CAA calls for proscription of Order of the Nine Angels
Campaign Against Antisemitism has called for the proscription of the Order of the Nine Angels group following the publication of a report on its activities.
The report by the activist group Hope Not Hate shows that the Order of the Nine Angels promotes extreme violence, Holocaust denial, neo-Nazism and other antisemitic conspiracy theories, such as ‘Zionist’ control of the world.
The group was founded in the 1970s and dates its calendar from the birth of Adolf Hitler. It aspires to destablise contemporary “Judeao-Christian” society and to see it replaced with a fascist and Satanist substitute. It is understood that members are encouraged to infiltrate institutions to undermine them from within or join Islamist organisations to promote the group’s destabilisation agenda. Some of the group’s texts apparently make reference to ritual sacrifice and praise notorious criminals.
Messages between members reportedly extol sexual assault and murder.
Earlier this year, the Home Secretary Priti Patel proscribed the neo-Nazi Sonnenkrieg Division as a terrorist group. This follows the proscription of National Action in 2016, for which Campaign Against Antisemitism had called.
It is believed that the Order of the Nine Angels has been an influence on the Sonnenkrieg Division and on multiple convicted neo-Nazis in the UK.
The Home Secretary must therefore now move to proscribe the Order of the Nine Angels as well.
A spokesperson for Campaign Against Antisemitism said: “The Order of the Nine Angles propagates extreme violence, Nazi ideology, Holocaust revisionism and antisemitic conspiracies, such as that Zionists control the world, none of which have any place in modern Britain. The odious group’s links with both Islamist terrorism and the far-right Sonnenkrieg Division, recently proscribed by the British Government, are enormously concerning, and the Government must now move to proscribe the Order of the Nine Angles as well before its dangerous ideology and actions end in the tragedy of yet another far-right terrorist attack.”