Difference between revisions of "Markus Beisicht"

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'''Markus Beisicht''' was described in 2007 by ''Der Spiegel'' as, along with [[Manfred Rouhs]], one of the 'party chiefs' of [[Pro NRW]], a far-right populist political grouping which emerged from [[Pro Köln]] as did the anti-Islam [[Pro Bürgerbewegung]] network. Its activities centrally involved opposition to the building of mosques.<ref>German far-right trying to gain support for "anti-Islam" party, Text of report by independent German news magazine Der Spiegel website on 31 December, [Report by Andrea Brandt and Guido Kleinhubert: "Playing With Fear; Cologne Radicals Want To Enter the Parliaments With the First 'Anti-Islam Party' - Constitutional Protection Officials Are Alarmed - And so Is the NPD"], BBC Monitoring Europe - Political, 31 December 2007.</ref>.
 
'''Markus Beisicht''' was described in 2007 by ''Der Spiegel'' as, along with [[Manfred Rouhs]], one of the 'party chiefs' of [[Pro NRW]], a far-right populist political grouping which emerged from [[Pro Köln]] as did the anti-Islam [[Pro Bürgerbewegung]] network. Its activities centrally involved opposition to the building of mosques.<ref>German far-right trying to gain support for "anti-Islam" party, Text of report by independent German news magazine Der Spiegel website on 31 December, [Report by Andrea Brandt and Guido Kleinhubert: "Playing With Fear; Cologne Radicals Want To Enter the Parliaments With the First 'Anti-Islam Party' - Constitutional Protection Officials Are Alarmed - And so Is the NPD"], BBC Monitoring Europe - Political, 31 December 2007.</ref>.
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Hope Not Hate calls Beisicht, a 'fascist activist' and lawyer.<ref name="CJreport2">''The Counterjihad Movement: the global trend feeding anti-Muslim hate'', Hope Not Hate, 2011, p63.</ref>
  
 
==2009 conference==
 
==2009 conference==

Revision as of 13:30, 24 February 2015

Markus Beisicht was described in 2007 by Der Spiegel as, along with Manfred Rouhs, one of the 'party chiefs' of Pro NRW, a far-right populist political grouping which emerged from Pro Köln as did the anti-Islam Pro Bürgerbewegung network. Its activities centrally involved opposition to the building of mosques.[1].

Hope Not Hate calls Beisicht, a 'fascist activist' and lawyer.[2]

2009 conference

Pro NRW was due to host an 'anti-Islamisation conference' in Cologne on 8-10 May 2009[3] at which Beisicht was due to speak alongside Filip Dewinter, Lars Hedegaard, Paul Belien and others.[4] Both Robert Spencer[5] and Pamela Geller pulled out of the conference.[6]

Affiliations

Notes

  1. German far-right trying to gain support for "anti-Islam" party, Text of report by independent German news magazine Der Spiegel website on 31 December, [Report by Andrea Brandt and Guido Kleinhubert: "Playing With Fear; Cologne Radicals Want To Enter the Parliaments With the First 'Anti-Islam Party' - Constitutional Protection Officials Are Alarmed - And so Is the NPD"], BBC Monitoring Europe - Political, 31 December 2007.
  2. The Counterjihad Movement: the global trend feeding anti-Muslim hate, Hope Not Hate, 2011, p63.
  3. Anti-Islamisierungs-Kongress 2009, Pro-NRW, accessed via Web Archive 19 January 2015.
  4. [http://www.pro-koeln-online.de/artikel09/230409_pam.htm Wilders-Vertraute Pamela Geller auf Pressekonferenz zum Anti-Islamisierungskongreß in Köln! BÜRGERBEWEGUNG PRO KÖLN E.V., 23 April 2009.
  5. Robert Spencer, Hamas-linked CAIR defames me again, again using libelblogger Charles Johnson's Little Green Footballs talking points, JihadWatch, 24 April 2009.
  6. Pamela Geller, THE PUNK IS PUNKED! CHARLES JOHNSON OF LITTLE GREEN FOOTBALLS SCAMMED! FALLS FOR FAUXTOGRAPHY, Atlas Shrugs, 25 April 2009.