Politics
Nowak’s tragic death another incident where police get it fatally wrong
The Chief Constable of Hampshire Police told the BBC that the footage of officers arresting Henry Nowak while he lay bleeding from stab wounds left him feeling as “distressed” as the wider public.
Officers handcuffed Nowak and read him his rights despite his obvious injuries. Ultimately, the court sentenced his killer, Vickrum Digwa, to a minimum of 21 years in prison for the murder. Prosecutors will soon continue proceedings against Digwa’s mother for allegedly concealing the knife used in the attack.
However, it has clearly emerged that police officers failed to respond appropriately to Nowak’s injuries despite his repeated pleas for help, and he subsequently died from those wounds. His death adds to a growing list of cases in which poor judgment and failures in duty of care during police arrests have contributed to tragic outcomes.
Coming just weeks after another fatal arrest in Northern Ireland, where security personnel ignored a man’s distressed pleas during an unduly forceful restraint, this latest preventable death once again places the conduct, judgment, and accountability of those exercising authority under intense scrutiny.
The chief constable of Hampshire police has apologised to the family of Henry Nowak for the student being handcuffed and arrested as he lay dying.https://t.co/AOmAulfk51
— BBC Breakfast (@BBCBreakfast) June 3, 2026
Police say Nowak not treated differently – and they’re right
As is pretty typical, the response from white supremacist, far-right politicians like Farage to the tragic and avoidable death of Henry Nowak has been to further stoke racism in British society. Subsequent white riots in Southampton, with the hashtag #FarageRiots trending across social media, underscore the violent and disruptive agenda at the heart of far-right politics.
This race-baiting and incitement of white riots from the far-right came despite an emotional plea from Nowak’s father stating:
We do not want his death to be used to create further division, hatred or tension. We want his story to help make our streets safer for everyone.
This is not about Sikhism. This is not about racism.
In practice, however, Farage and his supporters have exposed what many would regard as a ‘two-tier’ racist mentality within a small but vocal section of the public.
While police forces continue to reject allegations of two-tier policing, these hateful individuals often dismiss or ignore incidents in which police officers injure, mistreat, or kill members of marginalised communities, yet demand accountability when similar events affect people they identify with. Their selective concern reveals a double standard that has little to do with justice and everything to do with identity.
Apparently, the notion of a two-tier policing system is only a concern when it helps to stir up racial hatred against Black and Brown people – otherwise, they couldn’t really care less.
Chief Constable Alex Boon has told the BBC that he did not agree with Farage’s allegation that the police operate on a two-tier model of policing, saying that he sees daily how police officers do their job for all communities.
Nevertheless, the video has rightfully “distressed” the chief constable – as it has the British public, saying:
What was filmed there is a tragedy, an absolute tragedy. You can’t help but be affected by it. It’s very difficult to watch.
I really feel for the family of Henry at this time.
White supremacists now saying policing is racist
Whilst disputing that UK policing as a whole is racist, Boon did acknowledge that racist individuals do work within the police. As a result, the issue then arises of why the allegation of racism might have been believed so easily – and that’s pretty simple to understand: racism is absolutely rife in the UK.
Moreover, racism is rising – and set to rise even further, thanks to the disgusting likes of Farage’s Reform and white supremacist thugs like Tommy Robinson.
Chief Constable Alexis Boon of Hampshire Police has rejected claims of "two-tier" policing.
Speaking to @JasonFarrellSky, he said he does not believe UK policing is "racist" – but conceded that "there are racist individuals within policing". Read more: https://t.co/3zNWvf2jk9 pic.twitter.com/GU6D1ikUcI
— Sky News (@SkyNews) June 3, 2026
On the other hand, there have been a significant number of examples where the police have harmed – or killed – arrestees, and the common factor between those has indeed been the colour of the ‘offenders’ skin.
Clue: they were not white.
Therefore, it stands to reason that a possible reason for this fatal misjudgment by attending officers is the very fact that racism is thriving across the UK. Allowing that racism to fester, multiply and become even more commonplace only invites further tragic incidents affecting everybody stopped by the police.
After all, if racism was not as plausible as it has been for far too long, then there may have been more doubt shown by the police themselves. Furthermore, Digwa is not the first aggressive offender to attempt to hide his violent offence – that avoidance of accountability is pretty standard amongst male aggressors.
Surely then, this underscores the need for genuine humility from the police, the British public, politicians – and we’d hope, far-right actors like Reform UK.
Needless to say, we won’t hold our breath as Farage and Zia Yusuf seem hell bent on risking further tragedies off the back of the horrendous grief that Nowak’s family are living through.
Hate increasing against Sikh community in Southampton
As often happens when individuals exploit tragedy to inflame racial tensions, members of Southampton’s Sikh community have reported a rise in hostility and intimidation. Some have altered their daily routines out of fear of being targeted, while police have increased patrols around Sikh places of worship and community buildings in an effort to deter further incidents.
However, policing alone cannot address the deeper problem. When public figures, activists, or online trolls direct sinister hostility towards entire ethnic or religious communities, they can legitimise prejudice and even worse, embolden those willing to act on it.
Increased patrols may help deter immediate threats, but they cannot undo the damage caused when inflammatory rhetoric fuels undue fear, division, and acts of intimidation against people.
This risk and unbridled anger on show on our streets is undoubtedly causing fear amongst vulnerable marginalised groups, as well as women. After all, a huge proportion of Farage and Robinson supporters have a history of domestic abuse, and their sense of authoritative supremacy is seen against women too.
Ultimately, anger and hate never leads to any sort of positive outcome – and the British public would be wise not to be baiting into it.
Featured image via Getty/Leon Neal
Politics
Young adaptive clothing line hosts first Disability Pride Catwalk in Manchester
Disabled models will travel the runway at Aviva Studios on Saturday 27 June 2026 ahead of Disability Pride Month.
