Britain Responds to Grotesque Anti-White Murder of Henry Nowak Sikh Murderer Receives Life Sentence

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Henry Nowak and Convicted Murderer Vickrum Digwa via XThe killing of 18-year-old Henry Nowak has become a national indictment of modern globalist Britain after Restore Britain’s Rupert Lowe and Reform UK’s Nigel Farage accused the country’s police, establishment political class, and justice system of exposing a grim two-tier reality: a dying white teenager was handcuffed after being falsely accused of racism by the man who had stabbed him.Nowak, a student from Southampton, was stabbed five times last December by 23-year-old Vickrum Digwa, who used a 21cm Sikh ceremonial knife known as a kirpan. Yesterday, Digwa was sentenced to life in prison with a minimum term of 21 years after being convicted of murder and carrying a knife in public.But the sentence has not ended the outrage. Instead, the case has become a flashpoint over policing, ethnicity, immigration, law and order, and whether Britain’s institutions still have the courage to recognize victims and criminals without first filtering reality through a globalist anti-white ideology.Nowak’s final moments are now at the center of the national fury. After being stabbed, he told police he had been attacked, yet officers handcuffed him after Digwa falsely claimed the teenager had racially abused him. Bodycam footage has been released showing Henry Nowak begging for an ambulance before being handcuffed behind his back.Nowak: “I’ve been stabbed”Officer: “I don’t think you have mate”Follow: @europa pic.twitter.com/WqYV760Y14— Europa.com (@europa) June 1, 2026The judge rejected Digwa’s racism allegation in the clearest possible terms. “I am sure that Henry said nothing racist,” he said, adding that Digwa was “the only person to make that claim” and that it was “completely at odds with his previous character.”The judge also said Nowak “dying alone, humiliated and handcuffed” was a direct consequence of Digwa’s lies. He condemned the defense’s effort to smear the victim as “a violent, drunk, racist aggressor,” saying it compounded the suffering of Nowak’s grieving family.For Farage, the case is no longer merely about one murder. It is about a country where police appear quicker to react to an accusation of racism than to the sight of a bleeding teenager saying he had been stabbed.In what he called an “emergency address to the nation,” the Reform UK leader said the treatment of Nowak showed Britain had become a “two-tier country.” He argued that the case demonstrated that “the rights of white people mattered less than those of ethnic minorities.”“The last thing he heard was being read his rights by police,” Farage said. “The accusation of a racial slur is treated more seriously than actual violence.”Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer rejected the accusation through his spokesman, insisting, “There is no such thing as two-tier policing.” But to critics, that denial sounds increasingly detached from the reality ordinary Britons see with their own eyes.Nowak was stabbed. He said he had been stabbed. He was handcuffed anyway—and he died because of it.Farage compared Nowak’s final words—“I can’t breathe”—to those of George Floyd, whose death triggered a global political movement, corporate rituals, mass protests, and years of institutional upheaval. The contrast, he argued, is impossible to ignore.Where was the national reckoning for Henry Nowak? Where were the marches, hashtags, corporate statements, elite outrage, and institutional soul-searching after a young white man died handcuffed in the street?Farage demanded an end to what he called “anti-white prejudice” and said Britain must be willing to say that “white lives matter too.” He urged the public to respond not with sentimental speeches, but with “pure cold rage.”The fear of being called racist was greater than dealing with Henry Nowak’s murder.We should respond to this with pure cold rage.Britain’s historic way of life is being thrown away. pic.twitter.com/4N6vL76q1F— Nigel Farage MP (@Nigel_Farage) June 2, 2026The remarks triggered predictable condemnation from Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch, who accused Farage of “whipping up” anger and division. “I don’t want to hear about Black Lives Matter. I don’t want to hear about white lives matter. We all matter,” she said.But that response did little to answer the central issue. If everyone matters equally, critics ask, why did a dying teenager end up treated like the suspect after the killer invoked racism?Rupert Lowe, the Restore Britain MP, pushed the argument further, saying the murder must mark a turning point for a country that has tolerated institutional weakness for too long. For Lowe, polite concern is no longer enough.“Enough is enough—a deep line needs to be drawn in the sand. Talk is weak. Britain needs to say no more, and mean it,” Lowe wrote on X. Bodycam footage has been released showing Henry Nowak begging for an ambulance before being handcuffed behind his back.Nowak: “I’ve been stabbed”Officer: “I don’t think you have mate”Follow: @europa pic.twitter.com/WqYV760Y14— Europa.com (@europa) June 1, 2026Lowe said that under a future Restore Britain government, and with the approval of the British people, the death penalty would be available for the most serious violent crimes. He said Digwa’s case would meet that threshold.“A Restore Britain Government, with the British people’s approval, would put Vickrum Digwa to death,” Lowe wrote.He described the killing in brutal detail, noting that Nowak was stabbed five times, including in the back of the legs, the face, and fatally in the chest. Lowe also condemned Digwa for filming the dying teenager rather than calling an ambulance.That detail has become one of the most chilling elements of the case. A young man lay dying, and his killer recorded him.Prosecutors said Digwa removed the weapon from the scene with help from his mother, Kirun Kaur, who was convicted of assisting a defendant by removing the knife. Police later found the blade at the family home, along with more than 20 other weapons.Prosecutor Nicholas Lobbenberg KC told the court that Digwa had a “weapons obsession.” He said the murder was not a chaotic accident, but a sustained attack on an unarmed victim.“This was a sustained attack on an unarmed man,” Lobbenberg said. “The defendant is skilled with weapons, he trained with weapons, he sleeps in a room with weapons, he searches for weapons on his phone.”“The Crown says he is a man with a weapons obsession,” the prosecutor added. “He chose to use a weapon on the streets of Southampton.”A Snapchat video taken by Nowak shortly before the stabbing showed him filming Digwa and saying, “Go on, say you are a badman.” Digwa replied, “I am a bad man,” before approaching Nowak, grabbing his phone, and holding it during the incident.Another video taken by Digwa showed Nowak trying to flee by climbing over a fence. The teenager could be heard saying, “I have been stabbed” and “I can’t breathe.”The judge told Digwa that he had brought shame on his family and his religion. He said Digwa’s actions had “stirred up racial tension in Southampton and across the country,” leaving many Sikhs worried about their safety.“You, Vickrum Digwa, murdered him,” the judge said. “By doing so, you robbed him of all the things he loved.”The grief of Nowak’s family was devastating. His father, Mark Nowak, broke down in court while describing the unbearable knowledge that his son died frightened, wounded, and alone.“As a father, it is my job to protect my child and I failed to keep him safe,” he said. “I was not there when he needed me most, the thought of him lying in the road, scared, bleeding to death will haunt me forever.”Henry Nowak’s father says the ‘contrast’ in the police’s treatment of his son and his murderer is ‘unbearable’ in a statement after Nowak’s killer was sentenced to 21 years in prison.‘His murderer was afforded decency. He was believed’!pic.twitter.com/Z3frKYocLD— Tommy Robinson (@TRobinsonNewEra) June 1, 2026He said the family had been handed a life sentence of its own. “There is a Henry-shaped hole in our family forever and nothing will heal that,” he said.Nowak’s sister Olivia addressed Digwa directly, saying, “If you had known him, you would never have hurt him.” She described Henry as “funny, handsome, precious and kind,” adding that he “should not be forever 18.”For Restore Britain and the wider populist right, the case now stands as a symbol of a broken state. The police did not simply fail to save Henry Nowak; they humiliated him in his final moments after accepting the killer’s false racial claim.Lowe said the police officers at the scene should face criminal investigation for gross negligence manslaughter if the evidence supports it. Under a Restore Britain government, he wrote, “the police officers on the scene who allowed Henry to die will face criminal charges for gross negligence manslaughter.”He also tied the case to immigration and deportation policy, writing, “Digwa’s foreign family will be deported. Laws will change, the country will change, everything will change. Order will be restored, the law will be restored. Britain will be restored.”Farage focused on the ideological capture of British policing. He blamed Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion policies for creating a culture in which officers fear allegations of bias more than they fear failing a dying victim.“DEI agenda has gone so far through the police that people now get promoted, not on the basis of merit, not on the basis of ability, but on the basis of what their racial or religious origin is,” Farage said.Starmer’s spokesman said the Prime Minister had watched the footage again and maintained that it was appropriate to wait until sentencing before commenting publicly. He acknowledged that the impact of the killing was “rippling out across the country.”The Independent Office for Police Conduct is now investigating the police response. But for many Britons, the essential scandal is already visible: a young man was stabbed, falsely accused, handcuffed, and left to die in the street.The post Britain Responds to Grotesque Anti-White Murder of Henry Nowak Sikh Murderer Receives Life Sentence appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.