Kamis, 01 April 2021

Inside bedroom of police officer guilty of joining Neo-Nazi hate group - Metro.co.uk

Pc Ben Hannam, 22, joined terror group National Action
Pc Ben Hannam, 22, joined terror group National Action (Picture: PA)

Images from inside a police officer’s bedroom show a Nazi propaganda poster and stickers praising National Action.

Pc Ben Hannam, 22, has been found guilty of belonging to banned right-wing extremist group National Action (NA) following a trial at the Old Bailey.

He is the first serving police officer to have been found guilty of such an offence.

During his trial, jurors were shown how he appeared in a propaganda video for the group.

He was caught after an anti-fascist hacker found details of members of a Neo-Nazi internet forum, Iron March.

When he was arrested in his bedroom in March 2020, police found it full of extremist material.

A search of his room found Nazi propaganda
A search of his room found Nazi propaganda (Picture: PA)
Hannam was found guilty today
Hannam was found guilty today (Picture: PA)
He was arrested in his bedroom (
He was arrested in his bedroom (Picture: PA)
Jurors were shown images from his bedroom, which contained fascist propaganda
Jurors were shown images from his bedroom, which contained fascist propaganda (Picture: PA)
He denied being a member in police recruitment forms
He denied being a member in police recruitment forms (Picture: PA)
NA patches were found during a search of Hannam's room
NA patches were found during a search of Hannam’s room (Picture: PA)
Pc Ben Hannam, 22, who has become the first British police officer to be convicted of belonging to a banned neo-Nazi terror group
Pc Ben Hannam, 22, who has become the first British police officer to be convicted of belonging to a banned neo-Nazi terror group (Picture: PA)
This selfie of Hannam was used as evidence of his extreme right wing views
This selfie of Hannam was used as evidence of his extreme right wing views (Picture: PA)

Officers found Neo-Nazi posters, notes detailing his membership of NA, as well as NA badges and business cards.

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He had stored on a USB stick two documents said to be useful to a terrorist.

Mass murderer Anders Breivik’s manifesto contained guidance on making radiological, chemical and biological weapons, and improvised explosive devices while the second document detailed how to carry out a fatal knife attack.

A jury had deliberated for more than 32 hours to find Hannam guilty today.

As well as being a member of NA, they found him guilty of lying on his application and vetting forms to join the Metropolitan Police and having terror documents detailing knife combat and making explosive devices.

Judge Anthony Leonard QC lifted a ban on reporting the case after Hannam admitted possessing an indecent image of a child, which was to have been the subject of a separate trial.

Hannam took part in outdoor boxing tournaments with other members of the group
Hannam took part in outdoor boxing tournaments with other members of the group (Picture: PA)
The ideology of NA is based on 'Aryan purity' and hatred of non-white groups
The ideology of NA is based on ‘Aryan purity’ and hatred of non-white groups (Picture: PA)
Benjamin Hannam spray painting graffiti which was shown to the jury during his trial
He said he was ‘completely swayed’ by the group (Picture: PA)

The ideology of NA was described in court as based on ‘Aryan purity’ and hatred of non-white groups, particularly Jews.

Members celebrated Adolf Hitler as a ‘divine figure’ and glorified violence, including war and genocide, the court heard.

In his defence, Hannam, who is autistic, denied he had ever been a member of NA before or after it was banned.

He told jurors he had been attracted to fascism aged 16 because of its bold artwork and contacted NA after seeing propaganda online.

Hannam told jurors: ‘I was under the impression this was some kind of youth network.

‘I have never been stickering with NA nor have I done banner drops. I stuck to social activities.

‘Most of the time was going to the pub and going for walks. Other times camping or going boxing.’

Hannam sprayed NA graffiti in a promotion video for NA
Hannam sprayed NA graffiti in a promotion video for NA (Picture: PA)
Pages from Hannam's notebooks were shown to the jury
Pages from Hannam’s notebooks were shown to the jury (Picture: PA)

He denied reading all of Breivik’s manifesto, saying he found it ‘boring’.

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Hannam, of Edmonton, north London, is currently suspended from duty.

Commander Richard Smith, head of the Met’s counter-terrorism command, said: ‘He would never have been able to join had we known then of his interest in the extreme right wing and his previous membership of National Action.