The most inclusive fashion show that’s ever been staged in Manchester is coming to the city ahead of Disability Awareness Month.
Sixteen models – female, non binary and male – will travel down a specially constructed runway at Manchester’s Aviva Studios.
Aged from 20s-50s, every model is disabled, neurodivergent or chronically ill and all will wear adaptive fashion designs from a young, ambitious Manchester label. Manchester Metropolitan University fashion graduate Ellie Brown founded RECONDITION in 2025.
Brown’s eyes opened to how unaccommodating fashion can be in 2021, when she badly broke her ankle. This resulted in her using a wheelchair for several months. Each garment in RECONDITION’s denim-centred collection has been designed with and for disabled people.
Adaptations built into the label’s inclusive designs include:
- Front pockets on jeans for wheelchair users.
- Ring pull zips for people with reduced dexterity.
- Sleeves with poppers along their full length to help accommodate prosthetic limbs or medical equipment, from feeding tubes to insulin pumps.
Brown’s Manchester city centre based company now works alongside a co-design group who all have varying lived experience of disability. This ensures that her designs truly do the job, whether that’s:
- Accommodating stoma bags.
- Providing comfort and practicality for wheelchair users.
- Offering an easier “on and off” experience for people with reduced grip strength or dexterity.
‘Disability Pride Catwalk’ will show ‘accessible fashion is fashion for all’
Aaliyah Rice, 24, from Bury, Greater Manchester, is one of the models taking part. Diagnosed with ADHD aged 21, the advertising creative signed up after seeing an open casting call on TikTok. She said she thought it would be:
such a fun experience and a chance to meet like-minded people.
Rice added:
Mainstream fashion on a whole is entirely unaccommodating even for an able-bodied person. Things like sizing and fit are generally a nightmare. I can only imagine the extra layer of hell having a physical disability brings to clothes shopping.
My own personal experience is with clothes that give me sensory issues – things like tags, textures and seams that cause me distress and take my focus away from other things.
It makes it more challenging to shop, as most of the clothes that don’t cause me sensory issues aren’t fashionable or stylish and when you don’t feel confident you can’t embrace life the way you want.
I’m a strong believer that accessible fashion is fashion for all.
The label’s first catwalk collection includes the popular dark blue denim Reconditioned Jean, which is already on sale and debuts a number of new adaptive designs. These include a denim miniskirt, a dress, a jumpsuit, a top and a further new cut of jeans.
Research from disability charity Leonard Cheshire found that mainstream fashion in the UK does not meet the needs of three quarters of disabled people.
According to government figures, a quarter of people in the UK have a disability – that’s 16.8 million people. And in state pension aged people, the figure rises to almost half (45%).
Brown says that RECONDITION’s first major catwalk show, called Disability Pride Catwalk: A Space for Each Other, is “part performance, part social commentary”, and will:
reflect on who fashion is for, how access is built (or denied) and what it means to create space collectively.
The purpose-built runway at Aviva Studios features a double height bar, which is inclusive to wheelchair users and people of short stature and acts as a metaphor for how the built environment enables or disables people.
Brown said:
The Disability Pride Catwalk is a safe space for people to celebrate bodies of all kinds whilst enjoying the atmosphere and experience of a runway show.
I also hope the event will provoke useful discussions about how fashion – and society as a whole – can take more accountability for inclusivity.
Disability Pride Catwalk: A Space for Each Other
Saturday 27 June 2026 6-8pm
The Undercroft, Aviva Studios, Water Street, Manchester, M3 4JQ
FREE
Featured image supplied
By The Canary
Politics
The biggest international stars missing from the 2026 World Cup
Although the 2026 World Cup will go down in history as the biggest edition ever, featuring 48 teams and co-hosted by the United States, Canada, and Mexico, the tournament’s expanded format has not been enough to guarantee the presence of all the world’s football stars.
Whilst fans prepare to follow an unprecedented edition in terms of the number of teams and matches, qualifiers, injuries and tactical choices have shaped another side of the World Cup: the absence of names that have played a significant part in the game’s landscape in recent years.
Whilst the tournament has opened its doors to new teams and rising stars, it has closed the door on a number of stars who were hoping to write a new chapter in their international careers, or perhaps make a final appearance on the world’s biggest football stage.
World Cup: stars on the outs
Absence from the World Cup is not down to a single reason: some have paid the price for their national team’s failure to qualify, despite their status among the world’s elite players; others have been sidelined by injury at a particularly cruel time; whilst still others find themselves left out due to technical decisions dictated by competition for the limited places in the final squads.
But the outcome remains the same: big stars will be watching the World Cup from the sidelines.
Lewandowski… a last chance lost
At the forefront of the names missing from the finals is Poland’s Robert Lewandowski, the Barcelona striker and one of the most prolific goalscorers of his generation.
The 2026 World Cup represented a precious opportunity for the veteran player to embark on a new global stage, perhaps the last of his international career, but Poland’s failure to reach the finals ended that dream prematurely.
Kvaratskhelia and Szoboszlai… the absence of a new generation
The absences will not be limited to veteran stars, as the World Cup will also miss one of the most exciting players in Europe in recent years, the Georgian Khvicha Kvaratskhelia, after his national team failed to secure a place.
Hungary’s Dominik Szoboszlai, captain of the Hungarian national team and a Liverpool star, will also be absent, meaning the World Cup will lose one of the most prominent midfielders of his generation, a player whose influence in European football has been on the rise.
Italy… the open wound
Perhaps the most painful story remains linked to Italy, which continues to be absent from the World Cup finals, a situation that is hard to fathom given the Azzurri’s history and standing among the game’s elite.
