National Action cofounder jailed for being member of banned group

Alex Davies, 28, was jailed for eight-and-a-half years at London's Old Bailey court on Tuesday after being found guilty in May of being a member of a banned organisation.
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Alex Davies was jailed for eight-and-a-half years at London's Old Bailey court on Tuesday [Loop Images/Universal Images Group/Getty]

The co-founder of a British neo-Nazi group, whose members have planned or praised the murder of lawmakers, was jailed on Tuesday for being a member of a banned organisation.

Alex Davies, 28, helped to set up National Action, a white supremacist group which was proscribed by the government in 2016, after it openly celebrated the killing of Jo Cox, a member of parliament.

She was shot and stabbed to death by a Nazi-obsessed recluse in a frenzied street attack.

Davies was found guilty last month of remaining a member of the group after it was banned.

He was jailed for eight-and-a-half years at London's Old Bailey court on Tuesday.

In 2018, a National Action member admitted buying a machete for the purpose of murdering another female lawmaker as well as making a threat to kill a female police officer.

Last year, a policeman became the first serving police officer to be convicted of a terrorism offence after he was found guilty of being a member of the group.

Prosecutors said the aim of National Action, which was formed in 2013, was to start a race war. The group - the first far-right organisation to be outlawed in Britain since World War Two - had said it wanted to free white Britain from Jewish control and the spread of ethnic minorities.

British police have recently warned of a rise in far-right extremism.

(Reuters)