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Sunday 12 April 2015

North East EDL 'meet & greet' announced

The NE EDL is pleased to announce that we will be holding our long awaited meet & greet in Newcastle




Our popular meet & greet's are the perfect opportunity for anyone wanting to come along and meet other NE EDL members and supporters as well as your local division organiser, ask questions or hear about local issues.

The North East EDL will also be supporting the March for England (MfE) rally in Blackpool on the 25th April this year to celebrate St Georges Day.
We have a coach booked and will be taking payment at this meet and greet for anyone who would like to attend with us.
The cost will be £20.00 per seat & we have pick up points throughout the North East. This is a not a demo but a family orientated procession to celebrate the patron saint of our country and all are welcome to travel with us.
PLEASE NOTE: This is not an EDL event so please leave EDL colours in the house. We will be making this an all day event so we will be leaving early(ish) and our coach will not be leaving to return till early evening (8 or 9 oClock).

Details can be found on our facebook event page >> HERE <<

Drunk Afghan pizza chef hurled racist abuse at fellow drivers after causing A19 crash chaos in Sunderland

Drink-driver caused fire-car pile up. Called fellow motorists ‘white trash’. Was restrained after threats to kill family.


A DRINK-driver who was responsible for rush-hour chaos after he caused a five-car pile-up last month has been banned from the roads.

Afghan refugee Ahmad Reshad Rasooli, 23, ploughed into other cars on the A19 – pushing them into each other like dominoes during the morning rush-hour on Thursday, March 19.

When a dazed Rasooli got out of his Nissan Almera he had to be physically restrained by members of the public as he hurled racist abuse at them, Sunderland magistrates heard.

The accident caused hours of traffic chaos after the road was blocked and tailbacks at one point reached nearly an hour.

Lee Poppett, prosecuting, said a witness described seeing the green Almera weaving across both lanes before clipping the central reservation in thick fog and “very poor” driving conditions.

He followed it north until it approached the A19 junction with the A690 Durham Road, where the slow-moving traffic was “bumper to bumper”.

He said: “The Almera ploughed straight into a Peugeot. This pushed the Peugeot into the car in front and so forth. In all, five cars were involved.”

A second witness said Rasooli got out of the car and walked to the central reservation where he used the barrier to hold himself up.

He said that, when he spoke to him, he appeared drunk.

Mr Poppett said Rasooli became aggressive when the keys were taken from him as he walked back to his mangled car. He said: “Other people helped restraining him and he began to push them.

“He aimed a punch at one of the drivers, which missed.

“He had to be restrained and was shouting ‘I’ll kill you, let me see your face. I’ll come round and I’ll kill your family’.”

The driver of the Peugeot said he then shouted: “I’ll take you all on, you white pieces of trash.”

“He was detained by the drivers until police arrived,” Mr Poppett added.

After Rasooli, of Lort House, Shieldfield, Newcastle, was arrested he told police he had been to a family gathering in London, where he had drank vodka.

He had then set off at 1am for the long drive home to Newcastle, with his cousin as a passenger, and hit the rush hour as he drove north on the A19.

By the time a breath test was carried out at 8.30am – over seven hour after he left the capital – he had 55 microgrammes of alcohol in 100ml of breath – the legal limit being 35.

He admitted drink-driving.

A probation report said Rasooli, a pizza chef, came to the UK from Afghanistan in 2007 because of problems in his own country and has leave to reside permanently here.

Victoria Oliver, defending, said that while there were many aggravated factors, he only faced a charge of drink driving.

“It’s fair to say that he has never been in this predicament before,” she said. “He has a clean driving licence. He was in shock. He was going back to his vehicle. It was at that point that others decide he was going to drive away.

“There was no way he was going to drive his vehicle. It was still entangled in the vehicle in front. There was nowhere for him to go.”

She added: “It is fair to say that in his shocked state he has not acted in the best of ways. He has seen a threat and lashes out.”

Rasooli was sentenced to a six-month tagged curfew from 8am until noon seven days a week.