Italy’s absence means a host of star names will be missing from the tournament, led by goalkeeper Gianluigi Donnarumma, one of the world’s finest keepers, thus continuing the crisis of a team that has won the World Cup four times but now finds itself once again on the sidelines.
Nigeria Deprives the World Cup of a Formidable Striking Duo
On the African continent, Nigeria’s failure to qualify has left a clear mark on the list of absentees.
The World Cup will take place without Victor Osimhen, one of the most effective strikers in European football, as well as Ademola Lookman, who has established himself in recent seasons as one of the continent’s leading attacking players.
Their absence deprives the tournament of a duo possessing speed, decisiveness and the ability to make a difference, whilst adding a new chapter to the disappointment of Nigerian fans, who are accustomed to seeing their national team feature regularly at the World Cup.
When injury decides the fate of a dream
The list of absentees was not limited to those who missed out in the qualifiers, as injuries proved a decisive factor in preventing a number of players from taking part in the tournament.
“Al-Kanari” had previously highlighted in a report a list of stars who would be denied a place at the 2026 World Cup due to injury, including Brazil’s Rodrigo, Germany’s Serge Gnabry, the Netherlands’ Xavi Simons, and Frenchman Hugo Ekitike, alongside other names who have faced the harshest scenario a footballer can encounter just a few months before the start of the global event.
These cases confirm that the road to the World Cup does not end with qualification alone, but may be decided by minor physical details capable of ending a dream a player has waited years to realise.
Featured image via Getty/David Balogh
By Alaa Shamali
Politics
Israel arrests two players from Palestinian women’s national team
Palestinian footballer Natalie Abu Dayeh wasn’t preparing for a match or a training camp this time. She was sitting at her university homework in the town of Birzeit, north of Ramallah, before Israeli Occupation Forces (IOF) stormed her home and took her into custody, leaving behind the lecture notes and pen she had been writing with just minutes before the raid.
A scene documented by the Palestinian Football Association in an official statement, but it was not the only incident in recent hours. Shortly afterwards, the occupation authorities arrested Palestinian women’s national team player Rand Halawani (20), after summoning her to what is known as the “Tel Beit” police station in occupied Jerusalem.
Palestinian athletes regularly abducted
These two consecutive incidents have brought back into the spotlight Israel’s deliberate targeting of Palestinian athletes, a practice that is not limited to sporting competitions or international matches, but extends to the daily lives of male and female players off the pitch.
The Palestinian Football Association said that Abu Dayya, a player for the women’s national team and a student in the Media Department at Birzeit University, was arrested after her home was raided, whilst Halawani’s arrest came just hours later, indicating the ongoing persecution of Palestinian athletes across the Palestinian territories.
These incidents do not appear to be isolated from a broader context. Earlier, Musab Abu Salem, a player for the Palestine Stars team, was prevented from travelling to Italy to take part in a solidarity match against the Napoli Stars, after the occupation authorities stopped him at the Karama crossing and subjected him to questioning before issuing a decision barring him from leaving the Palestinian territories.
Israel impunity
This follows the genocidal crimes in which Israel targeted all sectors of sport during the war on Gaza, killing over 1,000 people – including players, coaches and referees – and destroying all sports grounds and facilities.
Between arrests and travel bans, Palestinian complaints are mounting regarding the restrictions faced by athletes, whether in terms of movement and travel or participation in international events.
The Palestinian Football Association emphasises that these practices do not target specific individuals so much as they undermine the ability of Palestinian sport to continue and participate in international forums.
Featured image via Getty/Abid Katib
By Alaa Shamali
Politics
Real Madrid presidential candidate pledges to sign Haaland if he wins the election
In one of the most dramatic moments of the Real Madrid presidential race, candidate Enrique Riquelme stole the limelight after appearing in a television interview holding up Erling Haaland’s shirt in front of the cameras. The scene quickly became a key talking point in his election campaign, and sparked widespread debate about the scale of the promises being made in the race for the presidency of Real Madrid.
The moment was not merely a visual spectacle; it was accompanied by a direct statement from Riquelme, in which he confirmed that signing Haaland would be one of his priorities should he win the Real Madrid presidency, as part of a vision to attract the elite names in European football to bolster the team’s attacking strength.
Real Madrid chaos
This move placed Haaland’s name at the heart of the election campaign early on, turning him into one of the key talking points in Riquelme’s message to the club’s supporters, in a contest that goes beyond the administrative to a race for the highest sporting ambitions.
In parallel with this, Rodri’s name was also mentioned within the same electoral scenarios; however, the momentum surrounding Haaland remained the most prominent theme in the messages directed at Real Madrid fans throughout the campaign.
However, Manchester City are now said to be considering legal action. A club spokesperson said:
The stories which have emerged from Spain regarding the future of Erling Haaland are untrue.
There is no chance of this happening and there is no contractual clause to enable it.
We are considering legal action for the use of our player image in this context.
The image quickly spread across social media platforms, where followers shared it widely, and it also garnered significant engagement across a number of prominent sports accounts, including the “El Chiringuito” account on x, which helped to increase interest in the comments and turn them into one of the most prominent talking points in the election landscape within Real Madrid.
Featured image via Getty/Angel Martinez
By Alaa Shamali
Politics
Farage threatens that white riots in Southampton are ‘just the beginning’
Nigel Farage has recently defended his call for “pure cold rage” in reaction to responding officers’ treatment of murder victim Henry Nowak. Worse still, he’s doubled down on his race-baiting, claiming that there’s worse yet to come.
Meanwhile, the Times has been doing all it can to tow the Reform leader’s party line. The right-wing rag has managed to dig up a Hampshire Police diversity training day questionnaire, reporting on the pigs feeling “pressured” and “controlled”, as if that’s somehow connected to them ignoring Nowak as he bled to death.
