Wednesday, August 3, 2011

Shock Nazi investigation

TWISTED BNP chief Chris Hurst gives a Nazi salute at a fascist gig by the singer who inspired massacre monster Anders Breivik.

Hurst, the BNP's London Regional Secretary, cried "Sieg heil" as pop girl Saga sang the Norwegian fiend's favourite songs at a rally in Hungary.

He also spouted racist bile to an undercover Sun team who infiltrated the hate-filled festival, attended by thousands of neo-Nazis from across Europe.


Hurst said: "It's good to fight back - but not by killing young white people."

Monster ... Breivik
Monster ... Breivik

The warped 22-year-old reckoned the victims were needed to "breed" to increase the white population.
And blaming immigration for Breivik's shocking slaughter, he added: "Isolated incidents like that are going to happen more and more as the problem gets worse."


Hurst was talking to an undercover Sun team before a concert by far-right Swedish singer Saga, whose horrific racist lyrics inspired Breivik.

Candidate ... Hurst's election pic
Candidate ... Hurst's election pic

During the two-hour gig - billed as a highlight of a fascist rally in Hungary - he repeatedly gave the Nazi stiff-arm salute and shouted, "Sieg heil."
And he sang along with Saga, who urges followers to rise up in the name of Aryan supremacy, as she signed off with a cover of an anthem, Tomorrow Belongs To Me, by neo-Nazi English band Skrewdriver.

It ends: "Oh Fatherland, Fatherland, show us the sign your children have waited to see. The morning will come when the world is mine. Tomorrow belongs to me."

Profile ... Hurst's online contact details
Profile ... Hurst's online contact details

Saga performed brazenly even though Breivik's 77 victims in a bomb and shooting atrocity are still being buried.
And Hurst's attendance at the rally, along with his racist rants and shameful behaviour, give the lie to the BNP's attempts to present itself as a mainstream, respectable political party.


The very nature of the five-day gathering of extremists from across Europe, which ends tomorrow, was also deeply disturbing.
The remote site in Veroce, 25 miles north of Hungarian capital Budapest, was packed with stalls selling Nazi memorabilia, copies of Mein Kampf and T-shirts bearing images of Hitler, his deputy Rudolf Hess, swastikas and the gates of Auschwitz concentration camp.

Caught on camera ... Hurst gives Nazi salute to far-right idol Saga
Caught on camera ... Hurst gives Nazi salute to far-right idol Saga


Many among the thousands of "delegates" displayed tattoos of stormtroopers or slogans such as White Power.

There were meetings, debates and showings of films, including one about the Hitler Youth.

Rabble rouser ... Saga salutes
Rabble rouser ... Saga salutes

And the rally was held behind a wall of private security guards and a cordon of police.
Hurst, of Whitton, South West London, is rising through the ranks of the BNP.
The politics graduate is close to party leader Nick Griffin and stood against Business Secretary Vince Cable in Twickenham at last year's general election, winning 654 votes.
He was hand-picked to help organise BNP campaigns for the next local London and mayoral elections, and will vet candidates.
Talking about the party, he said: "I've met Nick Griffin many times. He is a sound bloke. He is onside. He's not perfect by any stretch of the imagination but who of us are?"

And turning quickly to the subject of immigration, he added: "Why do we want hundreds of thousands of foreigners coming into our country every year?"
Hurst has been carefully crafting himself as the leader of a new generation of BNP bigots by setting up a youth wing called Resistance, which "fights to secure a future for British children".
But he struggled when asked to define the core issue steering the BNP.

He said the party had been "outflanked" by the English Defence League on Islam and by the UK Independence Party on Europe - and was losing recruits to both.
Hurst was at the rally with a Hungarian-born BNP pal known simply as "Z" as his full name is difficult to pronounce.

Hate-filled songs ... Saga
Hate-filled songs ... Saga


Boozing at a beer stall before the Saga gig, he introduced Z as the treasurer for the party's East End of London branch. He tried to recruit the Sun team into the party and said of the rally: "This is just like the BNP's red, white and blue festival - exactly the same thing."
Saga's concert was the headline event of Tuesday evening, taking place inside a converted circus tent in the heart of the festival site.
Breivik devoted three pages of his sick "manifesto for murder" to the poisonous blonde singer's lyrics.

Shocking ... Sun man Flynn with 'Auschwitz gates' T-shirt
Shocking ... Sun man Flynn with 'Auschwitz gates' T-shirt

He quoted 12 songs in their entirety and told how he listened to her music as he prepared his atrocity.
He urged others who want to follow his lead as a "conservative martyr" to motivate themselves by studying her words.

Hurst stood close to the stage, bouncing around with his cronies as he gave Nazi salutes.

Echoes of Holocaust ... T-shirts and mugs emblazoned with slogans including White Power
Echoes of Holocaust ... T-shirts and mugs emblazoned with slogans including White Power

He confided to our undercover team that he had been ordered to never give the salute publicly in case it was caught on camera and damaged the BNP's carefully-crafted image.
But confident he was among friends, he went ahead with abandon.
The Sun team listened as Saga opened her set with a hate-filled rock song called Hypocrite.

It includes the lyrics: "You complain about the immigration. You really make me sick. It was your vote that opened the border you filthy hypocrite."

Badges of hate ... for sale
Badges of hate ... for sale

She went on to perform her ballad Ode To A Dying People, which says of Aryans: "The greatest race to ever walk the earth, dying a slow death with insane mirth. The tomb has been prepared, our race betrayed, white man fight the flight towards the grave."
Hurst grinned: "I saw Saga play in London two years ago.
"I was proper p***ed up. I got on the stage and took the microphone from her and started singing.
"So I want to see if she remembers me."

Fists of fury ... crowd hails Saga's performance at Nazi festival
Fists of fury ... crowd hails Saga's performance at Nazi festival
By Azwie Stan

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