Florida university students to
counter neo-Nazi rally
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Members of the National Socialist Movement
demonstrate in Washington, DC, in 2008 [Haraz
N Ghanbari/AP Photo]
Students and activists are planning to
counterprotest a neo-Nazi rally at the
University of North Florida (UNF) on
Monday, while the university plans to
deploy regular and undercover police
officers to prevent clashes.
The neo-Nazi rally was called to
support Ken Parker, a political science
student who was suspended this month
after publishing a threatening image on
a Black Lives Matter-linked student
group's Facebook page.
"Let SDS [Students for a Democratic
Society] and the other clowns come at
me, I will shut them down," he wrote in
the post that was accompanied by a
photo in which Parker is shirtless and
wielding a rifle. Tattooed on his chest is
a large swastika.
Parker is a former Grand Dragon in the
Ku Klux Klan (KKK) and a member of
the National Socialist Movement (NSM ),
according to an expose published by
The Tab, a university news site for
schools in the US and UK.
Speaking to the local Action News Jax,
Parker defended his comments and said
he did not believe they constituted a
threat.
Monique Williamson, president of SDS
and a junior at UNF, told Al Jazeera that
she expects between 100 and 200
counterdemonstrators to show up to
oppose around 40 neo-Nazis on
Monday.
"We thought this is happening because
the president of the university refused
to take a strong stance on racism [in the
past]," she said.
Williamson, who says she has been
personally threatened by neo-Nazis,
said that "people don't feel safe on the
campus".
Undercover police
In an email sent to students, faculty,
staff and parents, UNF President John
Delaney assured the campus
community that proper security
precautions were under way.
"I wish I had a magic wand that could
address all of that and could solve the
historic problems of racism,
homophobia, anti-Semitism, etc," he
said in the email, which was provided
"I really wish that we
could take away the pain and fear."
Explaining that the university is
coordinating with the Jacksonville
Sheriff's Department, Delaney said the
campus would bring "extra police in
uniform and also undercover".
"Law enforcement practice is to request
that there isn't a counterprotest.
There's always a possibility of friction
between the opposing parties," Delaney
added, urging both sides to "protest
peaceably".
In response, Williamson of the SDS said:
"Do you really want students to not
push back against Nazis on campus?
That's unacceptable."
According to the
Southern
Poverty Law
Center (SPLC),
an Alabama-
based watchdog
that monitors
hate groups, the NSM is the largest neo-
Nazi organisation in the US and had 61
chapters in 35 states in 2009.
Speaking to Al Jazeera by email, NSM
Commander Jeff Schoepp confirmed
that Parker is a member of his
organisation. He referred to the
suspension of Parker as part of a
"political witch-hunt, pure and simple".
"White nationalism is rising, and if
these left-wing lunatics expect to be
treated fairly when our time arrives,
they had better quit their punch-a-Nazi-
and-kill-white-people ideology right
now … or it could come back to bite
them later on when the tables have
turned," Schoepp said.
Campuses as a focal point
The rally and counterdemonstration
come amid increased tensions over
white supremacist activity on campuses
across the US.
In October, more than a thousand
students and community members held
a demonstration at the University of
Florida in Gainesville to oppose a
speech by Richard Spencer, a leader in
the alt-right.
White supremacists have increasingly clashed
with anti-fascists throughout the US [File:
Reuters]
The alt-right is a loosely knit coalition
of white supremacist, white nationalist
and neo-Nazi organisations that
advocate a white ethno-state.
White supremacist and neo-Nazi groups
have faced widespread public backlash
since the deadly Unite the Right rally in
Charlottesville, Virginia, on August 12.
The NSM was among the groups that
participated in the protest.
During that rally,
hundreds of far-
rightists
descended on
the city to
protest a
decision to
remove a Confederate monument. They
clashed with community members,
activists and anti-fascists throughout
Charlottesville.
That afternoon, James Alex Fields , a 20-
year-old Ohio resident who had been
photographed marching with a neo-
Nazi group earlier in the day, allegedly
ploughed his car into a march and
killed 32-year-old anti-racist activist
Heather Heyer. At least 19 others were
injured in the incident.
According to the SPLC, at least 130
chapters of the KKK, 100 white
nationalist organisations and 99 neo-
Nazi groups are currently active in the
US.
The watchdog group has documented a
sharp uptick in far-right recruitment
efforts on US universities this year, with
at least 329 incidents of white
nationalist fliers distributed at 241
college campuses between January 1
and October 17.
Earlier this month, the FBI reported a
five-year high in hate crimes, with a
five-percent increase in 2016 when
compared with the previous year.
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