Veterans 4 Freedom comprised more than 200 ex-Servicemen and women. The sinister group planned to portray itself as a law-abiding organisation. But used the encrypted messaging app Telegram to discuss violent insurrection. Some V4F plots included attacking vaccine centres and targeting employees. A paramilitary group plotting to sabotage Britain’s coronavirus vaccination programme has disbanded after being exposed by The Mail on Sunday. Veterans 4 Freedom (V4F), which comprised more than 200 ex-Servicemen and women, used the encrypted messaging app Telegram to discuss violent insurrection, including attacking vaccine centres and targeting employees. One V4F member chillingly described the proposed campaign as ‘bringing the fight to the people sticking the needle in’. The sinister group planned to portray itself as a law-abiding organisation by marching peacefully on Parliament on Wednesday wearing Service ‘headdress’. But the MoS infiltrated V4F – which boasted of having 16 operational ‘cells’ – and found it was planning to escalate its covert activities with some members arming themselves with crossbows. V4F began to implode following the publication of our investigation last weekend. Its leader, a former Royal Marine who uses the name Bellzaac, wrongly suggested that the MoS was tipped off by the security services and claimed to have been ‘buzzed’ by a helicopter that shone a spotlight on his house. ‘Didn’t go till I went outside. My parents house has been compromised and the only people who could’ve got that those details are you know who,’ he wrote. ‘Have been constantly followed. I also got intercepted on my holiday.’ Bellzaac later posted a message on his publicly accessible Twitter account saying: ‘I’ve had to pull the plug on the movement/organisation. Basically we were a peaceful group and have been labelled with being something we are not. We wanted to do this legally & lawfully.’
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Neue Datenbank – Seit 2011 gab es 50 Fälle von rechtsextremem #Terror in Deutschland
Seit der Selbstenttarnung des »Nationalsozialistischen Untergrunds« (NSU) im Jahr 2011 gab es 29 gesichert rechtsterroristische Fälle, 21 Verdachtsfälle und neun vollendete Anschläge in Deutschland. Das hat die gemeinnützige Organisation Cemas (Center für Monitoring, Analyse und Read more…