New clues emerge of accused New Zealand
gunman Tarrant's ties to far right groups
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[April 04, 2019]
By Byron Kaye and Tom Allard
SYDNEY (Reuters) - From its clubhouses in
Melbourne and Sydney, the Lads Society promotes drug-free living and
exercise, as well as "white resistance" and Islamophobia, according to
online statements and interviews with two of its leaders.
One of Australia's most high profile extremist groups, its members last
year infiltrated the youth arm of the National Party, part of the ruling
coalition government, before being exposed and ejected due to their far
right views.
Now, the group has come to prominence again – and to the attention of
security agencies – after a gunman shot 50 people dead at two New
Zealand mosques.
In the hours after the shootings, the Lads Society's private Facebook
page lit up as its members discussed the attack and the man arrested and
charged with murder, 28-year-old Australian Brenton Tarrant, according
to five screenshots of the Facebook messages which were provided by a
person with access to the group and reviewed by Reuters.
"He had been on the scene for a while," said Tom Sewell, founder of the
Lads Society, according to the previously undisclosed messages on the
Lads Society's Facebook page.
"He made heaps on Bitcoin and paid for his own holidays, I spoke to him
back in 2017 when he was donating money to everyone," added Sewell.
In a later public statement, Sewell said he and Lads Society leaders
were interviewed about the Christchurch attacks by the Australia
Security Intelligence Organisation (ASIO), the country's domestic spy
agency.
ASIO said it does not comment on specific individuals, intelligence or
operational matters but was alert to the threat from people with
"extreme right-wing ideologies". The Australian Federal Police also
declined to comment when asked about any ties Tarrant had to the Lads
Society.
Sewell declined to comment on Tarrant or whether he knew him, and his
messages provided no further details.
Tarrant, who is now in custody and has said he plans to represent
himself, was not available for comment.
The Lads Society's page was shut down after Facebook targeted white
nationalists in the wake of the Christchurch massacre. Reuters was
unable to verify the claims on the since-deleted Facebook page.
However, Sewell's messages to the private group on the Lads Society
Facebook page, which carried the same profile photo as a photo posted on
Sewell's Instagram account, add to evidence Tarrant was engaged with
Australia's far right.
On the 8Chan message board minutes before the attack, Tarrant posted
links to a livestream video of the attack and said: "You are all top
blokes and the best bunch of cobbers a man could ask for." Cobber is
Australian slang for friend, and a term popular among Australian white
nationalists.
As Australia confronts the uncomfortable truth that Tarrant was one of
its own, the country has been gripped by acrimonious debate about both
its past race policies and whether recent political discourse about
immigration and Islam had any role to play in his radicalization.
In the space of a few minutes outside a Sydney mosque the day after the
Christchurch shootings, Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison
encapsulated the country's contradictory identity.
"We are a tolerant, multicultural society, the most successful
immigration country on the planet," he said, before pivoting to a darker
undercurrent. "These white supremacist, white separatist views, are not
new. I mean, these sentiments have sadly existed in Australia for
hundreds of years."
OFF THE RADAR
Tarrant grew up in the small Australian city of Grafton, where he worked
as a gym instructor and developed a passion for gaming and computers,
according to local media reports citing the gym owner and his
grandmother.
In a "manifesto" distributed online just before the attack, Tarrant said
he formed his racist beliefs on the internet and downplayed his links to
Australia, saying he was radicalized abroad.
He acted alone, the manifesto said, although he said he had donated to
far-right groups from an inheritance and a cryptocurrency windfall.
Austrian Chancellor Sebastian Kurz last week confirmed his country's
far-right Identitarian Movement had received 1,500 euros ($1,690) from
Tarrant.
Most of his past nine years was spent traveling across Europe, Asia and
the Middle East.
Tarrant was "on nobody's radar, anywhere," said Morrison, spending only
45 days in the past three years in Australia.
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Australia's Senator Fraser Anning poses for a photo during an
interview in Gladstone, Queensland, Australia March 25, 2019.
Picture taken March 25, 2019. REUTERS/Tom Allard
According to the Australian Broadcasting Corporation, citing
archives of the deleted Facebook account of the United Patriots
Front (UPF), another Australian far-right group, Tarrant described
one of that group's leaders, Blair Cottrell, as "Emperor". Reuters
was unable to independently verify that detail.
Cottrell - a muscle-bound, blond-haired carpenter - founded the UPF
alongside Sewell. Sewell later started Lads Society in 2017, with
Cottrell's promotional support. Cottrell, described by sources as
the movement's main figurehead in Australia, still heads UPF and
appears in Lads Society photos and videos but holds no formal
position in that group.
Cottrell told Reuters that, as best he could tell, Tarrant had
donated only once to groups he was associated with - A$50 to the UPF.
"I don't believe I influenced Tarrant much at all. Maybe three years
ago, he was in support of our specific opposition to that mosque
development in Bendigo."
In 2017, Cottrell and two other UPF members were found guilty of
inciting contempt of Muslims after they filmed a mock beheading
outside council offices to protest a mosque development in the small
Victorian city.
GOING MAINSTREAM
White extremists gained momentum in 2014 after an Islamist gunman
took a group of hostages in a Sydney cafe, analysts and members of
the movement say.
The following year, thousands of people attended rallies arranged by
anti-Islam group Reclaim Australia, and some far-right politicians
spoke at the events.
Suspicions about the presence of Lads Society members in the youth
wing of the National Party first emerged after officials of the
rural-based party noted an influx of new members from cities.
After ties to the Lads Society were revealed in local media, the
National Party expelled 19 people, saying in a statement in November
it "would not rest until every last one of these extremists have
been identified and removed."
In Australia's latest census, about 90 percent nominated their
ancestry as Australian or European, while 2.5 percent were recorded
as Muslims.
Just under a quarter of Australians have a "negative attitude" to
Muslims, according to a 2018 report from the Scanlon Foundation, a
group that tracks social cohesion.
FAR-RIGHT SENATOR
In the wake of the Christchurch attacks, Australia's Islamophobes
flooded social media with memes and messages in support of Fraser
Anning, the Australian senator who blamed the bloodshed on "an
immigration program which allowed Muslim fanatics to migrate to New
Zealand".
In an interview with Reuters, Anning said he was "completely
opposed" to the attacks in Christchurch.
However, he echoed the "replacement theory" embraced by Tarrant and
the global white supremacist movement. Muslims, he said, "are going
to outbreed us very quickly".
Anning has picked up 28,600 Facebook followers in the past four
weeks, data provided by his office shows, and now has more than
122,000 followers.
Sewell and Cottrell in statements and interviews with Reuters and
other media, also said they were appalled by the attacks on the
mosques.
"Politically motivated violence is not in the interest of our
organization or our community," Sewell said in his since-deleted
Facebook statement on March 20.
In his interview with Reuters, Sewell said further that Tarrant's
violence had caused governments to become "extremely reactionary",
passing legislation "without thinking it through".
New Zealand moved swiftly to ban the kinds of semi-automatic weapons
used in the attacks.
"We have a new level of totalitarian thought crime legislation
across New Zealand and shortly here in Australia too," Sewell added.
(Reporting by Byron Kaye, Tom Allard and Jonathan Barrett. Editing
by John Chalmers and Lincoln Feast.)
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