Blogger’s Note: And the Establishment wonders “why” over 150,000 far-right thugs are congregating outside Migrant Hotels, Migration Hostels, and Migration Centres, attracting vast swathes of political support from ordinary people who hold political views of a lesser bias. Not only is the media continuously printing a daily tally of crime (usually “sexual”) committed by migrants in the UK – but it is purposely ignoring (and omitting) all similar crime committed by “White” people (including “White” migrants – usually Ukrainian and Polish, etc). The news – like the structure of UK society – is being deliberately “engineered” by the ruling bourgeoisie. A continuous and brutal “Austerity” and withdrawal of all Socialist support for the indigenous population – and the ladling-out of the most lavish and opulent care and support for random groups of incomers – designed to water-down the work-force. We are importing selfish individuals – not collective-minded proletariats – and that is exactly what the bourgeois intend and want. The UK is being transitioned into a US State where the workers possess no rights and are paid so little by their employers – that the customer is expected to “tip” (to supplement their meagre wages) – something that used to viewed as vulgar in the UK before the rapid spread of US-owned businesses. ACW (2.1.2025)
Awale, a Muslim assessed to hold extremist beliefs, won a High Court case over the way decisions to house him in a close supervision centre had impacted on his mental health and breached his human right
By Alice Padgett – @Alice_padge – 1 Jan 2026
A double murderer has been awarded £7,500 compensation and taxpayers will foot a £234,000 legal bill after the High Court ruled his treatment in prison breached his human rights.
Fuad Awale was convicted in January 2013 of the execution-style shooting of two teenagers and given a life sentence with a minimum term of 38 years, then he was subsequently given a further six years for threatening to kill a prison officer.
He and an accomplice reportedly demanded the release of Abu Qatada, a hate preacher who had been facing deportation to Jordan on terror charges.
They also asked for the release of Roshonara Choudhry, who stabbed Labour MP Stephen Timms in 2010.
Awale, a Muslim assessed to hold extremist beliefs, won a High Court case over the way decisions to house him in a close supervision centre (CSC) – segregated from the wider prison population because of the risks he poses – had impacted on his mental health and breached his human rights.
A series of events during his time in the CSC system meant that by the time of the High Court ruling in September 2024 he had not been able to associate with any other inmates since March 2023.
The High Court ruled that his treatment breached Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) which protects the right to a private and family life.
Details of the compensation were revealed in a letter from Deputy Prime Minister and Justice Secretary David Lammy to shadow justice secretary Robert Jenrick reported by The Daily Telegraph.
Mr Lammy said the Government would “keep under review” whether the ECHR was acting as a barrier to protecting national security.
Mr Jenrick told the Telegraph: “It’s a sick joke that taxpayers are handing this man £7,500 in compensation and footing a legal bill of over £230,000.
“This is a double murderer and extremist who took a prison officer hostage.
“This is the reality of the ECHR: it prioritises the ‘rights’ of terrorists to associate with other extremists over the safety of our prison officers.
“Labour are cowing to terrorists and the human rights brigade. They must introduce emergency legislation to carve these monsters out of the ECHR immediately.”
In his letter to Mr Jenrick, the Deputy Prime Minister said: “This Government will not be cowed by legal threats from prisoners.
“The separation centre remains an essential operational tool to protect the public and other prisoners and when dangerous radicalisers pose a risk, they will be placed in one.
“This Government is committed to the European Convention on Human Rights.
“Commitment does not mean complacency, however, and we must keep under review whether the application of the convention is acting as a barrier to us protecting national security.”
