Hem
Partiledaren Jimmie Åkesson (SD) håller en pressträff i Riksdagens presscenter tidigare i oktober. Arkivbild. (Fredrik Sandberg/TT / TT Nyhetsbyrån)

Åkessons vän poserar med högerextrema på bilder

En person som beskrivs som en nära vän till Jimmie Åkesson har umgåtts med högerextremister och förintelseförnekare, rapporterar Expressen.

Mannen, som är i 50-årsåldern, ska bland annat ha varit en av deltagarna på Jimmie Åkessons svensexa.

Enligt Expressen syntes han i april i år krama om högerextremisten och tidigare NMR-medlemmen Christian Peterson och Adam Irving, som sköter utgivningen av sin morfar David Irvings förintelseförnekande böcker.

Jimmie Åkesson säger till Expressen att han har sagt upp kontakten med mannen sedan ungefär ett år tillbaka, efter att dennes ”beteende kraftigt förändrades”.

Expressen har sökt vännen utan framgång.

bakgrund
 
David Irving
Wikipedia (en)
David John Cawdell Irving (born 24 March 1938) is an English author who has written on the military and political history of the Second World War, especially Nazi Germany. He was found to be a Holocaust denier in a British court in 2000 as a result of a failed libel case. Irving's works include The Destruction of Dresden (1963), Hitler's War (1977), Churchill's War (1987) and Goebbels: Mastermind of the Third Reich (1996). In his works, he falsely claimed that Adolf Hitler did not know of the extermination of Jews, or, if he did, he opposed it. Irving's negationist claims and views of German war crimes in the Second World War (and Hitler's responsibility for them) were denounced by historians. He was once recognised for his knowledge of Nazi Germany and his ability to unearth new historical documents, which he held closely but stated were fully supportive of his conclusions. His 1964 book The Mare's Nest about Germany's V-weapons campaign of 1944–45 was praised for its deep research but criticised for minimising Nazi slave-labour programmes. By the late 1980s Irving had placed himself in the fringes of the study of history, and had begun to turn to further extremes, possibly influenced by the 1988 trial of the Holocaust denier Ernst Zündel. That trial, and his reading of the pseudoscientific Leuchter report, led him openly to espouse Holocaust denial, specifically denying that Jews were murdered by gassing at Auschwitz concentration camp. Irving's reputation as a historical author was further discredited in 2000, when, in the course of an unsuccessful libel case he filed against the American historian Deborah Lipstadt and Penguin Books, High Court Judge Charles Gray determined in his ruling that Irving wilfully misrepresented historical evidence to promote Holocaust denial and whitewash the Nazis, a view shared by many prominent historians. The court found that Irving was an active Holocaust denier, antisemite and racist, who "for his own ideological reasons persistently and deliberately misrepresented and manipulated historical evidence". In addition the court found that Irving's books had distorted the history of Hitler's role in the Holocaust to depict Hitler in a favourable light.
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