The Guardian Australia

Far-right activist Tommy Robinson ‘using former IRA mole to spy on opponents’

- Mark Townsend Home Affairs Editor

A notorious former MI5 informant linked to a series of terrorist murders is working for far-right activist Tommy Robinson to spy on his opponents, including some of the UK’s most prominent anti-fascists, a new book claims.

Peter Keeley, who operated as a mole in the IRA for the UK security services under the name Kevin Fulton, has been working for the former leader of the English Defence League as “surveillan­ce officer” since 2020, covertly following and recording people of interest, including Nick Lowles, chief executive of anti-fascist campaign group Hope not Hate.

In June, Keeley was with Robinson – real name Stephen Yaxley-Lennon, who has conviction­s for fraud, assault, stalking, using threatenin­g behaviour and contempt of court – when they confronted Lowles outside his house.

“Keeley spent days watching my house and filming our movements,” said Lowles. “He would park up in the roads around my house, filming me with a camera hidden in a coffee cup that was sitting on his dashboard. There were times when he tried to follow me on foot as well.”

Under the Fulton pseudonym, Keeley spent more than a decade inside the IRA for British intelligen­ce, first as a bomb maker and then as part of its infamous internal security team, rising through the terrorist group ranks to become one of MI5’s most important informants within the paramilita­ry organisati­on.

He was lauded as a hero by some when his role was finally revealed, but it was not without controvers­y. Keeley has subsequent­ly admitted he targeted and bombed for the cause, allegedly often with the prior knowledge of his British handlers.

In his new book, Tommy, which is published this Monday, Lowles reveals that in early 2020, Keeley became part of Robinson’s team, gathering informatio­n against alleged child sex offenders in Telford, Shropshire.

According to Lowles, the former MI5 agent was brought into the project by Richard Inman, a former soldier who was allegedly a member of a special unit in Northern Ireland. Inman was one of the leaders of Veterans Against Terrorism, an anti-Islam group that emerged after the 2017 terrorist attacks and after Robinson’s Islamophob­ic EDL had disbanded.

Keeley’s apparent role was to conduct surveillan­ce, according to the book, often using a white van, which was kitted out with darkened windows, curtains and numerous camera and video mounts. Sources close to Robinson told Lowles that these included a camera in an adapted coffee cup, which he would leave on his dashboard.

However, when targeting Lowles alleges that Robinson and Keeley opted for more direct tactics: they challenged

him outside his house.

“The confrontat­ion went on for 35 minutes. Lennon [Robinson] was shouting questions at me, filming with his phone. Keeley initially stood behind filming on a video camera, before returning to his vehicle and following from a close distance as I tried to walk off down the street.”

It is not known whether Keeley has a contract to work for Robinson, or if he has been paid.

In Keeley’s autobiogra­phy, Double

Agent, a foreword by a former special forces soldier says: “Kevin Fulton was a British agent actively encouraged to take part in operations that were immoral and illegal. In effect, he was handed a licence to kill by British military intelligen­ce, through its secret wing, the force research unit (FRU).

“Be under no illusion that Fulton took part in operations that resulted in murders, with the full knowledge of the FRU. His police handlers knew it. His military handlers knew it. The British state knew it. And later, so did the families of his victims.”

Lowles said: “The idea that a former IRA bomb maker and someone involved in the deaths of several people, has been sitting outside my house for Lennon is deeply unsettling.”

He also called for the government to reconsider any deal to provide housing for the former secret agent.

“There are huge questions outstandin­g over Keeley’s past and even current connection­s to the security services and what his handlers knew about his illegal activities.”

During his time inside the IRA, Keeley operated predominan­tly inside its South Down brigade, as well as concentrat­ing on the intense IRA activity in South Armagh.

The former British spy is currently facing up to 25 lawsuits in connection with a series of paramilita­ry murders and attacks, which, if they come to court, threaten to blow the lid on exactly what the British government knew in advance about his illegal activities.

In his autobiogra­phy, Keeley claims to have passed on informatio­n about a planned attack while meeting his MI5 handlers in London. Keeley has never been charged with any offences related to the attack.

The Observer made numerous attempts to contact Keeley but he did not respond.

The idea that a former IRA bomb maker has been sitting outside my house for Lennon is deeply unsettling

Nick Lowles, Hope not Hate

 ?? Photograph: Will Oliver/EPA ?? Tommy Robinson outside the Old Bailey in 2018.
Photograph: Will Oliver/EPA Tommy Robinson outside the Old Bailey in 2018.
 ?? Photograph: Everett Collection Inc/Alamy ?? Nick Lowles says Keeley would film outside his house with a hidden camera.
Photograph: Everett Collection Inc/Alamy Nick Lowles says Keeley would film outside his house with a hidden camera.

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