VOA标准英语2012--Immigration Tensions Grow as Far Right Plots Pan-European League
时间:2012-04-05 06:53:40
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Immigration Tensions Grow as Far Right Plots Pan-European League
Around 200 members of far-right movements from across Europe came together in Aarhus, Denmark last Saturday.
“This day will be remembered and etched into history, 31st of the third 2012. The date where people came together from all European countries to give birth to the European
Defense1 League," said Tommy Robinson, one of the organizers. A member of the English Defense League, he took to the stage to hail the meeting.
Even if the numbers did not match the
rhetoric2,
radicalism3 expert Matthew Feldman of the University of Northampton says the meeting was a
landmark4.
“It does represent the first attempt at a really pan-European linking of the ‘defense leagues’ to counter what they see as an Islamization of Europe,” Feldman
noted5.
Just days earlier, an Islamist gunman, Mohamed Merah, launched a series of attacks around the French city of Toulouse,
killing6 seven people. Among the victims were three Jewish schoolchildren.
In addition, last August in Norway, right-wing extremist Anders Breivik set off explosives in Oslo before carrying out a mass shooting at a youth summer camp - killing 77 people in all. He has since been diagnosed with schizophrenia.
Analyst7 Feldman says right-wing groups like the English Defense League try to avoid being labeled as extremist by adopting new
ideologies8.
“What we see now is what’s called an ethno-differentialist perspective in the literature," explained Feldman, "which says, ‘We actually don’t think that any group is better or worse than others. We simply think that cultural mixing, that
multiculturalism9 is the great evil, because it destroys both cultures that are mixing."”
Such ideas have long been
espoused10 by far-right political parties like the Front Nationale in France. Its leader,
Marine11 Le Pen, is expected to do well in next month’s presidential election.
In the Netherlands, Geert Wilders’ anti-Islam platform gave his Freedom party more than 15 percent of the vote in the 2010 elections. VOA
spoke12 to him before the poll.
“I have nothing against Muslims but I believe that Islam is a totalitarian
ideology13 and it goes against our freedom,” Wilders said.
Feldman believes new technologies are changing the far-right politics of old.
“For example, the software Facebook, where it’s very easy to quickly
coordinate14 something like a street
demonstration15 or to be able to have the grassroots communicating with each other and with the leadership,” noted Feldman.
The analyst adds that the number of anti-fascist protestors who turned out to counter last week's rally exceeded the far right numbers by 20 to one.
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