Says BNP Deputy Leader
by BNP News
Ugandan immigrants have no right to define who is British, the deputy leader of the British National Party Simon Darby has said.
Reacting to an attack on the BNP by the Ugandan priest masquerading as the former “Bishop of Birmingham” Dr John Sentamu, who had earlier criticised the BNP for daring to define Britishness in terms of ancestry, Mr Darby said, “Dr Sentamu should not interfere in the political process. He’s not in any position to tell me or anyone else who is, or isn’t, English.
“If I went to Uganda and told them that they were all genetic mongrels and that anyone could be Ugandan I’d still be picking spears out of myself now.”
Mr Darby was defending party leader Nick Griffin’s comments that the replacement of British people in this country by waves of immigrants was nothing less than “bloodless genocide.” Dr Sentamu had claimed that this was “just language which is beyond belief.”<br />
Mr Darby responded on his blog, writing that “Our old friend John Sentamu, or to give him his full name John Tucker Mugabi Sentamu, has been up to his old tricks once again. As if the responsibilities of being the Archbishop of York were not enough, the ambitious African has apparently used his power and influence to kindly bestow upon the world the right to be English.”
“I somewhat doubt whether or not this collection of professional zealots, who try oh so very hard to disguise their true motivations, have thought about the consequences of BNP success in spite of their very public interference.
“However, what is certain is that should the BNP triumph in Yorkshire or elsewhere, the likes of Malik and Sentamu will be able to wallow in their newly acclaimed marginalisation, obscurity and irrelevance for years.”