‘Once we identified his involvement with that organisation we took immediate steps to arrest him and put him before the court.’

He stressed there was no evidence Hannam abused his position ‘to further his extremist views’.

Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@metro.co.uk.

For more stories like this, check our news page.

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2021-04-01 18:47:00Z
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Alex Salmond’s Alba party only gets 3% support in shock new poll - Daily Record

A shock poll suggests Alex Salmond’s hopes of returning to frontline politics could be in peril, as only 3% of Scots saying they would offer support at the ballot box.

Only 10% of those surveyed rank the former First Minister favourability.

A Survation poll, carried out for DC Thomson, shows the new pro-independence party, the Alba Party, could be seriously lagging behind other parties.

The results also reveal 71% of Scots view Salmond unfavourably which is the worst result for any mainstream political leader in the UK.

17% of those polled said he was helping the cause fo independence while more than half of Scots said Salmond was “hindering the cause for Scottish independence”.

The poll was carried out from March 29 to March 30 and surveyed 1000 Scots.

The SNP were revealed to be ahead in both constituency and list votes.

The poll shows they would receive 49% and 37% respectively, while the Tories sit on 21% and 18%, Labour 20% and 19%, the Liberal Democrats on 9% and 8%, the Greens on 11% in the list and the Alba Party trailing on 3%.

The SNP are put on track for a narrow majority with 66 MSPs.

Labour come in second on 24 with the Tories on 21, Greens on 11 and Lib Dems on 7.

50% of those poll had a favourable view of Nicola Sturgeon while only 17% of people have a favourable view of Scottish Tory leader Douglas Ross and 22% have a positive view of Scottish Labour leader Anas Sarwar.

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After Salmond, Boris Johnson is viewed to be the most unpopular party leader among Scots with 56% saying they view him unfavourably.

Polling expert Professor Sir John Curtice said: “The headline is that it looks as though it’s all over for Salmond, though he might just get a seat in the north-east himself.

“But this is not what he needs if he is going to get his campaign to take off.

“If other polls come out over the weekend with similar numbers then he ain’t going to get broadcast coverage because the broadcasters will be able to say ‘you’re not a significant player in this election’.”

According to Prof Curtice, Salmond is failing to cut through and make a good impression among younger SNP voters.

He said: “Among SNP 2019 voters, Sturgeon has 87% favourability, Salmond 12%. He’s not convincing them, he’s not getting his argument across to that key constituency.”

Scottish politics

age on the SNP and the independence movement through trying to nail Sturgeon over the parliamentary inquiry has failed.”

Responding to the latest Survation Poll on voting intentions for the Scottish Parliament Elections on 6 May an Alba Spokesperson said: “After only three days since the launch of Scotland’s fastest growing party Alba’s scores are on the board.

“These early indications put Alba within touching distance of representation across Scotland.


“With five weeks still to go Alba’s support can only grow as we approach Polling Day.

“It is worth noting that Alba has already achieved, in three days, approaching half the level of support of the Liberal Democrats, a party which has existed for over a century.”

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2021-04-01 18:46:10Z
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COVID-19: UK records 51 more coronavirus deaths and 4,479 new cases as vaccine first doses pass 31 million - Sky News

The UK has recorded 51 more coronavirus-related deaths and 4,479 new cases in the latest 24-hour period.

The figures compare with 43 fatalities and 4,052 infections announced by the government yesterday.

Last Thursday, 63 deaths were reported along with 6,397 cases.

A total of 126,764 people have died in the UK within 28 days of a positive COVID-19 test, and there have been 4,350,266 lab-confirmed cases since the start of the pandemic.

Meanwhile, 241,906 people had their first dose of a coronavirus vaccine yesterday, taking the total to 31,147,444.

Some 404,922 had their second jab yesterday, meaning 4,513,458 have now had both shots.

On Wednesday, it was announced for the first time that the number of second doses administered in a single day exceeded first doses.

More from Covid-19

It comes as recent data suggests vaccine hesitancy among black people in the UK has halved.

Office of National Statistics (ONS) figures from 17 February to 14 March suggest 22% of black adults in the UK reported coronavirus vaccine hesitancy, down from 44% the previous month.

The news comes in the same week comedian and actor Sir Lenny Henry penned an open letter calling on black people to take the COVID vaccine.

