BNP leader joins Wootton Bassett crowds to mourn dead soldiers
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BNP leader Nick Griffin was present in Wootton Bassett today to
see the bodies of six soldiers pass through the town after their
repatriation from Afghanistan to British soil.
Mr Griffin stood on the high street where hearses carrying the
soldiers' Union Flag-draped coffins were due to arrive.
Wearing a black coat, adorned with a poppy, the controversial MEP
stood with a minder opposite family and friends of the fallen
soldiers.
Mr Griffin said: "I wanted to come here today because this is the
second worst toll to be coming through and because tomorrow is
Remembrance Day.
"So it's fitting that as many people as possible come here
today."
He added: "It's an absolutely tremendous and very moving
display."
Mr Griffin said he had a "friendly" reaction from the public to his
presence.
"It's been very low key, I've been talking to many people and it's
been very friendly," he said.
When asked for his view on the conflict in Afghanistan after the
loss of the five soldiers killed by a rogue Afghan police officer,
Mr Griffin said: "This is not the time or the place for political
statements - it's for remembrance. I have strong views on
Afghanistan but I'm not prepared to discuss them here."
Standing yards from Mr Griffin was veteran Martyn Matthews, 61, a
retired warrant officer who served for 27 years with the commando
forces.
Mr Matthews, from Corsham, Wiltshire, said: "We live in a democracy
and everyone has a right to their own views. If people are going to
give their lives for that freedom, Mr Griffin has as much right to
his views as anyone else does.
"Although I do not stand by his views, I would encourage him to be
here to see the impact extremism can have."
Under cloudy skies and drizzling rain, soldiers lined the
streets of the town alongside Royal British Legion veterans,
shopkeepers and residents to pay tribute to the fallen men.
Warrant Officer Class 1 Darren Chant, 40, Sergeant Matthew Telford,
37, and Guardsman Jimmy Major, 18, from the Grenadier Guards, died
alongside Corporal Steven Boote, 22, and Corporal Nicholas
Webster-Smith, 24, from the Royal Military Police.
They were shot dead by a "rogue" Afghan police officer at a secure
checkpoint in Nad-e-Ali in Helmand Province on November 3 in an
attack claimed by the Taliban.
Two days later, Serjeant Phillip Scott, 30, of 3rd Battalion The
Rifles, was killed by an improvised explosive device near Sangin in
Helmand.
As the cortege passed along the High Street, silence fell, broken
only by the chiming bells of St Bartholomew and All Saints
Church.
Standard-bearers from the Royal British Legion lowered their flags
as the coffins passed by.
As the procession paused by the war memorial, which was covered in
floral tributes, roses and wreaths were placed on the hearses by
relatives and friends.
Tearful family members wept as the coffins drove by - some wearing
T-shirts bearing the name of their fallen loved one.
The procession then continued to Oxford's John Radcliffe Hospital,
where post-mortem examinations are completed.
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