Eastern Eye (UK)

‘Offensive race report should be abandoned’

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who are campaignin­g for racial justice.

Now academics whose work was included in the report claim their findings were cherry-picked and whitewashe­d, and one of the commission­ers said the government rewrote the report to suit its narrative.

There is only one place where this report belongs – the bin. It is based on ideology, not evidence. It was biased from start to finish – Munira Mirza, the main driving force in setting up the commission, and Tony Sewell, who led the commission, have both long denied the existence of institutio­nal racism. The report should be abandoned immediatel­y, before the government tries to justify divisive policies based on its findings.

To me, the report is particular­ly offensive because it denies our experience­s as people of colour and blames us for the disadvanta­ges we face. It aims to stop us speaking out against racism by claiming that we are desperate to incorrectl­y paint ourselves as victims.

No one is denying that progress has been made over the years, but widespread racial injustice and inequality persist today.

The report’s findings are at odds with the data and the numerous examples of barriers and mistreatme­nt we encounter. When applying for jobs, for example, identical CVs get 60 per cent more interviews if your name sounds white British.

There is an increasing wealth gap – Bangladesh­i and black African households have around 10p, and Pakistani households around 50p, for every £1 of white British wealth.

Schools have recorded more than 60,000 racist incidents in the past five years, while BAME communitie­s are disproport­ionately affected by air pollution which impacts our health. The list goes on and on.

Over the last year, the pandemic has highlighte­d and worsened existing inequaliti­es. A report by Public Health England found that people of Bangladesh­i ethnicity are twice as likely to die from Covid-19 than their white British peers, while for other Asian and black ethnicitie­s, it’s 10 to 50 per cent more. Studies have shown that widespread disadvanta­ges faced by these groups – like overcrowde­d housing and jobs with a higher risk of exposure to the virus – play a large role. Meanwhile, police forces were seven times more likely to fine BAME people during lockdown.

This report was a missed opportunit­y for change. The BLM protests and calls for greater racial equality prompted Boris Johnson to commission this report in the first place. But all it reveals is that the government cares more about playing politics than improving our lives. We cannot allow the Tories to distract us from the pain and poverty they have inflicted on so many communitie­s through their policies by downplayin­g racism and pitting us against one another.

It is action we need, not denial.

 ??  ?? FALSE NARRATIVE: Ministers are ‘seeking to discredit ant-racism protests with he race report
FALSE NARRATIVE: Ministers are ‘seeking to discredit ant-racism protests with he race report

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