|
Online edition of India's National Newspaper Saturday, August 25, 2001 |
|
Front Page |
National |
Southern States |
Other States |
International |
Opinion |
Business |
Sport |
Science & Tech |
Miscellaneous |
Features |
Classifieds |
Employment |
Index |
Home |
|
International
| Previous
| Next
BNP 'mole' in Conservative Party
By Hasan Suroor
LONDON, AUG 24. The Tories' bid to reach out to diverse social
groups and shed their ``exclusivist'' image suffered a jolt today
after it emerged that a senior campaign manager of Mr. Ian Duncan
Smith, the front- runner for Tory leadership, has close links
with the fanatically racist British National Party (BNP). Though
Mr. Duncan Smith moved quickly to sack him, the discovery of a
BNP ``mole'' prompted speculation that there might be more
``closet'' racists in the Tory ranks.
As the party launched an investigation into how Mr. Edgar
Griffin, father of the BNP chief, Mr. Nick Griffin, was appointed
vice-president of Mr. Duncan Smith's campaign team in Wales, Tory
critics said it undermined the party's multicultural credentials.
Mr. Griffin, whose wife is also a BNP activist and whose links
with the even more extremist National Front are believed to go
back a long time, further embarrassed the Tory leadership by
claiming that there was no difference in the policies of the
Tories and the BNP. ``The two parties are almost the same on
long-term plans. In terms of manifestoes of the Tories and the
BNP, you can hardly tell the difference'', he said. He admitted
having ``sympathy'' for the BNP saying it was a democratic party.
Observers recalled that the BNP was behind the race riots in
Oldham in the run-up to the general elections in June and
benefited from racial tension. Mr. Griffin, whose son was a
candidate in Oldham, praised the BNP's performance and policies.
``They picked up 16,000 votes in Oldham. You don't pick up 16,000
votes unless you have good grounds, do you?'' he said.
Mr. Griffin, 79, has been a Tory Party member since 1948 while
maintaining links with parties of the far right. The Guardian
today said he introduced his son to the National Front in 1975
and worked for charities ``linked to the Italian fascist, Mr.
Roberto Fiore.'' His wife contested as a BNP candidate against
Mr. Duncan Smith at the last general election. Mr. Duncan Smith
said this proved that he had nothing to do with the BNP, whose
policies he said he ``abhorred''. He suggested that attempts to
link him with the BNP was part of a ``smear'' campaign by his
party rivals and supporters of Mr. Kenneth Clarke, the other
contender for Tory leadership. He pointedly said that Mr. Griffin
had been a party member ``under'' Mr. John Major and Mr. Steve
Norris the party vice-chairman - both of whom are supporting Mr.
Clarke in the leadership election.
How Mr. Griffin came to be a senior figure in Mr. Duncan Smith's
campaign however remained a mystery and he said he had asked the
party's Welsh unit to find out. He said obviously there was
someone who knew about Mr. Griffin's links all along but had
chosen not to report it to the leadership, and instead leak it to
the media. Mr. Griffin's cover was blown when he answered a
telephone call for his wife at the BNP office. Mr. Duncan Smith
sacked him immediately and said he ``loathed'' all that the BNP
stood for. His critics however recalled that in his early years
as MP he made racially coded speeches and showed ``interest'' in
a scheme of voluntary repatriation of immigrants. Mr. Norris
said:``Ian's problem is that however nicely he says it, his
message attracts precisely these sorts of people. That's why so
many of us are so determined to stop the party drifting to the
Right.''
While the anti-Duncan Smith camp in the party has seized on the
issue to damn him in the run-up to the leadership election,
independent commentators said the presence of a BNP sympathiser
in the party was something that should worry all Tories as it was
politically damaging to their image - and their attempt to
rebrand themselves as an ``inclusive'' platform. The impression
that the party harboured such elements would further alienate it
from the British mainstream. The former Tory Deputy Prime
Minister, Mr. Michael Heseltine, meanwhile, warned that the
Tories could find themselves in political wilderness for a whole
generation if Mr. Duncan Smith became the leader.
Send this article to Friends by E-Mail
|
|
Section : International Previous : Condit breaks silence, but doubts remain Next : Mobile phones make a dent on cinema | |
|
Front Page |
National |
Southern States |
Other States |
International |
Opinion |
Business |
Sport |
Science & Tech |
Miscellaneous |
Features |
Classifieds |
Employment |
Index |
Home | |
|
Copyrights © 2001 The Hindu Republication or redissemination of the contents of this screen are expressly prohibited without the written consent of The Hindu |
|