CSI: CRIMES ™
Member
Neo-Nazi group joins the fray
YOUNG neo-Nazis yesterday infiltrated the riots at North Cronulla, promoting their white supremacist cause.
One young woman was seen proudly holding up a poster that read: "Aussies fighting back!"
It advertised a group called the Patriotic Youth League.
Founded by former Newcastle student and One Nation activist Stuart McBeth in 2002, the league describes itself as a "radical nationalist" group. It is widely considered to be a neo-Nazi organisation.
It has links to the German-based skinhead group Volksfront as well as the like-minded British Nationalist Party and the New Zealand National Front.
The league has campaigned for the deportation of immigrants and keeping foreign students out of universities.
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League spokesman Luke Connors said he had been forbidden to comment on the Cronulla riots or the events leading up to them.
"I've been given instructions not to say anything," Mr Connors said.
http://www.news.com.au/story/0,10117,17536340-2,00.html
YOUNG neo-Nazis yesterday infiltrated the riots at North Cronulla, promoting their white supremacist cause.
One young woman was seen proudly holding up a poster that read: "Aussies fighting back!"
It advertised a group called the Patriotic Youth League.
Founded by former Newcastle student and One Nation activist Stuart McBeth in 2002, the league describes itself as a "radical nationalist" group. It is widely considered to be a neo-Nazi organisation.
It has links to the German-based skinhead group Volksfront as well as the like-minded British Nationalist Party and the New Zealand National Front.
The league has campaigned for the deportation of immigrants and keeping foreign students out of universities.
Advertisement:
League spokesman Luke Connors said he had been forbidden to comment on the Cronulla riots or the events leading up to them.
"I've been given instructions not to say anything," Mr Connors said.
http://www.news.com.au/story/0,10117,17536340-2,00.html