Back in the real world, the president of the National Black Police Association has warned that Farage’s rhetoric is in danger of setting policing back decades.
Farage promises ‘just the beginning’
In a Times Radio interview, Farage defended his call for “pure, cold rage”. He argued that:
I used that term very, very deliberately… I suggested that rage was put in a cold way, not a hot way.
What a precise instruction, delivered to charmers destroying a local community by chucking bins around.
And, Farage also claimed that the white riots in Southampton are “just the beginning”. He said:
large numbers of young white males think the police are prejudiced against them.
That would be because the Reform leader told them as much. Farage stood in front of a camera and bleated that Nowak’s treatment was a result of “anti-white prejudice”. He stated, without choking on his words, that the UK is a “two-tier system” that disadvantages white people.
As the Canary previously highlighted, Farage knew that his words would start a riot. Back in 2024, he was one of the figures throwing around the ‘two-tier policing’ rubbish which sparked the white riots during that period of time.
In a similar vein, at the time we also stated that the compliant corporate media aids and abets far-right politicians and hatemongers in stoking up racial tensions in these scenarios. However, what the Times is currently doing is far, far worse.
The Times parrots Farage’s tripe
On 4 June, the Times published an article titled:
Officers in force that failed Nowak ‘pressured’ by diversity course
This followed Farage’s attack line, attempting to blame DEI (diversity, equity and inclusion) initiatives for so-called “anti-white prejudice”. The article reported that:
Police officers in the force that failed Henry Nowak felt “controlled and pressured” during diversity training, it has emerged.
An evaluation of a day-long Hampshire Police course titled Inclusion Matters found that more than one in seven officers experienced pressure “to be certain ways” during the training.
The course covered topics including racism, unconscious bias, privilege and “the importance of being an ally”.
The cops complained that being told about their privilege made them feel pressure to “be a certain way”, did they? Would that ‘certain way’ be ‘less racist’, by any chance?
Note the Times’ feeble attempt at a deception here. The right-wing rag has seized on a questionnaire response to a police diversity training day where a few cops complained. It makes absolutely no mention of when this training took place.
However, the article expects readers to connect that diversity training to officers ignoring a white man saying he’s been stabbed. Even if the training told the pigs to take claims of racialised abuse more seriously, nobody genuinely believes that extends to ‘ignore a white man when he says he can’t breathe’.
But then, the Times isn’t looking for genuine belief. All it needs is its readers’ knee-jerk, unthinking anger. It needs blind hatred directed at the very concept of equality initiatives – just like far-right darling Farage wants.
‘There is a danger of policing going back’
Meanwhile, for those of us still concerned with fact, the police force’s extensive and well-documented history of systematic racism hasn’t gone anywhere. That ‘systematic’ bit is important. It’s a long-lasting, widespread and ongoing pattern, not a single instance of officers getting it badly wrong, as in Henry Nowak’s case.
In fact, the president of the National Black Police Association – chief inspector Andy George – has raised the alarm of Farage’s dangerous race-baiting. George warned that:
There is a danger of policing going back to a time long before Stephen Lawrence’s murder, to the 1960s and 1970s, because of the attacks from the far right which have been growing over the past few years, and which are becoming more mainstream.
Likewise, ex-chief inspector of constabulary Andy Cooke – who stepped down back in April – has stated outright that he saw no evidence of ‘anti-white bias’ during his tenure. Given that he’s a white cop, and a Tory appointee at that, we’re going to believe that he looked for it, too. Cook said:
Throughout my five years at the inspectorate, I found no evidence at all to support any claim there was an anti-white bias in operational policing. […]
This should be a period of time where politicians respect the family’s wishes and do not try to exploit such a tragic and painful situation to boost their political fortunes.
Instead, the former chief inspector accused Farage and his ilk of trying to “boost their political fortunes” by exploiting the Nowak case.
Nowak’s parents stated explicitly they didn’t want their son’s murder to be “used to create further division”. Farage and his lot don’t care. They’re working actively to reverse even fragile steps toward racial equality across the UK, and there’s no line they won’t cross, no cause they won’t exploit, in order to do so.
Featured image via Getty/Dan Kitwood
Politics
We are right to feel rage over the death of Henry Nowak
Are you raging over the death of Henry Nowak? Has the horror of that boy’s slaying, the lynching-like savagery of it, incensed you? Did you feel molten fury as you watched the bodycam footage of those lowlife officers dragging Henry across the harsh gravel? Were you consumed by wrath seeing this dying boy be libelled as a racist by his killer? If so, then according to the chattering classes you are tantamount to a fascist. It is you and your febrile emotions that pose the truest threat to the nation, even more so than knife-wielding scum like Vickrum Digwa.
What has happened in Britain over the past 48 hours has been extraordinary. Even as a seasoned critic of the hubris of our rulers, I’ve been shocked by the speed with which they’ve turned this atrocity into yet another soapbox from which to harangue the little people over what we think, what we say, even what we feel. More ink is now being spilled on the ‘problematic’ emotions of the masses than on the cruel killing of young Henry. We live under a regime so morally remote, so far up the fundament of its own self-righteousness, that it frets more over the justified rage of ordinary people than the unjustified destruction of a lad’s life.
It was comments made by Nigel Farage, leader of Reform UK, that tore off the smug set’s veil of concern for Henry to reveal the classist sneer beneath. He called for ‘pure, cold rage’ in response to Henry’s awful, lonely death. Cue rage – ironically – across the faux-liberal establishment. The bourgeois press fizzes with angst over Farage’s words. There are ‘fears’ that the ‘populist right’ will ‘whip up racist resentment’, says the Guardian. Farage’s words will ‘inflame tensions’, blubs the Independent. Every centrist twat’s favourite pod – The News Agents – accuses him of blowing a ‘careful dog whistle’, slyly goading the mob to ‘go and do your thing’.
