The Standard (St. Catharines)

London to review its statues

Commission will ensure city’s monuments reflect its diversity, mayor says

- JILL LAWLESS

London’s mayor announced Tuesday that more statues of imperialis­t figures could be removed from Britain’s streets after protesters knocked down the monument to a slave trader, as the killing of George Floyd in Minneapoli­s continued to spark protests — and drive change — around the world.

On the day Floyd was buried in his hometown of Houston, Texas, London Mayor Sadiq Khan said he was setting up a commission to ensure the British capital’s monuments reflected its diversity. It will review statues, murals, street art, street names and other memorials and consider which legacies should be celebrated, the mayor’s office said.

“It is an uncomforta­ble truth that our nation and city owes a large part of its wealth to its role in the slave trade and while this is reflected in our public realm, the contributi­on of many of our communitie­s to life in our capital has been wilfully ignored,” Khan said.

Even before the new commission got underway, officials in east London removed a statue of 18th-century merchant and slave owner Robert Milligan from its place in the city’s docklands.

It was the latest sign that internatio­nal protests of racial injustice and police violence that Floyd’s May 25 death spurred are already creating change.

Statues, as long-lasting symbols of a society’s values, have become a focus of protest around the world.

On Sunday, protesters in Bristol hauled down a statue of Edward

Colston, a 17th-century slave trader and philanthro­pist, and dumped in the city’s harbour.

That act revived calls for Oxford University to remove a statue of Cecil Rhodes, a Victorian imperialis­t in southern Africa who made a fortune from mines and endowed Oxford University’s Rhodes scholarshi­ps.

Several hundred supporters of the Rhodes Must Fall group gathered near the statue at the university’s College on Tuesday, chanting “Take it down” before holding a silent sit-down vigil in the street to memorializ­e Floyd.

Oxford city officials urged the college to apply for permission to remove the statue so that it could be placed in a museum. Another large statue of Rhodes that had stood since 1934 was removed from South Africa’s University of Cape Town in April 2015, after a student-led campaign that also urged the university to increase its numbers of Black lecturers and to make the curriculum less Eurocentri­c.

In 2003, the Rhodes scholarshi­ps were renamed the Mandela Rhodes scholarshi­ps in South Africa, and a partnershi­p was formed with the Nelson Mandela Foundation.

In Antwerp, authoritie­s used a crane on Tuesday to remove a statue of Belgium’s former King Leopold II that had been splattered with red paint by protesters, taking it away for repairs. It was unclear whether it would be re-erected.

Leopold took control of Congo in 1885 and enslaved much of its people to collect rubber, reigning over a brutal regime under which some 10 million Congolese died.

In Edinburgh, Scotland, there are calls to tear down a statue of Henry Dundas, an 18th-century politician who delayed Britain’s abolition of slavery by 15 years.

At weekend protests in London, demonstrat­ors scrawled “was a racist” on a statue of Winston Churchill. Britain’s wartime prime minister is revered as the man who led the country to victory against Nazi Germany. But he was also a staunch defender of the British Empire and expressed racist views.

Khan suggested Churchill’s statue should stay up. “Nobody’s perfect, whether it’s Churchill, whether it’s Gandhi, whether it’s Malcolm X,” he told the BBC, adding that schools should teach children about historical figures “warts and all.”

“But there are some statues that are quite clear-cut,” Khan said. “Slavers are quite clear-cut in my view, plantation owners are quite clear-cut.”

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THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A worker rests after the statue of slave owner Robert Milligan was taken down at West India Quay, east London, on Tuesday.
YUI MOK THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A worker rests after the statue of slave owner Robert Milligan was taken down at West India Quay, east London, on Tuesday.

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