Gulf News

French PM unveils plans to tackle racism

Borne’s plan includes educating youth and training teachers

-

Arrest warrants will be issued to those who use freedom of expression for racist or antiSemiti­c ends.

Name it, act on it, sanction it. That is the focus of a new plan announced yesterday by French Prime Minister Elisabeth Borne to defeat longstandi­ng racism, anti-Semitism and discrimina­tion of all kinds.

The four-year plan starts with educating youth with a required yearly trip to a Holocaust or other memorial site exemplifyi­ng the horrors that racism can produce, because “history alerts the present,” the plan says. It includes training teachers and civil servants about discrimina­tion and toughening the ability to punish those denounced for discrimina­tion.

Arrest warrants will be issued to those who use freedom of expression for racist or antiSemiti­c ends.

Unusually, the plan includes fighting discrimina­tion against Gypsies and Roma. “There will be no impunity for hate,” Borne said, presenting her plans, including 80 measures, at the Institute of the Arab World.

Hate reinvented

Tolerance is on the rise, “but hate has reinvented itself,” she said. “Our first challenge is to look squarely at the reality of racism and anti-Semitism and cede nothing to those who falsify history, who rewrite our past, forgetting or deforming some pages,” Borne added.

France’s government had a succession of policies in recent years to grapple with racism, anti-Semitism and discrimina­tion. Still, the estimated number of victims who suffered as least one racist, anti-Semitic or xenophobic attacks was 1.2 million per year, according to the National Consultati­ve Commission on Human Rights.

Social media and a rising farright fearful of the disappeara­nce of the nation’s Christian roots in an increasing­ly multicultu­ral France have added new dimensions to the fight against racism. Generation­s of citizens from former colonies in mostly Muslim North Africa and West Africa have over decades given the nation a new face.

Kaltoum Gachi, a co-president of the anti-racism organisati­on MRAP, told those attending the presentati­on that a 25-year-old family member named Kamel failed in his long search for a job with an automaker — until he changed his name to Kevin.

Names, addresses and looks have long been a roadblock for people with origins outside France. Regular testing in private and public places of employment will be part of the new anti-discrimina­tion effort,

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates