The Jewish Chronicle

Report: neo-Nazis listing shul locations

- BY LEE HARPIN

FAR-RIGHT EXTREMISTS have been using British-registered social media platforms to circulate antisemiti­c and neo-Nazi material — sparking fears that vulnerable individual­s may have been radicalise­d during the Covid-19 lockdown, a new report has shown.

The report from the Community Security Trust (CST) highlighte­d a widely circulated graphic that listed a number of British-Jewish organisati­ons and locations of synagogues, as well as four social media platforms that have been most used to spread such material.

The graphic blamed Jews for “forcing multicultu­ralism upon Europe” and “forcing these invaders into your country”.

The CST report — Hate Fuel: the hidden online world fuelling far right terror — coincides with a massive surge in neo-Nazi propaganda being shared on social media in the wake of the killing of George Floyd in America.

It stressed that the problem of farright indoctrina­tion was not limited to platforms such as Facebook and You Tube, and alternativ­e platforms such as Bitchute, Telegram, Gab and 4chan are now being targeted by extremists to promote a race war.

Bitchute, a UK registered company, was revealed to have hosted propaganda videos from the proscribed National Action group along with thousands of other antisemiti­c videos, which have been viewed thousands of times.

Gab hosted a dedicated network of British users called “Britfam” that has 4,000 members and approximat­ely 1,000 posts per day. Far-right extremists use the network to circulate racism, antisemiti­sm and Holocaust denial.

Telegram has also hosted several images and posts celebratin­g British terrorists Thomas Mair and David Copeland, and other far-right terrorists such as Brenton Tarrant and Robert Bowers; as well as images calling on users to kill Jews.

CST has shared the report in recent weeks with Counter-Terror Police, the Home Office, the Counter-Extremism Commission­er and Lord John Mann.

Some of the National Action’s videos were taken down from Bitchute after the CST’s report highlighte­d their presence.

While the main body of the report was completed on May 1, it includes an appendix showing that these same platforms all host racist content on the killing of George Floyd and the protests in the United States.

This includes recent material celebratin­g or justifying Mr Floyd’s death; content calling for more killings; messages welcoming the idea of a race war; and antisemiti­c content claiming that Jews were behind the protests.

Speaking to Channel 4 News last week, Neil Basu, head of Counter-Terrorism Policing, voiced concerns about online radicalisa­tion amid the lockdown.

He said: “One of my biggest fears is people have been locked down looking at nothing but their screens for over three months now, and there has been an increase in propaganda grievance narratives being twisted online to try and radicalise people who are vulnerable.”

Mark Gardner, the CST’s Director of Communicat­ions, said: “We now need to move on to the incitement part — how is this ideology being spread?”

He added that counter-terrorism police need to take this kind of far-right online activity “as seriously as they did when Al Qaeda and Isis were putting this kind of material out”.

New laws are to be introduced to hold social media companies hosting this material to account.

Recent online material includes messages saying Jews were behind the George Floyd protests

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