

#Tommy robinson panorama video free
“BBC staff should be free to do their jobs without these threats,” the NUJ spokesperson said.


In a statement, the National Union of Journalists (NUJ) said they “roundly condemn Tommy Robinson … and his fellow, far-right thugs who intend to intimidate staff at the corporation, particularly those working on Panorama”. “He speaks up for things that are right, he tells the truth and he can mobilise lots of people like you, and that’s what they fear,” he told demonstrators. The Ukip leader, Gerard Batten, was one of several that spoke before Robinson aired his film. He went on to claim that “evidence of a corrupt media is that not one single journalist in Britain has reported on Panodrama”. Members of the crowd sang “oh Tommy, Tommy” as Robinson arrived on stage and attacked the media. Michael Bradley from National Stand Up To Racism said: “Robinson and his are trying to build off the backs of the growth of the far right in the US, Brazil and across Europe, but a united anti-racist and anti-fascist movement can stop them.” Anti-fascist organisers said around 800 people were at their counter-protest. Greater Manchester police said there had been no arrests, and that around 4,000 people had attended the demonstration. He was imprisoned for 10 months for using somebody else's passport to enter the United States, and for mortgage fraud.Ī number of police officers and vehicles were in the area and temporary metal barriers had been placed around the BBC buildings. Robinson has previously been convicted for "using threatening, abusive or insulting behaviour" during a fight between Luton and Newport County football fans. In July 2019 he was given a nine-month jail sentence after he was found guilty of contempt of court for live streaming a video that according to the judge encouraged 'vigilante action' and 'unlawful physical' aggression against defendants in a sexual exploitation trial. His supporters have also staged "Free Tommy" rallies, where there have been clashes with the police. Donald Trump Jr retweeted Robinson's supporters campaigning for his release - Robinson himself was permanently banned from Twitter in March 2018. Robinson's case attracted high profile support from far-right figures including Steve Bannon and Geert Wilders. The sentence was put into effect after Robinson was arrested for live streaming outside Leeds Crown Court during the course of another trial.

Robinson was convicted of contempt of court in May 2017 for filming inside Canterbury Crown Court and given a suspended sentence. He subsequently set up a British section of Pegida, whose name comes from the initials of the German phrase for "Patriotic Europeans Against the Islamisation of the West" However, by October 2015 Robinson was once again campaigning against Islam, addressing a Pegida rally. In 2013 Robinson left the EDL after a high profile BBC documentary "When Tommy Met Mo", which followed Robinson's relationship with Mo Ansar after the pair met while filming a debate about Islam on BBC One's The Big Questions. Robinson had also been a member of the BNP.
#Tommy robinson panorama video series
The EDL were described as the most significant far-right street movement in the UK since the National Front in the 1970s, staging a series of provocative marches in areas of the country with significant Muslim populations. Born Stephen Christopher Yaxley-Lennon in 1982, Luton-based Tommy Robinson was co-founder and leader of the English Defence League between 20.
