The Scotsman

Yousaf: ‘I’ve been stopped and searched a dozen times’

- By CHRIS GREEN

Justice Secretary Humza Yousaf has told how his trust in the police was shaken after he was stopped and searched more than a dozen times, warning that there is still “structural racism” in Scottish society.

Mr Yousaf said the colour of his skin meant he had frequently been stopped by officers while he was growing up in Scotland, despite “never committing a crime”.

He said: “I was never committing a crime, I had never committed a crime. It just wasn’t great for my trust in the police.”

Justice Secretary Humza Yousaf has told how his trust in the police was shaken after he was stopped and searched more than a dozen times, warning that there is still “structural racism” in Scottish society.

Mr Yousaf said the colour of his skin meant he had frequently been stopped by officers while he was growing up in Scotland, despite “never committing a crime”.

Speaking at a fringe meeting during the SNP conference in Glasgow, he said he still believed stop and search was a legitimate police tactic as long as there were “checks and balances”.

In a discussion involving Calum Steele, the general secretary of the Scottish Police Federation, Mr Yousaf said his early experience­s of dealing with officers had not been positive.

“I’ve been stopped and searched over a dozen times,” he said. “Sometimes at the airport, but when I was younger in the street or in my car or a friend’s car, sometimes at railway stations as well.

“I was never committing a crime, I had never committed a crime. Sometimes I was the only brown face in a group of white people, and I’d be the one – especially at airports –

who was told to stand to the side and be questioned.

“It just wasn’t great for my trust in the police.”

Mr Yousaf also spoke of his frustratio­n at white friends telling him they were “colour blind”, rejecting the idea that racism was no longer a problem in modern Scottish society.

“I say: ‘Great, I’m pleased that you’re colour blind, but the world isn’t colour blind for me’,” he said. “There’s a reason why I’m three times less likely to get a job even though I’m more likely to be qualified than you are.

“There’s a reason why I’m more likely to be stop and searched even though I’ve committed no crime, just as you have committed no crime.

“There’s a reason that people of colour are more likely to get a harsher sentence than somebody who’s white, even though they’ve committed the same offence.

“The world isn’t colour blind, so don’t come to me and tell me ‘There’s no structural racism’. There is – I’ve faced it every week, every day, every part of my journey I’ve been on.”

Mr Steele said he accepted that the stop and search policy had been “cheapened” by the way in which it was implemente­d, but warned that officers were now more “disincline­d” to use the powers which could affect public safety.

 ?? PICTURE: JEFF J MITCHELL ?? 0 Justice Secretary Humza Yousaf was speaking at a fringe meeting
PICTURE: JEFF J MITCHELL 0 Justice Secretary Humza Yousaf was speaking at a fringe meeting

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom