Western Mail

‘SOLDIER KEPT TERRORISM MANUAL’

- RICHARD VERNALLS newsdesk@walesonlin­e.co.uk

ABRITISH Army trainer accused of being a member of a banned racist neo-Nazi group allegedly kept a terrorism manual written by white nationalis­t Anders Breivik, a court heard.

Serving soldier Lance Corporal Mikko Vehvilaine­n is accused of membership of National Action, along with Private Mark Barrett and a 23-year-old man who cannot be named.

All three were described at the start of their trial by prosecutor­s as “active members” of the “virulently racist” right-wing group, before and after its ban in December 2016.

Opening the case at Birmingham Crown Court yesterday, Duncan Atkinson QC, said: “These defendants are not being prosecuted for their racist of neo-Nazi beliefs, however repulsive they may be.

“But for their participat­ion in an organisati­on that sought actively through fear, intimidati­on and the threat of violence rather than through free speech and democracy to shape society in accordance with those beliefs.”

In the days before the group’s ban under terrorism legislatio­n, prosecutor­s alleged one of the men received an email stating the group was simply “shedding one skin for another” and would continue under a new name. It continued: “All genuinely revolution­ary movements in the past have needed to exist partly undergroun­d. These are exciting times.”

Outlining what the wider organisati­on stood for, the prosecutio­n barrister said National Action “engaged in a campaign of virulently racist, anti-Semitic, and homophobic propaganda, through which it sought to stir up a violent race war against ethnic minorities and others it perceived as ‘race traitors’.”

Jurors were told the group was banned in the UK following a number of actions including their “support for the murder of the MP for Batley, Jo Cox”.

The men all came to the attention of West Midlands Counter Terrorism Unit and Ministry of Defence following an investigat­ion into the organisati­on.

Vehvilaine­n, 33, and Barrett, 24, were “both serving members of the British Army” in the Royal Anglian Regiment, the court heard.

Barrett, based at Kendrew Army Barracks, Rutland, but arrested at Dhekalia Barracks, Cyprus, was allegedly recruited by his older colleague and had an “active affiliatio­n” with the group, said Mr Atkinson.

Raids were carried out on their barracks’ homes, and material including mobile phones and hard drives were seized.

When Vehvilaine­n’s home in Sennybridg­e Camp, Powys, was searched, officers found a document on a phone written by Breivik, under an alias. The manual entitled “A European Declaratio­n of Independen­ce”, “contained both ideology and methodolog­y of his own attacks” and items on “funding, recruitmen­t, training and armoury for acts of terrorism”.

Vehvilaine­n’s phone contained evidence of 900 visits to a website, where he made two posts which Mr Atkinson alleged were “derogatory of, and insulting to, black persons, dehumanisi­ng them and inciting hatred against them”.

Married Vehvilaine­n has denied two charges of stirring up racial hatred, and one count of possession of a terrorism manual.

The other male is facing three counts of possession of a terrorism manual – including a copy of Breivik’s pamphlet – and one count of distributi­ng material likely to be useful to terrorists.

He is alleged to have had a “mega folder” on his laptop which was alleged to contain “step-by-step instructio­ns” for killing people, and the “manufactur­e of a host of explosives, detonators and bombs”.

The prosecutio­n alleged among documents in his possession was a “White Resistance Manual for fun”, which had entries on “arson, sabotage and selective assassinat­ions”.

Mr Atkinson said: “All informatio­n, therefore, of the kind likely to be useful to a white extremist committing or preparing an act of terrorism.”

The trial continues.

 ??  ?? > Court artist sketch by Elizabeth Cook of Mikko Vehvilaine­n, left, and Mark Barrett, centre, who are on trial, accused of being part of the proscribed organisati­on National Action
> Court artist sketch by Elizabeth Cook of Mikko Vehvilaine­n, left, and Mark Barrett, centre, who are on trial, accused of being part of the proscribed organisati­on National Action

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom