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{"id":7759,"date":"2019-07-12T09:14:32","date_gmt":"2019-07-12T13:14:32","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/novocommunications.net\/hott93\/?p=7759"},"modified":"2019-07-12T09:14:32","modified_gmt":"2019-07-12T13:14:32","slug":"is-there-a-growing-far-right-threat-online","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/novocommunications.net\/hott93\/is-there-a-growing-far-right-threat-online\/","title":{"rendered":"Is there a growing far-right threat online?"},"content":{"rendered":"

Is there a growing far-right threat online?<\/h1>\n
By Gordon Corera<\/span> Security correspondent<\/span><\/div>\n
<\/figure>\n

Far right activity on the internet threatens to spill over into violence in the real world, according to some observers. But are governments and tech companies doing enough to counter the danger?<\/strong><\/p>\n

Two days before the attack, Australian Brenton Tarrant tweeted images of the weapons he was going to use. Half an hour before, he outlined what he was going to do in an online forum. A few minutes before, he emailed a “manifesto” explaining why. And as he began, he switched on a Facebook live stream for people around the world to watch.<\/p>\n

The attack on mosques in Christchurch, New Zealand, in which more than 50 people were killed, was an act of violence foreshadowed online.<\/p>\n

Tarrant, who appeared in court in June to deny the charges, was a lone individual. But he was also someone who inhabited an internet-based international subculture, one whose ideology is moving from the darker reaches of the internet into the political mainstream.<\/p>\n

The fear is that security services and tech companies have been slow to deal with this growing new threat.<\/p>\n

<\/figure>\n

Travels<\/h2>\n

In late 2018, Tarrant was a long way from his New Zealand home, driving around Austria.<\/p>\n

He had spent the past few years travelling the world, venturing as far afield as North Korea and Pakistan.<\/p>\n

A reconstruction of his travels shows he spent most of his time crisscrossing Europe, from Spain to the Balkans and almost every country in between. There, he would often stop off to visit sites with links to particular historic battles.<\/p>\n

His 74-page manifesto is rooted in Europe and its history, with references to age-old European battles to attempt to justify an attack carried out on the other side of the world. In it, he also cites his time in France – where he describes seeing an “invasion” of immigrants – as having particularly affected him.<\/p>\n

At the manifesto’s centre is the idea of something called the “great replacement” – a claim that “European” people are being replaced by Muslims (despite projections from independent bodies such as the Pew Forum<\/a> saying there is no sign of this happening in the coming decades).<\/p>\n

Tarrant’s exact movements in Austria are unknown but they remain a focus of much interest.<\/p>\n

<\/figure>\n

A tweet days before the Christchurch attack included a reference to “Vienna 1683”. This was the year the advance of Ottoman forces was stopped just outside the city. For some on the far-right, Austria has an almost mythical significance as the front line in the war centuries ago between Christian Europe and the Muslim world.<\/p>\n

But there is another link between Tarrant and Austria. His manifesto is filled with in-jokes for those who inhabit a particular online subculture, with references to computer games and far-right memes. It’s a sign of a man who lived much of his life online. And through this world he had become an admirer of Martin Sellner<\/a>, a young Austrian social media influencer who plays a major role in Europe’s new far-right ecosystem.<\/p>\n

In early 2018, Tarrant liked the Austrian enough to give him a 1,500 euro (\u00a31,350; $1,690) donation.<\/p>\n

<\/figure>\n

The propagandist<\/h2>\n

I meet Martin Sellner in a caf\u00e9 in a suburb of Vienna. With his sharp haircut and trainers, he looks nothing like the traditional image of a far-right activist.<\/p>\n

The 30-year-old is a leading figure in Generation Identity, the Austrian offshoot of the so-called identitarian movement, which is fiercely opposed to Muslim migrants, claiming that they threaten Europe’s identity and will eventually replace the indigenous populations.<\/p>\n

The movement began in France in 2012 and has expanded to nine countries including Germany, Italy and the UK.<\/p>\n

He is happy to be interviewed about his views, but the one issue he becomes uncomfortable talking about is his links to Brenton Tarrant.<\/p>\n

Two weeks after the Christchurch attack, Sellner’s home was raided when details of the donation came to light. As part of an investigation into a possible link between Tarrant and Sellner, computers and bank cards were seized.<\/p>\n

Sellner says he never met Tarrant, but admits they exchanged emails after the donation.<\/p>\n

“If you ever come to Vienna, we have to go for a coffee or a beer,” Sellner wrote.<\/p>\n

“The same is true for you if you ever come to Australia or New Zealand,” replied Tarrant. “We have people in both countries who would like to welcome you to their home.”<\/p>\n

Find out more<\/h2>\n