The Pak Banker

Anti-black racism in the MENA region

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While much of the US and other Western countries remain convulsed with Black Lives Matter protests, the MENA (Middle East and North Africa) region should use this moment to address its own problem of antiblack racism. From Basra to Beirut and from Tunis to Tel Aviv, anti-black racism exists in various forms across the region.

In the MENA region, it is mostly the consequenc­e of centuries of slavery, with black Africans sold in slave markets across the Indian Ocean and Persian Gulf region. Indeed, in some parts of the Arab Gulf region, slavery was abolished only as recently as the 1970s. This is also why racial insults hurled at black people in these countries often refer to them as "slaves" or "servants."

This racist mindset also leads to widespread systemic discrimina­tion against black people throughout the region. Basra in southern Iraq is home to the majority of the country's estimated 1.2 million black population. Black Iraqis have long complained of systemic racism, with limited access to housing, education, health care and all but the most menial jobs.

While black communitie­s in some MENA countries grapple with the legacy of slavery, others still face modern-day slavery or conditions akin to it.

Mauritania is one of the last countries on the planet where slavery continues to this day. The Global Slavery Index of 2018 estimates there are about 90,000 black Mauritania­ns, or roughly 2.4% of the population, bound to a caste system that is a form of modern-day slavery, with their enslavemen­t inherited from ancestors and passed down to their children.

Slavery was abolished in Mauritania in 1981 but it was not until 2007 that it was made a crime, and then only in response to internatio­nal pressure, with successive government­s failing to eradicate the scourge.

A similar caste-like black community exists at the margins of society in Yemen. They call themselves the Muhamashee­n ("the marginaliz­ed"), but other Yemenis refer to them pejorative­ly as the Akhdam ("the servants"). Many survive by begging. Not surprising­ly, this community has borne the brunt of Yemen's ongoing civil war.

While countries like Mauritania and Yemen grapple with centuries-old practices, others have seen slavery rear its ugly head in modern times. Black Africans have long used Libya's Mediterran­ean coast as a staging post from which to attempt to reach Europe. Several migrants have been enslaved and tortured by Libyan militias, and subsequent­ly sold in open-air slave markets.

Popular culture in the MENA region is also rife with anti-black racism, from caricature­s of black people used for comedy to erasing them completely from depictions of national culture. The national media in Tunisia, for example, portray the country's citizens as light-skinned. It might come as a shock that 15% of Tunisians are black.

Iran has a sizable black population living along the country's south coast. Their contributi­on to the culture of that region - whether in terms of cuisine, spirituali­ty or to the unique bandari music - is immense. But Iranian popular culture would have us believe the country is populated only by fair-skinned Persians. This comes largely from the "Aryan myth" of Iranian nationalis­m. Depictions of black people are limited to stereotype­s or pale-skinned people in "blackface" - theatrical makeup used to portray racist caricature­s of black people. Indeed, early Iranian theater often featured a type of comedy performanc­e known as Siah-Bazi, a term meaning "playing black."

In the Arab world, more recently, several Arabic-language networks have come in for criticism for their racist depiction of black people in hidden-camera practicalj­oke reality television shows.

Almost a year ago, protesters marched through cities in Israel calling for an end to anti-black police brutality and discrimina­tion in housing, health care and education. One of the most horrifying examples of anti-black racism in Israel occurred in 2016, when the government admitted to having given Ethiopian-Israeli women long-term contracept­ives without their consent. The community's birth rate has halved over the past decade.

Perhaps the most egregious form of institutio­nalized racism in the MENA region is the kafala system of hiring migrant workers in Lebanon and parts of the Gulf region, which has been described as a modern-day from of slavery. The kafala system, which is not covered by regular labor laws in Lebanon, gives employers total control over the legal residency of "their" workers.

Every so often, horrific kafala-related stories emerge of migrant workers, most of them African, being made to work long hours without pay, tortured, sexually abused and even murdered, with little or no recourse to the law for help. Racism also pervades the tourism and hospitalit­y sector in Lebanon and parts of the Gulf region, with African and South Asian tourists complainin­g of being denied entry to trendy bars and clubs.

If there is to be any impetus for change in the MENA region, it is likely to come from civil society. For example, recent protests against Lebanon's corrupt political class were led by the youth of the country and included calls to abolish kafala. In 2018, Tunisia became the first MENA country to pass a wide-ranging anti-racism law.

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