Far-right Britain First’s leader arrested in Belfast

Monitoring Desk)

LONDON: Britain First’s leader Paul Golding has been arrested in Belfast in connection with speeches he made at a rally, Northern Ireland’s police said Thursday.

Golding was accompanying deputy leader Jayda Fransen in her first court hearing in connection to a speech made at the Northern Ireland Against Terrorism rally in August. Golding was arrested for a speech he made at the same rally, police said. “Detectives investigating speeches made at the Nort-hern Ireland Against Terror-ism Rally on Sunday Aug. 6 this year have arrested a 35-year-old man in the Belfast area today,” the Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) said in a statement.

“He has been taken to Musgrave PSNI Station for interview. There are no further details at this stage,” it added.

Fransen, whose tweets sparked a dispute between U.K. and U.S. officials last month after they were re-tweeted by the U.S. President Trump, claimed that Golding was arrested on the “same trumped up charges”.

Earlier this week, a video recorded in Belfast was posted on a social media account of the anti-Muslim fringe group Britain First and Fransen spoke of the “Islamification of the mainland” and how Belfast’s central mosque was a “den of inequity”. Local councillor Tim Attwood condemned the most recent video.

“I condemn the grotesque and offensive comments ma-de by […] Jayden Fransen fro-m Britain First outside the Islamic Centre last night,” he said. “There can be no place in Belfast for abusive comments such as ‘Muslims [sic] communities are trying to achieve colonization’ or ‘Campai-gning against dens of inequ-ities,” Attwood added.

Fransen gained international notoriety after her anti-Muslim videoclips were retw-eeted by U.S. President last month. U.K. Prime Minister Theresa May criticized Trump.

“I am very clear that the retweeting from Britain First was the wrong thing to do,” she said. Home Secretary Amber Rudd also denounced Britain First as “an extremist organization which seeks to divide communities through their use of hateful narratives which spread lies and stoke tensions”.

“President Trump was wr-ong to retweet videos posted by the far-right group Britain First,” Rudd added. However, she said the state visit invitation to Trump had already been made. No date has been set for the Trump visit but anti-racism activist groups such as Hope Not Hate have started online campaigns for the cancellation of any state visit by the American leader to the U.K.