He was banned from driving for 16 months an told to pay £85 costs and a £60 surcharge.

'If you can't speak English you shouldn't be driving taxis,' County Durham cabbie claims

Would-be taxi drivers will be tested on their maths and English skills as part of a revamped application process in County Durham


County Durham cabbies should have a good grasp of the language before they can ply their trade, drivers have claimed.

Taxi bosses have backed the move which could see would-be drivers facing tests of their numeracy and literacy if they want to receive a hackney carriage or private hire licence in County Durham.

Cabinet members will be asked to agree next week to a 12-week consultation on the proposal.

Alan Shield, chairman of the North West Durham branch of the National Taxi Drivers Association, said: “If you can’t add up, you can’t give change.

“If you can’t speak English, how do you know where your fare is going to?

“I’m not racist, but if you can’t speak English you should not be driving taxis.

“If someone jumps into a taxi and says ‘take me to Stanley’ and the driver says ‘Que? I’m from Barcelona – no English’ it’s not good enough.

“I think this is a valid point.”

The move is part of a raft of measures set to shake up the taxi industry. Improved safeguarding measures for child passengers are set to be put in place, as well as restrictions limiting the age of vehicles used as cabs and their emissions.

There will also be new regulations regarding limousines.

Chris Chandler, of Sunniside, is the director of the National Taxi Association, said: “For anyone coming to Durham or Chester-le-Street, a taxi driver is generally the first contact a member of the public has.

“If they have insufficient command of the English language and if they can’t write a receipt out properly it doesn’t look good.

“I don’t have a problem with people from other countries coming into this trade. We’re supposed to be a diverse community, but I just think if I’m going to work at 6am I want everyone on a level playing field.”

Andrew Goodchild, taxi operations manager at Durham City Taxis which employs 47 drivers, backed the proposals for the literacy test.

However, he said the introduction of a new knowledge test which covers the entire county has been seen as an overly severe measure by the county.

Mr Goodchild said: “In terms of literacy, if the driver can’t speak, or read, English he can’t work with directions.

“I don’t know what standard it would have to but it would have to be so you can communicate.”

He added: “It’s too advanced.

“They are purposefully trying to make it hard but the average age of a taxi driver is in the mid-40s and they will put off new blood.”

Mr Shield said: “If I had to sit this again, I’d go back to driving buses.

“It’s that hard.”

Councillors will vote on the consultation at their meeting in County Hall, Durham, on Wednesday.

EDL planning demonstration in Solihull over Catherine-de-Barnes Muslim cemetery plans

Gathering planned for later this month after planning application is submitted for a third time


The English Defence League is planning a demonstration in Solihull to protest against proposals for a Muslim cemetery in a nearby village.

Members will gather in the town centre on Saturday, April 18 in connection with plans for burial plots at Catherine-de-Barnes.

Proposals for the scheme were submitted to Solihull Council for a third time last month.

The plans for the burial ground were turned down twice last year after planners said the development would blight Green Belt land.

But Cemetery Development Services Ltd, the agent working on behalf of the applicant, has continued to insist there was a need for a dedicated Muslim cemetery to resolve a shortage of plots for followers of Islam.

The first application for planning permission for the cemetery was for 7,000 plots.

That was reduced to 4,000 in the next application.

The current proposal asks for permission to build a 3,333-plot cemetery with storage, toilet facilities and a garden.

The EDL announced the demonstration on Facebook.

It said: “The Solihull Division alongside the United Midlands will be holding a local demonstration in Solihull town centre on Saturday the 18th April 2015.

“The reason for this local demonstration is because of the third proposed Muslim burial plot in Catherine-de-Barnes.

“We have chosen to do the demonstration in Solihull town centre as Catherine-de-Barnes comes under the Solihull borough and we feel we will have more of an impact in the town centre than turning up in a small area a few miles down the road.”

Thirty arrests were made as the EDL staged a rally in Dudley in February against plans for a new mosque in the town.