
The members of Mr Meanor,who went on a schools tour in 2016 (Picture: @mrmeanormusic)
The Home Office was behind a covert effort to combat radicalisation in Muslim areas through the power of boyband music,according to reports.
In 2016,pop group Mr Meanor embarked on a tour of schools in the north of England to spread a message of anti-violence.
The effort was backed by Warrington-based charity The Tim Parry Johnathan Ball Foundation for Peace,which was set up in memory of two young victims of a 1993 IRA bombing.
But news site PoliticsHome has now reported the entire campaign was organised by figures inside the government.
The outlet cites LinkedIn posts by former contractors and the involvement of communications company Breakthrough Media,which worked with the Home Office’s Research,Information and Communications Unit (RICU).
A 2016 investigation by the Guardian found Breakthrough had created dozens of websites,videos and social media pages to counter Isis propaganda when the terror group was at its height.
Amber Rudd was Home Secretary at the time of the Mr Meanor tour (Picture: Yui Mok/PA Wire)They had recently released a new single titled Think About It,which has a strong anti-radicalisation message.The song includes the lyrics:Cause 9/11 changed how we view these thingsUnited News - unews.co.za