Student ‘set up website to promote’ extremists
AN alleged neo-Nazi student campaigned on social media for an extreme right-wing group which aimed to “stir up a race war”, a court has heard.
Andrew Dymock, 23, promoted the System Resistance Network (SRN) group through a Twitter account and a website, the Old Bailey was told.
The defendant, from Bath in Somerset, is on trial on 15 charges, including 12 terrorism-related alleged offences.
Opening his trial, prosecutor Jocelyn Ledward said the case centred on a period in 2017 and 2018 when Dymock was studying politics at Aberystwyth University in Wales.
He used online platforms to promote and raise money for SRN, which “preached zero-tolerance” to nonwhites, Jewish and Muslim communities and described homosexuality as a “disease”, jurors were told.
Ms Ledward said: “Its clarion call was for the expulsion of all minorities and a white revolution.
“Its online campaign, comprising virulently racist, anti-Semitic and homophobic propaganda, sought to stir up a race war against ethnic minorities and others that it perceived as ‘race traitors’.”
SRN was one of a small number of organisations which filled a “dubious gap” left following the proscription of far-right group National Action and was itself banned in 2020.
Ms Ledward said: “Before its proscription, the prosecution case contends that Mr Dymock was not only an active member of SRN but also participated in its activities in significant and specific ways.
“It is the prosecution case that he set up and operated both a website and a Twitter account which he used to promote, encourage and advance the organisation and its aims.”
Online articles included the titles “Join your local Nazis”, “The truth about the Holocaust” and “Homosexuality, the eternal social menace”, jurors were told.
Jurors heard how Dymock was expelled from SRN in late February 2018.
An examination of Dymock’s computer allegedly revealed longstanding extremist views dating back to when he was 17.
Examples included a Google translation of the words “Kill all of the Jews”, the court heard.
In a text message to a girlfriend, he declared he was “1488 till I’m in the crate”, in reference to a neo-Nazi numerical code, jurors heard.
In addition, Dymock had books, flags, clothes and badges with links to the extreme right wing in his bedroom at home and university, jurors were told
However, Ms Ledward told jurors Dymock was not being prosecuted for holding racist, anti-Semitic or homophobic beliefs, or for his “adherence to a neo-Nazi creed”.
Its online campaign... sought to stir up a race war against ethnic minorities and others JOCELYN LEDWARD
She said: “Rather, he is facing prosecution for his encouragement of terrorist activity, of violence, as a means to shape society in accordance with his beliefs, rather than through free speech and democracy.”
She said Dymock would deny being behind the online accounts and would say he was “set up” by others.
He denies five charges of encouraging terrorism, two of funding terrorism, stirring up racial hatred and hatred based on sexual orientation, four counts of disseminating terrorist publications, possessing a terrorist document and possessing racially inflammatory material.
The case continues.