
The review ordered by Yvette Cooper — and since rejected by ministers — recommended changes to counterextremism policy to tackle a greater range of threats
Claims of two-tier policing are an extreme right-wing narrative, according to an internal Home Office review that recommended sweeping changes to the UK’s approach to combating extremism.
The Home Office document also cites how right-wing extremists “frequently exploit” the grooming gangs scandal — described as “alleged group-based sexual abuse” — to promote anti-Muslim sentiment.
It recommended that the UK’s approach to tackling extremism should no longer be based on specific ideologies such as Islamism or the far right but “on behaviours and activity of concern”. This is because of the “dizzying range of beliefs and ideologies we see”, it added.
Imagine that, a Labour gov’t report suggesting the far right was exploiting the rape of thousands of children by Muslims.
An atrocity that was deliberately hushed up by Labour politicians.
