Daily Mail

UK soldier in neo-Nazi case ‘was preparing for race war’

- By Jemma Buckley

A BRITISH soldier accused of being a member of a banned far-Right terrorist group stockpiled daggers, machetes and knuckledus­ters at his Army home in preparatio­n for a ‘race war’, a court heard.

When Lance Corporal Mikko Vehvilaine­n, 33, was arrested, police found a cache of weapons and Nazi flags, while an SS ceremonial dagger and Swastika bunting were found at another address, the jury was told. Vehvilaine­n, an Army trainer, is accused of being a member of banned neo-Nazi group National Action, along with fellow soldier Private Mark Barrett, 25, and a 23-year-old man who cannot be named for legal reasons.

Birmingham Crown Court was told he had drafted a copy of a magazine called Extinction in which he wrote about creating ‘all-white stronghold­s’. In the document, he is alleged to have urged members of National Action to be ‘prepared to fight and die for your race in a possible last stand for our survival’. Prosecutor Duncan Atkinson QC said: ‘The lists, and indeed the substantia­l quantity of weaponry recovered from his address, revealed and speak of his intention to stockpile weapons and other equipment in preparatio­n for the “race war” that he spoke of so often.’

Outlining the moments after Vehvilaine­n’s arrest at service family accommodat­ion at Sennybridg­e Camp, Powys, the QC said police saw a swastika flag inside a cupboard. Mr Atkinson added: ‘He commented when the officers saw it: “That’s what this is about, isn’t it?”

‘Stockpiles of weaponry were recovered. The prosecutio­n suggest that these items were found because Vehvilaine­n was putting into effect, quite literally, a call to arms to those like him who wanted to create a white-only society.’

Barrett, who served alongside Vehvilaine­n in the Royal Anglian Regiment, was detained at an Army base in Cyprus, on the same date last year. His effects were said to have included two National Action cards – one labelled White Jihad – and Nazi images. The defendants deny being members of a banned terrorist group. The trial continues.

‘Substantia­l quantity of weaponry’

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