The commentary drips with the haughtiest dread. You can smell the panic of the establishment at the prospect that the lower orders might pour on to the streets to express an unsanctioned emotion. The ‘dog whistle’ comment captures it beautifully. They view the masses as human hounds dumbly awaiting the coded orders of their demagogic masters. The emotional wasteland that is Keir Starmer, who seems incapable of either rage or joy, called Farage’s remarks ‘unforgivable’. Now is ‘a time for serious work, not rage’, he robotically spluttered.
Pick up a broadsheet or switch on the news and you’d be forgiven for thinking Farage had wielded that knife in Southampton. His ‘violent’ words are triggering the woke classes even more than the violence visited on Henry. The press is awash with handwringing over the barbarous ‘atmosphere’ his comments might conjure up, the ‘lynch mobs’ they might draw on to the streets, the innocents who might get hurt on the back of his ‘stoked anger’. The liberal elites’ fleeting grief for Henry has given way to fabulist fever dreams about the zombie masses that might swarm the streets at the behest of their monstrous controller, Farage.
And now we have Wes Streeting, the former health secretary, accusing Farage of whipping up a 1930s-style vibe. ‘[To] stoke rage… is really dangerous’, he said. ‘It’s not too dramatic to say this has echoes of the 1930s.’ Every time ordinary people push back against the state – every single time – these cowards and snobs play the 1930s card. The vote for Brexit, concerns over mass immigration, rage over the state’s denigration of a dying boy – all of it reminds them of Nazism. It is such rank elitism. That they sniff the spectre of Hitler every time Brits get angry about something says so much more about them than us. Not only do they not trust us – they even see us as brownshirts-in-waiting, easily activated by the dog whistling of some demagogue.
They have no idea of how hateful they sound. Or how hopelessly cloistered. Rage is precisely what millions felt upon viewing that bodycam footage. Fury rippled through my WhatsApp groups on Monday night when it was released. ‘Made me vomit.’ ‘FUCKING HELL.’ ‘A million times worse than I was expecting.’ What is truly inhuman is to not feel rage when reading about this boy being taunted by his killer for 10 minutes before being disbelieved, dragged and arrested as he begged for his life. It isn’t the fury of ordinary people that is scary – it’s the absence of it among our supposed betters. Instead of keeping a check on our emotions they should check themselves for a pulse.
Then there’s the hypocrisy. It is off the charts. The Guardian slams us for feeling rage over Henry, yet it published pieces in the wake of George Floyd’s death saying: ‘We need… rage.’ Cathy Newman of Sky News badgered Reform UK’s Zia Yusuf over Farage’s ‘rage’, yet back then she was delighted that ‘the fury over Floyd’s death’ had been transported ‘to all four corners of the globe’. Owen Jones condemned Farage’s ‘rage’ remarks and implied they had stirred up the idiots who threw bins at cops in Southampton on Tuesday night – yet in 2020 he gushed over the ‘righteous rage’ in response to Floyd’s death.
Rage over a man who died 4,000 miles from Britain? Go for it. Rage over a boy who died right here in England? Don’t even think about it. The reason for this brazen double standard is clear. It’s because the Brits who ‘raged’ over Floyd were primarily bourgeois leftists who obsequiously bent the knee to the ruling-class ideology of identitarianism. Meanwhile, the Brits raging over Nowak’s death include huge numbers of working-class non-Londoners who want to dismantle identitarianism, with its hyper-racialism, anti-whiteness and two-tier policing.
The establishment can handle the sight of Oxbridge keffiyeh-wearers partaking in orgies of performative virtue, whether over ‘racist America’ or ‘evil Israel’. But oiks? Gammon-coloured men draped in the England flag? Those people with their angry criticisms of the neo-racialism of the elites? Absolutely not. They must be demonised, driven from the streets. Only the righteous graduate classes are permitted to vent their moral fury in public places.
The instinct of the elites, always, is to curb populist fury. We saw it after the Manchester Arena bombing of 2017, when we were encouraged to say ‘Don’t look back in anger’ and discouraged from talking about the Islamist menace. We saw it in relation to the rape-gang scandal, when we were sternly told that any use of ‘inflammatory language’ about those mostly Muslim gangs might ‘incite mass violence’. And now we see it after the death of Henry Nowak – that familiar imperious instruction to watch what you say, police how you feel, and, above all else, don’t get angry.
Some are accusing Farage of using the Nowak horror as a weapon in the culture war. In truth, Starmer and the rest of them are using it as a shield. They’re hiding behind the spectre of lynch mobs, and the phantom of the 1930s and even the deep pain of the Nowak family in a desperate bid to avoid the criticism and dissent of ordinary people. It’s not going to work. They are too weak and the populist surge is too strong. Working-class anger won’t be tamed this time.
Brendan O’Neill is spiked’s chief political writer and host of the spiked podcast, The Brendan O’Neill Show. Subscribe to the podcast here. His latest book – After the Pogrom: 7 October, Israel and the Crisis of Civilisation – is available to order on Amazon UK and Amazon US now. And find Brendan on Instagram: @burntoakboy.
Politics
Welsh Reform spad exposed for racist, anti-Muslim bigotry online
Yet another prominent Reform UK party figure in Wales has been exposed over hateful rhetoric shared online repeatedly, especially targeted at Islam or Muslim-majority populations.
Derek Roberts’ social media account is full of racist and anti-Muslim bigotry, much targeted at Pakistanis. This included posts targeted at Scottish (briefly) First Minister Humza Yousaf and other high-profile figures he deemed sympathetic — i.e. not outwardly hateful — towards Muslims or Islam.
