Anti-migrant
vigilante groups patrolling Europe – what to know
By Ana P. Santos Published on : 2025/09/10
Across
Europe, self-styled protective forces comprised of loosely organized groups
that call themselves 'citizen patrols' or 'migrant hunters' are patrolling
borders, tracking down asylum seekers, and harassing humanitarian workers.
Research suggests a complex mix of social, strategic, and personal factors is
driving the rise of these groups.
As the
employee drove up to RAF Wethersfield, a former military base in Essex,
northeast of London, a group surrounded his car.
With
mobile phones recording, the group reportedly yelled, "Traitor",
threatening to expose the employee’s license plate. The encounter was
live-streamed to the group’s thousands of viewers.
The
British newspaper The Independent, which documented the incident last month,
reported that the group of self-styled "migrant hunters" was angry
over the military base being used as accommodations for asylum seekers.
These
self-styled vigilantes reportedly pose as journalists, showing up at
accommodation centers and hotels to harass employees as well as asylum seekers.
Then they post the footage online, sharing the locations of hotels that shelter
asylum seekers and call on their followers to support anti-migrant protests.
The
incident at the former military base was in relation to ongoing anti-migrant
protests that started in July and have spread across the country.
However,
across Europe, numerous media reports show that loosely organized groups that
call themselves "citizen patrols", "migrant hunters," or
self-styled protective forces are patrolling borders, tracking down asylum
seekers, or harassing humanitarian workers.
'Defenders'
of the community
Across
Europe, vigilante groups position themselves as 'defenders' of the community,
intervening where they claim police and state authorities have failed.
Their
outward goal is to protect citizens from what they perceive as criminal or
threatening. Their justifications often tap into broader social fears and
mirror topics already dominating headlines, giving the groups an air of
legitimacy.
Research
by the Radicalisation Awareness Network (RAN) -- an EU-funded network bringing
together practitioners such as social workers, teachers, and healthcare
professionals who work with individuals either vulnerable to radicalization or
already radicalized -- examined what it refers to as the "growing
internationalization" of right-wing extremism, its online spread, and
attempts to normalize hateful narratives targeting migrants and asylum
seekers.
Right-wing
extremism in Europe is far from monolithic. Rather, it encompasses a wide range
of ideological subcurrents such as anti-migrant vigilanteism. These ideologies
often overlap or compete, the research shows.
Once
centered on youth subcultures like neo-Nazis and skinheads, the study by RAN
found these movements now involve adults. RAN cited a study on right-wing
extremism in Norway, which demonstrated that the average age of radicalization
has significantly increased from about 22 years old in the 1990s to 31 years
old in the 2010s.
Different
groups
RAN
enumerated the different ideologies of right-wing extremist groups, which
include Neo-Nazi and identitarian movements, both of which promote racial
supremacy and ethnic separation, drawing on Nazi ideology or the "Great
Replacement" narrative to defend a supposedly threatened European
identity.
Other
categories include anti-Islam and anti-migration movements, which gained
dominance after the arrival of refugees and asylum seekers peaked in 2015.
These vigilante groups, such as Soldiers of Odin, claim to defend European or
Christian identity.
According
to RAN, the categorizations are neither fixed nor exhaustive. Groups often
straddle multiple categories or clash within the same category. Beyond
ideology, they differ in strategies, tactics, and structures. This makes
Europe’s right-wing extremist landscape both fragmented and interconnected.
Individual
motivations
Apart
from the ideologies that draw people to anti-migrant vigilante groups, a 2019
joint study conducted by researchers at Masaryk University and the University
of Oslo about vigilante groups against migrants and minorities states that
motivations at the individual level vary widely.
Some
members join to boost their status or reinvent themselves, particularly those
with troubled pasts or criminal records. Others are drawn to the promise of
belonging, the thrill of militarism, or the chance to be part of something
larger than themselves, the publication found.
Some
groups are reportedly loosely structured. Some are networked and adopt
uniforms, radios, and use violence. Rights groups have raised the alarm on the
presence and activities of anti-migrant vigilante groups, saying that they
thrive on fear, misinformation, and amplify political hostility towards
migrants. Overall, a complex mix of social, strategic, and personal factors is
driving the rise of anti-migrant vigilante groups across Europe, research
suggests.
Decline
in overall asylum claims
Data from
the EU's asylum agency revealed that in the first half of 2025, applications
seeking asylum in the European Union dropped by 23 percent.
The
European Union Agency for Asylum (EUAA) said 399,000 new applications were
lodged between January and June, down 114,000, or 23 percent, from the same
period in 2024.
Germany
was no longer the most preferred country for asylum seekers and saw the biggest
decline in asylum applications, at a 43 percent drop. This was followed by
Italy and Spain, which saw a 25 percent and 13 percent decline in asylum
applications, respectively.
The
decline in asylum applications was attributed to the reduction in asylum
applications from Syrians.
In
contrast to the number of asylum claims across the EU, which have been on the
decline, the rise of anti-migrant vigilante groups seems to continue.
Miguel
Ramos, a journalist who focuses on far-right movements, told InfoMigrants that
he was not surprised. "The goal of the far right is to create divisiveness
between locals and migrants. Their agenda focuses on conspiracy theories like
the Great Replacement Theory, Islamophobia, and fake news. They don't care
about numbers."
"They
don't care about reality. They are playing another reality based on racism.
Based on a white Christian Europe."
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