Western Mail

Student had Mein Kampf ‘to help with dissertati­on’

- LUKE POWELL newsdesk@walesonlin­e.co.uk

AN ALLEGED neo-Nazi student claimed he had copies of Hitler’s Mein Kampf to help him with his university dissertati­on.

Andrew Dymock told the Old Bailey he had the Nazi leader’s autobiogra­phical manifesto – along with books on Satanism – for “research” on right-wing populism.

The 24-year-old is on trial accused of a string of terrorism offences relating to the alleged promotion of the extreme right-wing group System Resistance Network (SRN), which is now banned.

Dymock, who lived with his parents in Bath, Somerset, denies the allegation­s, claiming he was set up.

The former Aberystwyt­h University politics student told the court yesterday: “Mein Kampf was a very important text to one of the modules I was doing on the Second World War.

“I was also using it for my dissertati­on and I used it for some other essays to do with Hitler’s views on the geopolitic­al context in early 20th-century Europe.

“I bought a copy sometime in 2017 and accidently bought it in German. I can’t read German. So I got these copies in English.”

Dymock said another book on “Nazi Satanists” – which he described as an “abhorrent subject” – was also used for his dissertati­on research.

Asked why he was in possession of a SS flag, Dymock claimed he purchased it due to his interest in World War II and flags in general.

He said: “The SS one I got back when I was 16 or 17. I found out they were illegal and, being a dumb teenager, I want to buy one due to the historical interest.”

The defendant admitted going on the far-right “Iron March” forum in late 2017, but told the court he never had an account or posted on it.

Asked if the site featured in his research, Dymock said: “There was a lot of material on there, historical and political.”

The defendant said he was not a national socialist and “never had been”.

Dymock has denied 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 trial at the Old Bailey continues.

 ??  ?? > Andrew Dymock
> Andrew Dymock

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom