News
Year-long investigation by BBC Wales Investigates exposes far right group

A YEAR-LONG undercover investigation by BBC Wales has prompted calls for a far right group to be banned and for the police to investigate some of its members who were secretly filmed making racist comments and saying migrants who refuse to leave the UK should be shot.
Broadcasting today on BBC iPlayer and BBC One Wales at 9.00pm, the BBC Wales Investigates programme, Unmasked: Extreme Far Right, follows a year-long investigation into far right group, Patriotic Alternative.
Former Counter-Extremism Commissioner Dame Sara Khan believes the UK government should urgently change the law to make groups like Patriotic Alternative illegal.
A BBC journalist infiltrated the group using a fake identity, Dan Jones, someone who was sofa surfing in Cardiff and didn’t have a full time job. Posing as a new recruit to PA he covertly recorded at demonstrations, got casual work with one member of the group, attended their summer camp as well as their secretive annual conference where he recorded some of PA’s members and supporters using racial slurs and sharing extreme views.
He filmed one PA member saying he believed a race war was inevitable and the organisation should use a similar tactic to the Nazi party to gain power. Another who says he works for the Inland Revenue, saying that he wants to see a whites only world and how he gives deliberately misleading information to non-white people at his work who he calls his “racial enemies.” Another said he wanted to see migrants rounded up, put in camps and shot if they refused to leave. And at the group’s annual conference, a guest speaker from Australia – a convicted criminal, Blair Cottrell, told the undercover journalist and other members how he thought the only way to deal with black criminals is for them to be skinned and their bodies hung up at traffic lights to deter others.
Barrister Ramya Nagesh watched some of the footage for the Unmasked: Extreme Far Right programme and said that in her view: “There’s more than enough evidence for the police to investigate and refer to the Crown Prosecution Service.”
The group cannot be banned under current legislation as they do not advocate terrorism but Dame Sara, the UK’s first Counter-Extremism Commissioner, feels they are “creating a climate conducive to terrorism”.
Patriotic Alternative leader Mark Collett said they are not extremist, do not promote violence and peacefully campaign for the rights of what he calls indigenous British people. PA, considered to be the UK’s largest far-right group with about 500 members and thousands of followers online, says it exists to “raise awareness” of immigration and promote “family values.”
The undercover reporter known as Dan Jones has now left Patriotic Alternative.
When contacted by the BBC about Dan’s evidence, most of those secretly filmed refused to answer questions – but one accused the BBC of having an anti-white bias.
Mark Collett says the allegations in tonight’s programme will be investigated and action taken against members if they have broken the group’s code of conduct.
Unmasked: Extreme Far Right airs today (21 January) at 9pm on BBC One Wales and is available now on iPlayer: https://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/m00279gm/bbc-wales-investigates-unmasked-extreme-far-right
Accompanying the programme, a six-part BBC Sounds podcast, Unmasked: Extreme Far Right, also launched today, tells the first-hand account from the reporter who went undercover. All six episodes are available to listen to now on BBC Sounds: https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p0kkv4t7
News
Spring statement slammed as disability cuts spark fear in Wales

Trussell Trust warns of rising hunger as 3.2 million face benefit losses
DISABLED people across Wales are facing what campaigners have called “brutal” and “terrifying” cuts to their benefits after the Chancellor’s Spring Statement revealed sweeping welfare changes that will leave millions worse off.
Rachel Reeves, delivering her first Spring Statement as Chancellor, claimed that the changes would help restore a £9.9bn surplus by 2029-30. However, the Department for Work and Pensions quietly published figures showing that 3.2 million families – both current and future claimants – will lose an average of £1,720 a year.

