Less than half of the schoolchildren in Bristol’s city centre are of white British extraction, chilling evidence of the rapid ethnic cleansing of Britain’s indigenous population.
The shocking statistics are revealed in a new report for Bristol City Council by the Institute of Community Cohesion (ICoCo) which also found that Bristol has nine nursery and primaries where more than a quarter of pupils are of Somali origin, including two where the proportion is more than half.
Four secondary schools have more than 10 percent Somali pupils, the report continued. In total, four percent of all schoolchildren in the city are of Somali origin, a total of one in every 25 pupils. The number has rocketed from less than one in 500 eight years ago.
The report also predicted that the proportion of non-British children in Bristol is likely to rise quickly because the number of births to Somali mothers in the city is also rising rapidly — up from about 60 in 2001 to 270 in 2005.
While Somalis are the largest group, Bristol has seen new arrivals from almost 100 other countries since the start of the millennium. Less than half of the children in schools in inner-city Bristol now “come from white British backgrounds,” the report reveals.
The report based its figures on the 2008 pupil information survey of all state schools and National Insurance registrations for non-UK nationals.
The study was carried out last year and based on 32 individual interviews and 118 people seen at eight focus groups.
“Schools are becoming increasingly diverse at a much faster rate than the Bristol population as a whole,” the report said.
“Demographic changes have occurred swiftly and without warning in some schools, with potentially destabilising effects.”
The report says that “without rapid and effective action, like many similar cities in the UK, we could find ourselves in a situation where schools are increasingly socially and ethnically divided. We are committed to taking action to prevent this happening.”
This process is nothing less than the systematic ethnic cleansing of the indigenous population of Britain, a phenomenon described by British National Party leader Nick Griffin as “bloodless genocide.”
This displacement of the British people by masses of immigrants is also a violation of the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, as adopted by the General Assembly Resolution 61/295 on 13 September 2007.
That declaration specifically states, in article 8, that “Indigenous peoples and individuals have the right not to be subjected to forced assimilation or destruction of their culture.”
Furthermore, the UN declaration goes on to state that governments are obligated to “provide effective mechanisms for prevention of, and redress for:
(a) Any action which has the aim or effect of depriving them of their integrity as distinct peoples, or of their cultural values or ethnic identities;
(b) Any action which has the aim or effect of dispossessing them of their lands, territories or resources;
(c) Any form of forced population transfer which has the aim or effect of violating or undermining any of their rights; and
(d) Any form of forced assimilation or integration.”
Recommended reading: Folk and Nation: Underpinning the Ethno-State
By Arthur Kemp and Nick Griffin.
This is the first of a planned series of ideological handbooks, initially distributed to voting members of the BNP. The booklet explains in detail the concept of ethno-nationalism.
It is divided into the following subheadings:
Ethnic Nationalism — A Definition.
Central Tenets of Ethno-Nationalism.
Underlying Concepts of Ethno-Nationalism.
The Implications of Ethno-Nationalism.
The Practical Application of Ethno-Nationalism.
Attacks on Ethno-Nationalism.
How to Argue the Case for Ethno-Nationalism.
This booklet will provide all the answers underpinning the non-racist argument for Britain to remain a British country. It is invaluable for anyone wishing to understand a crucial part of BNP policy and modern democratic nationalist ideology.
Softcover, new version, includes United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples on back cover, 26 pp. £4.00 Click here to order.
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