He also publicly supported Tommy ‘Fake-Name’ Robinson online. Farage’s Reform have previously, albeit unconvincingly, attempted to distance themselves from the violent, far-right Islamophobic criminal.
Roberts stood down as a Senedd candidate in May’s Welsh elections but is now employed as a special adviser (spad) by Reform’s Gas Thomas. Roberts was originally announced as second-place candidate for Reform in Pen-y-Bont Bro Morgannwg constituency, spanning Bridgend and the Vale of Glamorgan.
Upon Roberts unexpectedly quitting, Reform cited “personal reasons.” However, as BBC Wales wrote:
A source close to Reform UK told the BBC that prior to Roberts quitting, concerns were raised about a Facebook account in his name.
This comes after another Welsh Reform spad stood down following the emergence of Hitler salute photos previously shared on social media — complete with finger-moustache.
Tommy Robinson inflames white riot as thugs throw Nazi salutes
Repeated, vile online anti-Muslim hatred
BBC Wales was shown dozens of offensive Facebook posts featuring vile, inflammatory language from an account in Roberts’ name, between 2022 and 2025.
Among the vitriolic posts shared online from Roberts’ account were:
- Various racist jokes in 2022 about floods in Pakistan, including racist slurs about Pakistanis.
- At least one post in 2022 expressing support for far-right activist ‘Tommy Robinson’. After referring to the “Pakistani community” in derogatory, sweary terms, the post stated: “Come on Tommy!”
- One post in 2023 criticising the ethnic background of a Plaid Cymru councillor.
- Referring to Muslim Scottish leader Humza Yousaf, two separate posts in 2023 which said:
“Scotland please don’t let a Muslim be in charge of a political party in your Celtic country!”
“At last this vile man is getting kicked out of Scottish government! Remember one thing you were NOT elected by the Scottish people the same as the PM and the Welsh FM!
“Remember White, White, White.”
- Another post, in 2023’s Welsh Labour leadership contest, referring to Jeremy Miles pictured to the right of Welsh Labour politicians Eluned Morgan and Vaughan Gething, stating:
“Let’s face it, the guy on the right won’t get it unless he is gay or a Muslim.”
- Another post from 2024 which read, somewhat bizarrely:
“I absolutely hate the PM [Keir Starmer]… and I absolutely detest the Islamic way of life!”
Reform refused to comment to the BBC on “internal hiring processes” or whether they disputed this story.
When ‘vetting problems’ become party problems
None of this should surprise readers. It’s not the first time Reform candidates and politicians have been accused of hateful, Islamophobic, racist or similarly bigoted messaging. It won’t be the last.
Yet every time this happens, one common question emerges, as with the BBC’s article. It’s always a matter of
‘How did this so-and-so get through party vetting? Does Reform even have party vetting?’
See, for example, Makerfield by-election candidate Rob Kenyon’s online admissions “I am sexist” and obscenities about Carol Vorderman. Or, as the BBC point out, Corey Edwards, who also stood down from the same constituency list after a photo emerged of him appearing to perform a Nazi salute. The latter is now also employed as a Welsh Reform spad alongside Roberts.
There comes a point, however, where you need to stop asking about party vetting. We all know that Reform has the political donations and so resources to do serious vetting if they wish to.
But they don’t want to vet for racism and sexism — that’s the entire point. They want to normalise it. Letting a few misogynists and ethno-nationalists through the door is the political objective. And then some more.
We need to stop worrying about Reform’s internal ‘failings’ on due process and start worrying about what they’re successfully letting through. It’s blatant racism, misogyny, transphobia and general bigotry. Their obvious objective is to legitimise all this and the Islamophobia that they’ve been reported for.
It’s time to recognise that these “vetting problems” are just Reform party problems.
Nigel Farage, Rupert Lowe, and Kemi Badenoch squabble over race to the bottom
Featured image via the Canary
Politics
‘Sexist’ Robert Kenyon flees from female journalist
Robert Kenyon is Reform UK’s candidate in the crucial Makerfield by-election. As we’ve reported, Kenyon has made a number of comments he’s struggled to defend, including that he’s a “sexist.” This is partly because his views are indefensible, and partly because he can barely string a sentence together.
The lad does have a strategy for dealing with hard questions, though, and it’s to run away:
Reform UK’s #Makerfield Candidate @RobKenyonReform can’t answer a simple question.
This isn’t new politics, it’s dodging simple questions. Share far and wide! pic.twitter.com/HqSnKM6Y5c
— Reform Party UK Exposed
(@reformexposed) June 4, 2026
Oh, and by ‘hard questions’, we basically mean ‘any questions.’
Run, Rob run
In the video above, Beth Rigby of Sky News approaches Kenyon, who is standing to the side of his van with an umbrella. Robert Kenyon’s willingness to be pictured with an umbrella demonstrates he’s something of a modern misogynist, because one of the old guard would never be seen dead with such a contraption – especially not when walking the short distance from the van to the office. Don’t believe us? This is from the Telegraph in 2014:
Umbrellas annoy me. I’ve always thought that umbrellas were inherently unmanly. As undignified in a man’s hand as they are in his cocktail. I think slightly less of a man if I see him using an umbrella. I know, I know: it’s my problem, not his. He’s just trying to stay dry. But why is he so obsessed with this precious dryness? And is an umbrella really the best way? What’s wrong with a hat, a waterproof jacket, waiting for the downpour to pass or, hell, just getting wet?
Britain is a ridiculous country full of wet and angry, Reform-curious, men, and it always has been. Back to the video, Rigby asks Robert Kenyon:
Why should women in Makerfield vote for you, Rob?