Also, the first minister of Wales, Mark Drakeford, has expressed confidence in the country's roadmap out of coronavirus restrictions, telling Sky News that COVID is in a "relatively benign position".

Cross-border travel between Wales and the rest of the UK will be allowed from 12 April.

And pubs, restaurants and cafes could reopen outdoors from 26 April.

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2021-04-01 15:22:30Z
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Ben Hannam: The neo-Nazi who joined the Metropolitan Police - BBC News

Still from footage of Ben Hannam in police uniform
HVP Studios

Metropolitan Police officer Ben Hannam has been convicted of membership of the banned neo-Nazi group National Action.

The deception was as easy as ticking a box.

In 2017, on his application form to join the Metropolitan Police, Ben Hannam was asked if he had ever been in the far-right British National Party or any organisations whose aims "may contradict the duty to promote race equality".

He ticked "no".

Once accepted, he spent two years in the force, working among communities in north London, even interviewing suspects on his own.

But, just two days before he applied to join the force, he had appeared in a neo-Nazi propaganda video.

Deceit had become normal.

Hannam spraying graffiti
Metropolitan Police

At school he had a girlfriend of Mauritian and Muslim heritage, as well as friends from various ethnic backgrounds.

Several gave evidence at his trial, saying he never showed any prejudice towards them.

One grandparent is gay. Another step-grandparent is Jewish.

Yet Hannam spent his weekends with neo-Nazis and collected a library of fascist literature.

His beliefs were noticed by some.

A teacher told the trial she had been unable to mark one essay submitted by Hannam - the first time this had happened in 20 years of teaching - because of "concerning content" and his "intolerance" towards Islam.

He was also spoken to after students at his diverse school reacted to "anti-immigration" views he espoused during a debate.

The Met never took a reference from the school.

Autism debate

Three experts agreed Hannam was autistic and that this was relevant to his interest in fascism, an ideology historically associated with order and structure.

One said Hannam was well aware of what National Action stood for. The others said his autism meant it took him some time to realise the group was "morally bad".

Hannam and others with Celtic cross, some faces blurred by Metropolitan Police
Metropolitan Police

Prosecutors said his diagnosis did not excuse his conduct or explain why he sought friends in a neo-Nazi group.

Hannam had joined National Action (NA) in early 2016 while studying for his A-levels.

He was active online, including on the image board 4Chan, and was attracted to NA after watching videos of co-founders Alex Davies and Ben Raymond.

'Iron March'

After writing to the group, Hannam was invited to meet older members in London and was soon travelling north to attend an annual conference in Liverpool, where he posed for a photo next to a man doing a Nazi salute which featured in a film of the event.

Using an alias, he joined a neo-Nazi web forum called Iron March, which spawned several extremist groups around the world.

In one forum thread started by Hannam, entitled "Muslim shoots white man in London", he asked for "thoughts and advice".

When one user replied by discussing how to get a firearm, Hannam wrote: "Care to help me out in this topic then? I don't know where to start with obtaining one besides a shotgun, and I don't think they'd be of much use".

He also used the website to help another student apply to NA.

He suggested the teenager tone down his application, as otherwise "you'll get the police knocking at your door".

Nazi salute

During his trial, Hannam claimed "there are no pictures of me doing a Nazi salute".

But the BBC has identified him at a fight training event, filmed for an NA propaganda video, which he arranged to attend in August 2016 with the other teenager.

The film shows Hannam boxing with leading member Mark Jones, their faces blurred, with the whole group then saluting together for the camera.

Hannam saluting in propaganda video
Propaganda video

That summer, NA - founded as a youth movement three years earlier - used social media to glorify the murder of MP Jo Cox by a neo-Nazi.

By the end of the year it was outlawed in the UK as a terrorist organisation, making it illegal to remain a member.

The ban came as:

In 2017 the organisation re-emerged under new aliases, including NS131.

Hannam continued to meet other members, pose for propaganda images to promote the new brand, and attend fight training. Another event, not attended by Hannam, saw members practise knife combat in a forest.

Arrests

Counter-terror police seized clear, raw footage of these events in September that year, when they arrested NA co-founders Alex Davies and Mark Jones.

But, despite the small numbers at each gathering, Hannam was not identified.

