LONDON: The hard-right Reform UK party leader Nigel Farage has dismissed members of his election campaign after they were filmed making racist and homophobic comments, he said in a statement Thursday.
Farage, a former EU parliamentarian who has tried and failed to run for the UK parliament seven times, is seeking a seat in the general election next month called by Britain’s embattled Prime Minister Rishi Sunak.
An undercover investigation broadcast on Channel 4 filmed campaigners for his Reform UK making racist and homophobic comments last week in Farage’s constituency of Clacton-on-Sea in southeast England.
One campaigner, Andrew Parker, is heard describing Islam as “the most disgusting cult” and calling for Muslims to be kicked “out of mosques” that should be turned into pubs.
Speaking to a constituent, Parker also called for new army recruits to carry out “target practice” by shooting migrants trying to cross the English Channel illegally in boats.
Channel 4 also filmed George Jones, a campaign events organizer for Reform UK, explaining the party’s focus on Clacton: “Look around you. The real England. You know what I mean? Not like London when you’re a foreigner in your own country.”
He later made homophobic remarks including describing the LGBT flag as “degenerate.”
In a statement to Channel 4, Farage said he was “dismayed” by the comments of “a handful of people associated with my local campaign,” and announced they would no longer be part of it.
“The appalling sentiments expressed by some in these exchanges bear no relation to my own views, those of the vast majority of our supporters or Reform UK policy,” Farage said.
Parker said in a separate statement that “neither Nigel Farage personally or the Reform Party are aware of my personal views on immigration.”
According to the anti-racism organization Hope Not Hate, Reform UK has had to withdraw 166 candidates since the beginning of the year, most of whom have made racist or offensive remarks.
Farage’s party is polling third behind the ruling Conservatives and the opposition Labour party.
But a surge of popularity for Reform UK candidates since Farage took over as leader this month risks drawing away votes that the Conservatives would need to win a fifth term in power.
UK’s Farage dismisses campaign members over racist comments
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UK’s Farage dismisses campaign members over racist comments
- Andrew Parker described Islam as “the most disgusting cult” and called for Muslims to be kicked “out of mosques” that should be turned into pubs
Pakistani Taliban kill six soldiers in checkpoint attack
- Pakistan has faced a surge in militant attacks along its border regions since the Taliban authorities retook control in Kabul in 2021
PESHAWAR, Pakistan: Pakistani Taliban militants stormed a security checkpoint in Pakistan’s northwestern border area with Afghanistan, killing six soldiers and wounding four others, a government official said Tuesday.
Pakistan has faced a surge in militant attacks along its border regions since the Taliban authorities retook control in Kabul in 2021.
It accuses Afghanistan of harboring the insurgents, a claim the Taliban government denies.
Late Monday, more than a dozen armed men attacked the checkpoint, leading to a heavy exchange of fire in Kurram, a tribal district in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province.
“Six security personnel were martyred and four were injured, while two militants were also killed in the fighting,” the government official posted in Kurram, who was not authorized to speak to the media, told AFP on the condition of anonymity.
The Pakistani Taliban group, or Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), has long been active in the region, and claimed responsibility for the attack.
Pakistan accuses the Taliban authorities in Afghanistan of sheltering TTP militants and allowing them to launch cross-border attacks from there — a charge Kabul denies.
The border between the two countries has been closed since the clashes in October, though Pakistan said last week it would allow UN aid supplies to pass to Afghanistan soon.
The attack comes days after an exchange of gunfire and shelling between Afghan and Pakistani forces at a major border crossing that killed four civilians and one soldier, according to Afghanistan.
Each side accused the other of starting the fighting.










