RACIST firebomber Mark Bulman has been jailed for five years after trying to torch the Broad Street mosque.
The 22-year-old used a British National Party leaflet as a fuse in a petrol-filled beer bottle which he hurled through a window at the place of worship.
But the Molotov cocktail failed to ignite so the self-confessed bigot handed himself in to the police saying that they would find his fingerprints on it.
And as well as trying to burn the mosque to ash and rubble' Bulman also daubed racist graffiti on the walls.
Colin Meeke, prosecuting, told Swindon Crown Court that police received a call shortly before 1am on Thursday, August 17 from the defendant.
After he told them what he had done an officer went to the scene and found him near Fleming Way.
The racist was armed with a chair leg which he said he needed to protect himself from the enemy'.
He referred to the Broad Street area as enemy territory' because it had businesses owned by people from ethnic minorities.
Bulman also daubed swastikas on the outside of the mosque as well as other racist messages on a wall in Turl Street.
In a rambling interview Bulman told police of his dislike for anyone apart from white British people.
When his house was searched, officers found a variety of racist material and he admitted being a BNP sympathiser and had been on their rallies in the past.
Bulman, of Montrose Close, Moredon, admitted arson, attempted arson and two counts of religiously aggravated criminal damage.
Philip Warren, defending, said "On any view of it, it is a horrible and serious business.
"It is highly offensive, deliberately offensive, and the offence and outrage caused must have been massive."
He said his client had told the psychiatrist that he wanted to reduce the mosque to "ash and rubble" and "to give the establishment and lefties a wake up call."
But Mr Warren said: "This was by any standards an amateur and inept act not a concerted attempt to burn the building."
Having spent 140 days in prison on remand he said that his client, who had no previous convictions, had time to reflect on his "skewed views" of society and wanted to change.
From now on he said that he sought to use the pen rather than the sword to get his opinions across and Mr Warren said Bulman wished to address the court.
But Judge Douglas Field refused to allow it saying: "I am not going to allow a political speech."
"There has to be a deterrent element to my sentence to deter stupid people like you.
"You are a racial bigot. It was your wish and intention to burn that building to the ground. We have mixed races in Swindon and it is extremely important that we all get on together."
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