Hannam (in white) sparring with Oskar Dunn-Koczorowski, watched by National Action co-founder Alex Davies in the blue shirt.
Metropolitan Police

Different counter-terror teams around the UK had responsibility for different group members, but some people - who may have appeared peripheral - were not a focus.

Investigations had already revealed several soldiers were members of an NA chat group.

One soldier, Mikko Vehvilainen, was stockpiling weapons and would later be convicted of membership

During exchanges with other senior figures, Vehvilainen said members should focus on gaining "military and key civil positions".

Data leak

Hannam was only caught after anti-fascists leaked data online from the Iron March forum.

Detectives reviewed IP addresses for British forum users, tracing the account used by Hannam to his north London home.

The police investigation found no evidence he had been involved with NA after July 2017.

However, there are hints that he did not break all contact with his past.

Still from footage of Ben Hannam in police uniform
HVP Studios

Even before his arrest, people involved in the group knew that one of their former members had joined the police, the BBC has established.

Hannam also continued to access and save disturbing content, including an image glorifying the perpetrator of New Zealand's Christchurch massacre.

In November 2018, he saved a photo to his phone of NA associate Oskar Dunn-Koczorowski, who was arrested for terrorism offences the following month, but whose image was not yet public.

In court, Hannam claimed he simply chanced across it online, but how it actually came into his possession is unclear.

Commander Richard Smith, head of the Met's counter terrorism command, said he was "hugely concerned" that a serving officer had been a member of a banned group, but that he was identified at the "earliest" opportunity and officers then moved quickly to make an arrest.

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2021-04-01 12:07:01Z
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Scottish election 2021: Sturgeon says SNP 'not a divided party' - BBC News

Nicola Sturgeon
Getty Images

The leader of the SNP has insisted her party was "not divided".

Speaking on BBC Scotland's Good Morning Scotland programme, Nicola Sturgeon said her aim at May's Holyrood election was winning a "simple majority".

She rejected Alex Salmond's idea of creating a "super majority" by encouraging voters to back his newly-formed Alba Party on the regional list.

The former first minister said he wanted to work with an SNP government to advance the cause of independence.

He told the BBC's Today programme that that cause was "much, much bigger than personalities".

Ms Sturgeon denied that the SNP was suffering from internal issues and said support had "never been higher".

She explained: "I know I lead a party that has a growing membership just now and has a commanding position in the opinion polls.

"The breakdown of opinion polls that tests the views and attitudes of SNP voters show the SNP is actually the most united of all the parties in Scotland."

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SCOTLAND'S ELECTION: THE BASICS

What elections are happening? On 6 May, people across Scotland will vote to elect 129 Members of the Scottish Parliament (MSPs). The party that wins the most seats will form the Scottish government. Find out more here.

What powers does the Scottish Parliament have? MSPs pass laws on most aspects of day-to-day life in Scotland, such as health, education and transport. They also have control over some taxes and welfare benefits. Defence, foreign policy and immigration are decided by the UK Parliament.

How do I vote? Anyone who lives in Scotland and is registered to vote is eligible, so long as they are aged 16 or over on the day of the election. You can register to vote online.

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Ms Sturgeon went to say that she was concentrating on winning a "simple majority" and if people wanted an SNP government, and her as first minister, then voting for the nationalists was the only way to bring that about.

She said: "You only have to cast your mind back to the days when Alex Salmond was leader of the SNP and he didn't say what he is saying now.

"What he said then, and he was right then, is that the only way to make sure you get the government you want is to vote for the party that will be that government.

"Anything else is trying to gamble with the system, game the system, take a chance on the outcome of the election.

"If you want to see an SNP government elected that then has the ability to deliver an independence referendum, you don't get that by voting for somebody else."

Presentational grey line
Analysis box by Philip Sim, political reporter, Scotland

Nicola Sturgeon insists that there is no split within the independence movement.

But it is inescapable that at the same moment she was being interviewed on Radio Scotland, her predecessor Alex Salmond was speaking on Radio 4 as the leader of a rival party.

The two were once an inseparable double act atop the SNP, which took Scotland to the brink of independence. But he has now formed his own breakaway group, populated with defectors from the SNP including two sitting MPs.

The fact that many of these defectors have left the SNP over various policy differences means there is sure to be friction between their manifesto pledges too.

