An eyewitness to the murder of Jo Cox MP says he heard her attacker shout "Britain first" or "put
Britain first" before he stabbed her and shot her dead.
Local Clarke Rothwell told the BBC he couldn't be sure
which of the phrases he used, but he was sure he used the words 'Britain
first'.
His statement adds weight to earlier reports that the
MP's assailant shouted the words during his attack.
He said: "I turned around to look what the noise
were, and I heard a woman screaming.
"Then a guy was bent over a woman - I could see
her legs sticking out - with what looked like a gun in his hand. He then
proceeded to shoot her again on the floor."
Asked what the attacker said during the assault, he
said: "The words I heard him say were "Britain first", or
"put Britain first".
"I can't say exactly which it was, but definitely
"Britain first" was what he said. What he shouted. He shouted it at
least twice."
She had just finished meeting voters at a constituency
surgery event when she was attacked.
She was rushed to hospital, but later died from her
injuries.
She is survived by husband Brendan, and their two
young children.
Police arrested a 52 year old man from Batley on
suspicion of murder and are not looking for anyone else in connection with the
attack.
Britain First answer:
The eyewitness who insists Jo Cox’s killer shouted “Britain First” before
murdering the MP was on the leaked British Nationalist Party (BNP) membership
and contacts list. Britain First and the BNP are known to be openly hostile
toward one another.
As a result of eyewitness Clarke Rothwell’s claims,
the media have been quick to link the Labour MP’s murder to Britain First, a hard
line nationalist group. Much of the press has also linked the killing to
Britain’s European Union (EU) referendum, and Germany’s Chancellor Merkel has claimed the Leave campaign is to blame for the murder, for using “radical”
language.
Mr Rothwell, who witnessed the brutal attack on the
mother of two, told BBC Newsnight: “The words I heard [Cox’s attacker] say were Britain first, or put
Britain first,
“I can’t say exactly what it was but definitely
Britain first is what he said, what he was shouting. He shouted it at least
twice.”
Gas fitter Mr Rothwell, who was working near to the
murder scene yesterday, appears on the leaked BNP membership and contacts list. Britain First was founded as a
splinter group of the now effectively defunct, far right BNP and there is known
hostility between the two groups.
The gunman, named locally as Thomas Mair, has a
history of mental health problems. His brother, Scott, told reporters: “My brother is not violent and is not all that political.”
The original claim for the “Britain First” shout was
local dry cleaner Aamir Tahir. In the following hours, however, Mr. Tahir has
told other news outlets that he “wasn’t there [at the scene]” and simply heard
the allegation as second-hand information. Another witness, Hicham Ben
Abdallah, has said that he heard no such claim.
There is no record of the last witness named in the Guardian – Graeme Howard –
living in the area, though they claim he lived on Bond Street, just minutes
away from the site of the murder. Breitbart London visited Bond Street – a tiny
road – last night, and could not find Mr. Howard.
A sign in a shop window close to where Mrs. Cox was
killed insists that “no one shouted Britain First” at any time.
Other eyewitnesses also
denied hearing it:
Britain First spokesman Jayda Fransen distanced her
organisation from the attacks, which she called “absolutely disgusting”. She
told LBC radio that Britain First have “a very strict code of conduct” and that
there is “no violence tolerated at all”.
“We’re a registered political party and we hold legal
protests. We absolutely condemn this kind of behaviour. We think it is
disgusting in fact. Attacking an MP is an attack on democracy.”
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