The National - News

TOMMY ROBINSON SENTENCED TO NINE MONTHS IN PRISON

▶ The right-wing activist was found guilty of contempt of court for revealing the identities of men accused of abuse

- TAYLOR HEYMAN and PAUL PEACHEY London

British far-right activist Tommy Robinson has been sentenced to nine months in jail.

Robinson, whose real name is Stephen Yaxley-Lennon, was found to be in contempt of court last Friday after he filmed defendants accused of sexual grooming during a trial last year and posted the footage on social media, breaching reporting restrictio­ns on the case.

The sentence includes six months for filming outside Leeds Crown Court and three months for an earlier incident outside another court.

Robinson, who has a history of criminal conviction­s, violence and racism, sought to cast the case as an attack on freedom of speech and has won support from extremists across the world.

Dutch far-right leader Geert Wilders urged Robinson’s supporters to “raise your voice” if he was jailed amid concerns that Robinson would use the case to raise his profile and secure funding. News of his prison term sparked disturbanc­es outside court when his supporters threw bottles at police.

Nick Lowles, chief executive of anti-extremism campaignin­g group Hope Not Hate, said: “Stephen Lennon put at risk the trial of men accused of horrendous crimes with his livestream­ing antics.

“He doesn’t care about the victims of grooming, he only cares about himself.

“He now faces yet another stint behind bars.

“So far this year, he’s been humiliated at the ballot box, kicked off social media platforms for hate speech, jailed for contempt, and it’s only July.”

The sentence was reduced to 19 weeks after deducting time served in prison last year for one of the offences.

He will be released on licence after 10 weeks in jail.

The co-founder of the English Defence League, 36, has staged violent demonstrat­ions against Islam.

Robinson’s extremism has resulted in him being removed from social media platforms including Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.

A paper published this week said such actions by social media companies was shown to be an effective way of limiting extremists’ influence.

The Global Research Network on Terrorism and Technology found that many far-right groups had migrated to smaller platforms.

But the report found that their messaging had been become more extreme after moving from mainstream platforms.

Robinson was earlier jailed for making the video recordings outside a court in Leeds, northern England, which revealed the identities of defendants accused of the sexual exploitati­on of young girls while jurors were still considerin­g their verdicts.

He successful­ly appealed against the prison term and was released.

The Court of Appeal, however, ordered a rehearing and Attorney General Geoffrey Cox, the government’s chief legal adviser, decided to start contempt proceeding­s against him.

Robinson was 10 minutes late for the sentencing hearing at the Old Bailey on Thursday and was reprimande­d by Dame Victoria Sharp.

“It’s not a very good start,” the judge told him.

Robinson arrived at court wearing a black T-shirt bearing the slogan “convicted of journalism” on the front.

But once he stepped into the courtroom itself, the T-shirt was replaced with a plain black one.

Crowds of supporters gathered outside London’s Old Bailey court, chanting “we want Tommy out” and throwing bottles at police officers.

 ?? Getty ?? Founder and former leader of the English Defence League Tommy Robinson arrives at the Old Bailey on Thursday
Getty Founder and former leader of the English Defence League Tommy Robinson arrives at the Old Bailey on Thursday

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