So, Mr Salmond's very presence in the race raises questions for Ms Sturgeon - even over her core objective of independence, which her party can no longer own as home turf. She now has to spend precious time talking about his vision, instead of her own.

Both leaders may insist that their campaigns will be positive and do not pose a threat to the cause they share, but in many ways Holyrood is no longer big enough for the both of them.

Presentational grey line

Ms Sturgeon told listeners that two things were required to win independence - a majority in the Scottish Parliament to bring about a referendum and, "crucially", winning majority support among the Scottish population.

She said: "Anybody who tries to suggest there's a shortcut to that, or that we can somehow game or trick our way to independence, frankly, is misleading people. It's got to be through a process that is not just legitimate but seen to be legitimate so that it can command respect and authority at home and internationally as well."

On SNP politicians leaving the party to stand at the Holyrood election for the Alba Party she said she was "not sure it is as many as Mr Salmond might have been hoping for".

She added "I also don't think this is a friendly gesture on Mr Salmond's part towards the SNP."

Alex Salmond
Getty Images

Last week, former SNP leader Mr Salmond announced the creation of a new pro-independence party. He said the Alba Party would not field candidates in any of the 73 constituency seats but rather concentrate on the regional lists which cover eight areas of Scotland and produces 56 MSPs.

Speaking on Today, Mr Salmond said that securing a "super majority" of pro-independence parties at Holyrood would "strengthen immeasurably Scotland's hand in negotiating with a Tory PM".

He added: "From 2007 to 2011 I was first minister and I was negotiated first with Gordon Brown and then with David Cameron to try to advance Scotland's cause and it was a difficulty because it was a Unionist majority in the Scottish Parliament so I was looking over my shoulder all the time as I was trying to negotiate, then after 2011 when the SNP on its own gained a very narrow majority it became much easier to get that referendum in 2014.

"What I am saying is that a supermajority in the parliament that is not just composed of one party, the SNP, but other independence parties, like Alba, will change that power balance considerably because no Tory PM will want to be to trying to face down an entire parliament and an entire people."

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2021-04-01 10:23:20Z
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PM's top black adviser quits after landmark race review - The Times

The government’s race review has been condemned as “culturally deaf” after it stated there was a new story to be told about slavery, which was not just about profit and suffering.

The report by the independent Commission on Race and Ethnic Disparities, formed last July after the resurgence of the Black Lives Matter movement, argued that the era was also about how “culturally African people transformed themselves”.

The comments in a foreword written by the commission’s chairman, Tony Sewell, were condemned within hours of their publication yesterday. They were said by Labour to “glorify” and put a positive spin on slavery and empire.

This morning it emerged that Boris Johnson’s most senior black adviser quit shortly before the report was published.

Samuel Kasumu, an

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2021-04-01 09:00:00Z
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Boris Johnson's most senior black adviser to step down in May - Sky News

The prime minister's most senior black adviser is to step down from the government.

Samuel Kasumu will leave his role as special adviser for civil society and communities in May.

It comes a day after a government-backed review of racial disparities in Britain was published.

The Commission on Race and Ethnic Disparities' 258-page report was criticised for being "steeped in denial".

But Number 10 sources rejected reports that Mr Kasumu's resignation is linked to this.

The commission's report, which explored ethnic and race disparities within education, employment, the criminal justice system and health, argued that the UK is no longer a country "where the system is deliberately rigged against ethnic minorities".

It said the UK "should be regarded as a model for other white-majority countries" although it cannot be considered "a post racial society".

More from Politics

"Too often 'racism' is the catch-all explanation, and can be simply implicitly accepted rather than explicitly examined," the report argued.

"The evidence shows that geography, family influence, socio-economic background, culture and religion have more significant impact on life chances than the existence of racism."

The report argues there is an "increasingly strident form of anti-racism thinking that seeks to explain all minority disadvantage through the prism of white discrimination", which diverts attention away from other factors behind disparities of outcome.

It criticised what it said was the "confusing" way the term "institutional racism" has been applied, arguing it should only be used when there is proven deep-seated, systemic racism present and not as a "catch-all" term for any microaggression.

Labour's shadow justice secretary David Lammy said black Britons were being "gaslighted", while fellow MP Diane Abbott told Sky News the report was "more about politics than the policy" and "taking us back in the argument for racial justice, not taking us forward".

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2021-04-01 07:30:00Z
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