While Reeves defended the changes as part of a plan to grow the economy, critics say the cost is being passed to the most vulnerable – particularly disabled people who are already struggling to afford basic necessities.
In a statement to The Herald, Jo Harry, network lead for the Trussell Trust in Wales, said the cuts would push more people into poverty and hunger.
“These brutal cuts to already precarious incomes won’t help more disabled people find work, but they will risk forcing more people to skip meals and turn to food banks to get by,” she said.
“Disabled people are already three times more likely to face hunger, and over three quarters of people in receipt of Universal Credit and disability benefits are already struggling to afford the essentials like food. This will only get worse.”
‘Terrified’ by cuts
David, 46, who lives in Wales and has a painful bone disease, said he now relies on a Trussell Trust food bank and fears for his future.
“I am terrified now that the Chancellor has confirmed that my disability benefits will be cut,” he said.
“The bone tumours in my hips cause me pain every day and force me to use crutches. In cold weather, my symptoms worsen – but I already can’t afford to put the heating on.”
“Life costs more if you’re disabled. Things like specialist equipment and travel to healthcare appointments all add up. PIP – which the government is brutally cutting – is there to account for these extra costs. It is not a luxury.”
Warnings from experts
The British Medical Journal this week published a warning that cuts to disability benefits could lead to an increase in mental health problems, NHS pressures, and even deaths. In a previous wave of cuts between 2010 and 2013, over one million people had their benefits reassessed – resulting in an estimated 600 suicides.
Meanwhile, the Office for Budget Responsibility warned of a slowdown in living standards growth. Real household disposable income is forecast to grow by just 0.5% in 2027, with inflation expected to rebound to 3.7% in mid-2025.
Campaigners say the Chancellor could have chosen to tax extreme wealth instead of cutting benefits.
Caitlin Boswell from Tax Justice UK said: “Inequality is soaring and people are being left behind, struggling to make ends meet, while the very richest get richer. Choosing to make cut after cut to the poorest and most marginalised, while leaving the vast resource of the super rich untouched, is immoral and harmful.”
Community
Woodland at Tenby school targeted by vandals

A PEMBROKESHIRE school’s woodland area has been targeted by vandals in a spate of criminal damage and anti-social behaviour.
The incident occurred in the woodland behind Ysgol Hafan y Môr on Heywood Lane, Tenby. Dyfed-Powys Police have been informed, and a joint patrol with Mid and West Wales Fire and Rescue Service has since taken place.
Tracey Davies, from the fire service’s arson reduction team, and PCSO Ffion Thomas visited the site earlier this week to assess the situation and reassure the community.
Posting on the Tenby, Saundersfoot and Narberth Police Facebook page, they said: “ASB and criminal damage will not be tolerated in this area, and we will be taking positive action regarding this.”
They urged members of the public to report any further incidents to Dyfed-Powys Police using the following contact methods:
🖥️ | https://orlo.uk/KxdYo
📧 | [email protected]
📞 | 101
Business
Cardiff Airport boss resigns amid criticism of Welsh Government direction

THE CHIEF EXECUTIVE of Cardiff Airport, Spencer Birns, has stepped down from his role, sparking fresh criticism over the Welsh Government’s management of the publicly-owned site.
Mr Birns, who took on the role in 2020 after serving as the airport’s commercial director, has overseen a challenging period marked by the COVID-19 pandemic and a slow recovery in passenger numbers. Despite efforts to revive the airport’s fortunes, services and airline partnerships have struggled to return to pre-pandemic levels.

The airport, which was purchased by the Welsh Government in 2013 for £52 million, has continued to rely on public funding to stay afloat. Passenger numbers remain well below expectations, and several carriers have either scaled back operations or withdrawn entirely.
Reacting to Mr Birns’ resignation, Andrew RT Davies MS, Member of the Senedd for South Wales Central and former Leader of the Welsh Conservatives, said the move amounted to a “vote of no confidence” in the airport’s current ownership and direction.
Mr Davies said: “The chief executive leaving the pitch is a vote of no confidence in Welsh Government’s ownership of Cardiff Airport. Spencer Birns has always done his best at Cardiff Airport, where facilities are second to none, but the lack of direction from Welsh Government has led to a non-return of airlines and a brutal decline in passenger numbers.
“If we’re going to see this key economic asset gain real strength, we need to see a change of ownership, and better direction so talented people like Mr Birns aren’t walking away.”
Cardiff Airport has not yet named a successor or given details on the timeline for Mr Birns’ departure. A spokesperson for the airport said the search for new leadership would begin immediately, and paid tribute to Mr Birns’ service.
The Welsh Government has defended its stewardship of the airport in the past, citing the pandemic’s unprecedented impact on global aviation. However, critics argue that the airport has lacked a coherent long-term strategy and failed to attract sustainable commercial interest.
Mr Birns’ resignation comes at a time when the future of the airport remains under intense scrutiny, with calls growing louder for either privatisation or a new management structure.
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