Recently, Tommy Robinson was seen relaxing by a pool at a luxurious hotel in Ayia Napa while exacerbating the tensions of racial conflicts in Britain.
The previous leader of the English Defence League, fleeing the UK to avoid a court appearance, resides at a lavish resort on the outskirts of the coastal town in Cyprus, costing £400 per night.
Throughout the past week, he has been sharing numerous posts endorsing violent activities against alleged ‘migrant hotels’, advocating for ‘mass expulsions’, and asserting that the prevailing chaos is being instigated by ‘Muslims’ and ‘migrants’.
These included spreading false speculations that a suspect in a recent stabbing incident was of Muslim descent and unverified allegations of migrants engaging in sexual assaults.
Robinson, 41, a self-proclaimed journalist, was captured on Sunday reclining on sunbeds and occasionally glancing at his phone.
He was also observed perusing a book by a conspiracy theorist named Patrick Byrne, propagating discredited assertions that the 2020 election loss of Donald Trump was orchestrated by internal government fraud.
Robinson’s social media account posted and reposted content numerous times throughout the day.
As per the initial report from the Daily Mail, which disclosed Robinson’s location without explicitly naming the hotel, he is accompanied by family and friends at the undisclosed hotel. He has been following a relaxed routine, spending ample time at the pool and enjoying dinners at the hotel restaurant.
The 41-year-old is now asserting that this revelation forms part of an ‘establishment assault’ and that his children now fear for their safety due to a belief that someone might come to harm them despite the hotel’s identity being kept confidential.
Multiple media outlets deduced the location’s identity based on clues in various images and videos posted by Robinson on social media, including a gym selfie featuring a wristband featuring the hotel’s logo.
Robinson was granted unconditional bail last Sunday evening after his apprehension over the weekend – yet he failed to show up at the Royal Courts of Justice on Monday.
The far-right activist is facing allegations of breaching the stipulations of a 2021 court order imposed following a successful lawsuit filed by Syrian refugee Jamal Hijazi for disseminating false claims about him.
He was instructed to compensate Mr Hijazi £100,000 and, as is customary in such instances, refrained from reiterating the allegations – yet a purported ‘dossier of evidence’ suggests that he went against these directives.
Port police apprehended him on Saturday for purportedly resisting a stop-and-search procedure at the Channel Tunnel in Folkestone, Kent.
Subsequently, he was detained under counter-terror statutes permitting police to conduct such inspections at ports, airports, and rail stations.
In court, it was disclosed that Robinson was released on bail at 10 p.m. and immediately left the UK via the Eurostar train.
Earlier that day, he purportedly screened a documentary against court orders at a rally in central London.
The film Silenced reportedly reiterates the false allegations that Robinson, under his actual name, Stephen Yaxley-Lennon, asserted against Mr Hijazi.