It’s a good question, because Robert Kenyon has also said things like this:
Reproductive rights? Women’s rights? They can dress it up all they want, they are deciding to kill a baby inside the womb…What they mean is they want to shag anyone they want and if they get caught they get a second chance and treat it [sic] as a secondary last chance form of contraception. They ain’t kidding anyone.
And this:
I’d hazard a guess that the majority [of abortions] are for vanity purposes like unwanted pregnancies.
“Vanity,” he said. The reality is women want to be able to choose when they bring a life into the world; not that they’re worried their favourite dress might not fit.
On the topic of vanity, Ribert Kenyon clearly isn’t someone who cares about how he looks or sounds to other people. As the Guardian reported:
In 2021, Kenyon responded to a social media post about [Carol] Vorderman in which another user wrote: “My god I’d love to smell and lick your arsehole”, by saying: “He’s only saying what we’re all thinking”.
A man with pride in how he comes across would not have said this in public.
Divisive Reform
In response to Rigby, Kenyon responded:
If you speak to the Press Office.
He didn’t expand on what would happen if she spoke to them, so Rigby pressed on:
Why should women in Makerfield vote for you, Rob, when you said you were a sexist? Why should women vote for you when you said that you were sexist and that they can’t drive?
As we reported previously, Kenyon was a reservist in the Army Reserves. Despite his party suggesting otherwise, Robert Kenyon never actually deployed anywhere. Given the way he fled the scene with nothing to show for it, though, you’d be mistaken for thinking he served in Afghanistan.
There’s no doubt an audience for Robert Kenyon’s brand of umbrella-owning misogyny — the problem is that audience probably doesn’t include women — i.e. the majority gender in the UK.
Featured image via the Canary
By Willem Moore
Politics
Chest Discomfort Without a Diagnosis: When Specialist Assessment Matters
The second someone finds themselves facing chest discomfort, their mind begins to spiral into panic. It can be difficult to think of anything else in that second, as anything happening to our hearts scares us far more than most health issues out there. But do you know what can make this situation even more excruciating? Going through a heart check and still walking away without a clear diagnosis in hand. This is, arguably, even more exhausting and frustrating than the discomfort itself. The only ray of light that remains, then, is hoping that some specialist can help you instead. So, if you’re in this situation, let’s help you understand why chest discomfort can be so difficult to diagnose and how a specialist can help you uncover the root cause of this issue.
Why is chest discomfort so difficult to diagnose?
The biggest problem with the symptom “chest discomfort” is that the chest contains many organs and structures that can cause it. The heart, lungs, muscles, ribs, oesophagus, and even something more abstract, like anxiety, can create this sensation. While chest pain related to the heart is described as tightness, indigestion or acid reflux as a burning sensation, and muscle strain as a sharp pain, the first instinct people have when clutching their chest is that something is wrong with the heart. The problem is, heart problems don’t always follow this pattern anyway. Many people will experience jaw discomfort, upper back pain, nausea, dizziness, or fatigue rather than chest pain, and never link them to the heart. Some people may even have intermittent symptoms that practically disappear by the time of the appointment, making things even harder for a doctor.
When should you involve a heart specialist?
Now, if your pain is linked to a muscle strain or mild indigestion, your GP will usually be good enough to handle the problem. But there are a few red flags to watch out for. Chest discomfort that repeatedly appears during physical activity is one of them. If walking uphill, climbing stairs, or other forms of exercise trigger chest tightness, blood flow to the heart may be affected.
You should also get yourself checked by a good cardiologist in London if your symptoms are becoming more frequent and more intense, and are affecting your quality of life. Even if your tests came out green before, these ongoing symptoms deserve a closer look. Remember: a single normal ECG does not mean the issue is no longer heart-related. If a close relative of yours also has had a bout with heart disease, high cholesterol, or cardiac issues – especially at a younger age – you absolutely should get yourself checked by a heart doctor. Lastly, if your chest pain is accompanied by heart palpitations, dizziness, or unexplained shortness of breath, and these symptoms are worsening over time, get yourself checked immediately.
Should you wait for an NHS referral or go private?
To be clear, the NHS is an excellent system for treating emergencies and providing essential care for most people. But when it comes to specialists, a private clinic may be a much better option. The primary reason is that waiting times for such doctors, especially for non-urgent investigations like unexplained chest discomfort, can stretch for weeks, even months, depending on your area. For someone who is experiencing chest pain, this is pretty bad, as not only can their symptoms worsen significantly with time, but the waiting period itself can be emotionally draining.
Going private will let you see a cardiologist and access advanced tests (if needed) much faster. In many cases, you can arrange a consultation, ECGs, stress testing, echocardiograms, and advanced imaging within a week. When the goal is to identify a potentially serious issue that presents as just chest pain, this is nothing short of a blessing in disguise. Again, if your symptoms are mild and stable, and you’re already seeing a GP, it’s fine to wait a bit. But if your symptoms are worsening or affecting your life in any way, it’s best to see a private cardiologist instead.
What tests should you get for your chest discomfort?
The exact tests you’ll be getting will depend on your consultation with the cardiologist, based on your symptoms, risk factors, age, physical exam results, and medical history. But there are still some common tests that you can ask about. The first is an electrocardiogram, also called an ECG. This test records the electrical activity of your heart, checks for any abnormalities in your heart rhythm, and signs of previous damage to the organ.
Alongside this, you may need blood work to check for markers of heart muscle injury, inflammation, cholesterol, and other conditions that may be contributing to your symptoms. If your symptoms occur during physical activity, a stress test may also be added. In it, you’ll be asked to exercise on a treadmill or a stationary bike, and your heart will be monitored by the doctor throughout.
