Bolton a man with a shaved head and a tattoo poking out above his shirt collar hands out what look like wraps of cocaine to his friends. It is just after 11am but behind him the pub is already packed with young, mainly white, men. Suddenly it erupts.
"We want our country back. We want our country back … Muslim bombers off our streets." The chants ring out as tables are thumped and plastic pint glasses are thrust into the air.
"It is going to be a good 'un today," says the shaven-headed man, leaning across the table towards me to make himself heard. "We're going to get to twat some Pakis – I can feel it."
The pub, a few hundred yards from Bolton railway station, is the latest gathering point for the most significant rightwing street movement the UK has seen since the heyday of the National Front in the 1970s.
For the past four months the Guardian has joined English Defence League demonstrations, witnessing its growing popularity, from protests attracting just a few hundred hardcore activists at the end of last year to rallies and marches which are bringing thousands of people on to the street – and into direct conflict with the police and local Muslim communities.
The EDL plans to step up its campaign in coming weeks, culminating in marches through some of the UK's most high-profile Muslim communities, raising the spectre of widespread unrest.
With the British National party beset by infighting and recriminations after its poor showing in last month's local and national elections, the UK is facing the prospect of rightwing activists turning away from the ballot box and back to the street for the first time in three decades.
Ново движење кое наречено Англиска Лига за Заштита ветува дека летото и навистина ќе биде жешко. Сакаат да ги протераат муслиманите од Британија. Не се рабти за групи на скинхедси, ова е нова работа која ужива поддршка кај многумина кои не се со нив. Групата -- сега прераснува во движење -- се формираше како отпор спрема една исламистичка групација во Лутон.
Ветуваат судири со најекспонираните Исламски организации, а доколку доволно масовни и брутални, очекуваат сигурно да предизвикаат немири. Движењево се создава заради вакуумот, мешу другото, предизвикан со сериозните поделби во националистичките партии како Британската Национална Партија.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2010/may/28/english-defence-league-protest-bnp
English Defence League: new wave of extremists plotting summer of unrest
Matthew Taylor
Friday 28 May 2010
Forged on football terraces and targeting Muslim communities, rightwingers return to the streets in an increasingly violent form
In the back room of a sparsely decorated pub in Bolton a man with a shaved head and a tattoo poking out above his shirt collar hands out what look like wraps of cocaine to his friends. It is just after 11am but behind him the pub is already packed with young, mainly white, men. Suddenly it erupts.
"We want our country back. We want our country back … Muslim bombers off our streets." The chants ring out as tables are thumped and plastic pint glasses are thrust into the air.
"It is going to be a good 'un today," says the shaven-headed man, leaning across the table towards me to make himself heard. "We're going to get to twat some Pakis – I can feel it."
The pub, a few hundred yards from Bolton railway station, is the latest gathering point for the most significant rightwing street movement the UK has seen since the heyday of the National Front in the 1970s.
For the past four months the Guardian has joined English Defence League demonstrations, witnessing its growing popularity, from protests attracting just a few hundred hardcore activists at the end of last year to rallies and marches which are bringing thousands of people on to the street – and into direct conflict with the police and local Muslim communities.
The EDL plans to step up its campaign in coming weeks, culminating in marches through some of the UK's most high-profile Muslim communities, raising the spectre of widespread unrest.
With the British National party beset by infighting and recriminations after its poor showing in last month's local and national elections, the UK is facing the prospect of rightwing activists turning away from the ballot box and back to the street for the first time in three decades.