The Canadian government announced Friday that four new terrorist entities had been added to its terror list, three of which are associated with far-right extremist ideology. US-based Three Percenters.
BuzzFeed News
An international neo-Nazi group that once boasted dozens of American members, including two who allegedly plotted mass-casualty attacks, political assassinations, and the bombing of a major media outlet, is again actively recruiting extremists in the United States and Europe.
The Feuerkrieg Division (FKD), which was founded in late 2018 by a 13-year-old boy from Estonia and was composed of mostly young men before it announced its dissolution in February 2020, resurfaced on the messaging app Telegram in May. Members of the group announced that they were ready to “embrace chaos” and “invoke terror” in hopes of destroying modern society.
At the same time, FKD recruiting leaflets and propaganda posters began appearing on the streets of Estonia, Bulgaria, and other European countries, where the group had a strong presence previously. “Strive for the collapse” and “join the revolution,” read digital and physical propaganda posters created by the group tha
11:57 EDT, 4 June 2021
A politics student who ordered Neo-Nazi flags emblazoned with the logo of a far-right terror group told a court today they were his airsoft team.
Andrew Dymock, from Bath, Somerset, allegedly joined white supremacist groups Sonnenkrieg Division and System Resistance Network (SRN) between 2017 and 2018.
Both groups are inspired by the bloodthirsty ideology of the book Siege by American neo-Nazi James Mason whose writings Dymock is said to have posted online.
Dymock, 24, allegedly created and updated the neo-Nazi website The Lion Rises and posted virulent antisemitic content to SRN s Twitter account.
But Dymock claimed that all the far-right material he had amassed linked to research for his dissertation or planted there by an ex-girlfriend.
12:27 EDT, 6 May 2021
A neo-Nazi student used social media to stir up a race war against ethnic minorities, the Old Bailey heard today.
Andrew Dymock, from Somerset, allegedly promoted the white supremacist group the System Resistance Network (SRN) through a Twitter account and a website.
Dymock, who studied politics at Aberystwyth University, is accused of 15 charges, including 12 terrorism-related alleged offences.
He used online platforms to promote and raise money for SRN, which preached zero-tolerance to non-whites, Jewish and Muslim communities and described homosexuality as a disease , jurors were told.
Online articles included the titles Join your local Nazis , The truth about the Holocaust and Homosexuality, the eternal social menace .