To get a clearer picture of how well your heart is functioning, an echocardiogram may also be ordered – an ultrasound specifically for the heart. It shows how well your heart is pumping blood, how well your valves are functioning, and if there are any structural issues that need addressing. In more complex cases, your doctor may also recommend tests such as a Holter monitor if the chest pain appears at random, ambulatory monitoring if random blood pressure spikes are a suspect, a coronary CT angiogram to obtain detailed images of your arteries, and a 3D scan to obtain a true, full picture of your heart in real time.
Getting the best possible care for your heart
At the end of the day, don’t forget that chest discomfort, especially one that hasn’t had a clear diagnosis so far, is not something you simply need to live with. This isn’t something you resign yourself to for the rest of your life. You need to keep fighting, and the best way to do so is to get yourself checked by specialist doctors. Even if the cause turns out to be non-cardiac in the end, anything this persistent should absolutely be evaluated so you are not left guessing about your own health. If you feel you can still afford to wait, see a specialist with an NHS referral; otherwise, start with a private cardiologist immediately. Sooner or later, the root cause of your issue will undoubtedly surface, and when it does, prepare yourself for the treatment plan. If you can just do this much, everything will be just fine.
Politics
Zionists forlorn as Germany loses out on UNSC seat
Germany was kicked off the United Nations Security Council (UNSC) for the first time since it joined in 1973. This occurred amid claims that its role in the genocide of Palestinians played a role. It was deeply upsetting Zionists in Germany and elsewhere.
Facing consequences for their genocidal actions is not really the Zionists’ strong suit.
The United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) voted on the temporary seats for the UNSC yesterday.
Germany needed a two-thirds majority of votes in the wider UNGA to get a seat on the UNSC for the next two years, which it didn’t; Portugal and Austria were elected instead.
The UNSC consists of 15 of the 193 member states. The US, UK, China, Russia, and France are the five permanent members of the council and have veto power. In contrast, ten non-permanent (NPM) seats are regionally allocated. They are elected by the UNGA secret ballot every year to serve two-year terms.
The NPM seats on the UNSC are split according to regions: Africa gets three, Asia-Pacific gets two, Latin America gets two, Western Europe gets two, and Eastern Europe gets one.
Cost of loyalty to US and Israel
Full-time Canadian Zionist Hillel Neuer, who runs UN Watch, acknowledged the reports that Germany lost its UNSC seat because of its firm stance with Israel. For Neuer, blind loyalty to an apartheid state is apparently worth more than a seat at the table.
Manche behaupten, Deutschland habe seine Kandidatur für den UN-Sicherheitsrat verloren, weil es zu fest an der Seite Israels steht.
Wenn das stimmt, dann sei es so.
Stimmen von Diktaturen und Hamas-Verstehern sind kein moralischer Maßstab. Prinzipien zählen mehr als ein Sitz.
— Hillel Neuer (@HillelNeuer) June 3, 2026
Meanwhile, German politicians are mad that Germany, through its UN contributions, has not been able to keep its seat at the UNSC. Additionally, German journalist James Jackson posted an article from Die Zeit.
German politicians are outraged that they cannot buy popularity by financially supporting international institutions while actually undermining them (Netanyahu invite & Albanese sanctions) https://t.co/MG9coGd0sU
— James Jackson (@derJamesJackson) June 4, 2026
In the Die Zeit article, one CDU minister, Manfred Pentz, who serves as the Hessian Minister for International Affairs, is asking why Germany should continue to invest so much money in the UN. This is notable if it does not have the influence it believes it is entitled to.
Rare moment of justice
Former German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock was the one who announced the results, as she is the current UNGA president. She is also a staunch Israel ally. The Schadenfreude was delicious – just as journalist Ali Abunimah commented.
How do you say Schadenfreude in German?
https://t.co/5b1wA8Wz2V
— Ali Abunimah (@AliAbunimah) June 3, 2026
Craig Mokhiber, the former UN official, called Germany’s loss a rare moment of justice as Germany is punished for its war on Gaza and Iran.
In a rare moment of justice at the UN General Assembly today, Germany lost its bid for a UN Security Council seat. Germany’s scandalous support for genocide in Palestine and aggression against Iran, and its repression of human rights defenders inside Germany, were all on display…
— Craig Mokhiber (@CraigMokhiber) June 3, 2026
Counterweight to the US and Israel war machine
The results yesterday also led to NPM seats at the UNSC for Kyrgyzstan, Zimbabwe, and Trinidad and Tobago.
Kyrgyzstan beat the US-backed Philippines.
Five new non-permanent members have been elected to the UN Security Council.
Austria
Kyrgyzstan
Portugal
Trinidad and Tobago
ZimbabweThe countries’ two-year terms will begin on 1 January 2027.https://t.co/GG0pBn9swn pic.twitter.com/UgodQSH743
— United Nations (@UN) June 3, 2026
Zimbabwe, being on the UNSC, is also a counterweight to the Anglo-American-Zionist lobby.
Zimbabwe, formerly Southern Rhodesia, gained independence from British colonialism on April 18, 1980. It is also one of the most sanctioned countries in the world because it committed the unthinkable crime in Western eyes for seizing land from white settlers. Of course, Israel hates it!
However, under economic strain from sanctions, Zimbabwe has yielded to Western pressure and gone back on some of its land reforms.
Neuer was throwing his toys out of the pram just because a German Diplomat congratulated Zimbabwe.
.@_FriedrichMerz This is a horrible message to send. Why is your government posting special congratulations to the U.N. election of the serial human rights abusing regime of Zimbabwe’s Emmerson Mnangagwa? Don’t you know how they crush dissidents? See here: https://t.co/KYpj03wxzU https://t.co/0FuvZGDy5t
— Hillel Neuer (@HillelNeuer) June 3, 2026
As Mokhiber said, a rare moment of justice at the UNSC. But, be assured of a lot of whining from all US-backed states involved in the new developments.
Featured image via the Canary
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