Dozens of neo-Nazis in Scotland exposed after cyber attack leaks details

DOZENS of neo-Nazis in Scotland have been exposed after their details were leaked in a cyber attack on a website.

The Swedish site Midgård boasts that it sells Nazi music, clothing and propaganda that “fight for the white cause” and “deliver products to nationalists all around the world.”

2

The hacked data with made public by an anti-fascist group AFA SwedenCredit: Getty
Campaigners said "There’s no way to be on this shop without knowing what they stand for.”

2

Campaigners said “There’s no way to be on this shop without knowing what they stand for.”

A hack by anti-fascist group AFA Sweden, based in Stockholm, has put over 20,000 records of global orders in the public domain containing names, addresses, phone numbers and purchase information of Midgård customers for the last five years.

And 36 individuals from Scotland placed multiple orders from 2017 and 2022, reports the Herald.

Midgård had six different customers from Glasgow between 2017 and 2022.

There were three from Falkirk, and two each from Larkhall and Inverurie in Aberdeenshire.

A man from Edinburgh placed 20 orders between 2018 and 2021 for albums from bands such as Skrewdriver and No Remorse.

No Remorse have recorded songs titled ‘Belsen Was a Gas‘ and ‘The N*****s Came Over’.

And a Lanarkshire customer used an email address containing the numbers 1488 – which refers to the “fourteen words” and ‘Heil Hitler’ with H being the eighth letter in the alphabet.

The number 1488 was used by Charleston Church shooter Dylan Roof who murdered nine African Americans with 88 bullets.

The New Zealand Christchurch mosque shooter also made reference to 1488 in his manifesto.

There were also customers revealed to be from Alloa, Arbroath, Bishopbriggs, Broughty Ferry, Edinburgh, Cumbernauld, Dundee, Hamilton, Grangemouth, Kilwinning, Livingston, Lochinver, Paisley, Perth, Port Glasgow, Strathaven, Stenhousemuir, Stranraer, Tain and Whitecraig.

Anti-facist charity Hope Not Hate told the Herald the website sells stickers and posters which are used for activism, not simply personal use.

Patrik Hermansson of Hope Not Hate said: “The shop has increasingly moved from the Nazi music scene into a provider of material for far-right activists in the UK and other countries.

“The people behind it are quite well known, they have connections to the Nordic Resistance movement, one of the largest and most extreme organised Nazi groups in Europe, with members who have committed acts of terrorism.

“They themselves have a criminal record for hate crime charges.

“There’s no way to be on this shop without knowing what they stand for.”

FOLLOW US ON GOOGLE NEWS

Read original article here

Denial of responsibility! Trusted Bulletin is an automatic aggregator of the all world’s media. In each content, the hyperlink to the primary source is specified. All trademarks belong to their rightful owners, all materials to their authors. If you are the owner of the content and do not want us to publish your materials, please contact us by email – [email protected]. The content will be deleted within 24 hours.

Leave a Comment