Independent journalist and anti-grooming gangs activist Tommy Robinson is facing contempt of court charges. The Conservative Party-controlled Attorney General’s Office (AGO) has initiated potential contempt proceedings after the far-left ‘Hope Not Hate’ group – the UK equivalent of the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) – funded by George Soros, alleged he violated a court order.
In a libel case concluded in 2021, Syrian migrant Jamal Hijazi sued Robinson. He had repeated claims Hijazi had assaulted girls at Almondbury Community School in Huddersfield, West Yorkshire, in October 2018, resulting in a lawsuit. The courts sided with Hijazi, ordering Robinson to pay damages and legal costs and imposing an injunction prohibiting him from repeating the allegations.
Hope Not Hate, which also targets Raheem Kassam, Editor-in-Chief of The National Pulse, presented a dossier to the AGO claiming Robinson has repeated the allegations. The High Court will hold a hearing on potential contempt proceedings on July 29.
The state previously imprisoned Robinson for contempt of court after he filmed Muslim men accused of exploiting young girls outside a courthouse in May 2018, breaching a reporting ban. Jurors subsequently convicted all of them.
This latest attempt to drag Robinson in front of the courts follows a case brought against him by the Metropolitan Police, collapsed in an embarrassing fashion. The London police force arrested and pepper-sprayed Robinson after he refused to comply with an order to leave a march against anti-Semitism, claiming his mere presence in public was “likely to cause harassment, alarm, and distress to others.”
Police bail conditions after this arrest included a near-total ban on entering London, but a judge ultimately determined officers had no lawful order against Robinson when they detained him.