Yorkshire Post

Dismay as report claims UK is not ‘rigged’ against minorities

Commission accused of focusing on poverty and class rather than racism

- DAVID BEHRENS ■ Email: david.behrens@jpimedia.co.uk ■ Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

IT WAS a report that seemed to please no one.

Even Boris Johnson, who commission­ed it, appeared lukewarm to the suggestion that Britain was no longer “deliberate­ly rigged” against ethnic minorities.

“A very interestin­g piece of work” was the most enthusiast­ic comment the normally ebullient Prime Minister could manage, as the fall-out continued and Samuel Kasumu, his most senior black adviser, resigned for reasons that Number 10 insisted were unrelated.

It was on Wednesday morning that the first findings emerged from the Commission on Race and Ethnic Disparitie­s, set up in the wake of last year’s Black Lives Matter protests in London, Leeds, Bradford and around the country.

If there was division between communitie­s, it postulated, it was more likely a consequenc­e of geography, family influence and economic deprivatio­n than of racism.

There was no evidence that there was institutio­nal racism in Britain, said the commission chairman, Dr Tony Sewell.

He might have reached a different conclusion had he and his fellow commission­ers been able to visit West Yorkshire, one of his leading critics said last night.

“If they had spent some time and spoken to people in Leeds or Bradford, Birmingham or Greater Manchester, they’d have got a better sense of what the problems are and what the solution is,” Nazir Afzal, the former chief prosecutor for North West England, told The Yorkshire Post.

He is among a growing chorus of commentato­rs to have forensical­ly dismantled the conclusion­s of Dr Sewell, a former teacher who grew up in Brixton, south London, and who chaired the Education Inquiry panel in the capital when Mr Johnson was Mayor of London.

The controvers­y he stirred this week was perhaps not a surprise. As soon as his appointmen­t to the commission was announced, the Muslim Council of Britain ventured that he was “keen on downplayin­g race disparitie­s”.

But the scale and ferocity of the attacks, and their singular tone, was unexpected. Labour said the report was a “divisive polemic” which had insulted its readers, while unions said it ignored the experience­s of black and minority ethnic workers.

David Isaac, the former Equality and Human Rights Commission chairman, said the focus on institutio­nal racism was a distractio­n, and that while many of the report’s suggestion­s were sound, major inequaliti­es remained.

Mr Afzal went further, dismissing the recommenda­tions as “so high level I don’t know what difference they could make”.

The report, he said, “actually wants to minimise the impact of racism, and focus on class, poverty and communitie­s’ own actions as being somehow responsibl­e for their state”.

But he added: “Why focus on

everything other than race when you’re supposed to be a race commission?

“There are complexiti­es here which this report hasn’t addressed at all, or if it has addressed them it mentions them

as headlines and then moves on very quickly.”

The outcome, said Mr Afzal, read like a manifesto for a Government narrative of post-Brexit Britain as a role model for the world.

“It’s very selective in its choice of data. Research is out there which shows that there is employment discrimina­tion, there are social mobility problems, issues with crime and with health, but you wouldn’t guess that from the nature of this report – because it just seems to want to make the case for putting the

blame on families on communitie­s themselves.”

It amounted, he said, to weighing provable causes of deprivatio­n – such as poverty and absentee parents – against the psychologi­cal impact of racism.

“They can prove you’re poor because you haven’t got any money, and they can prove you’re from a broken home – but they can’t prove racism, so they ignore it.”

Mr Afzal, a native of Birmingham who suffered racist violence as a young man, was also critical of the negative values attached to

parenting in some minority communitie­s.

A more constructi­ve approach could be found in the West Riding, where racial tensions had eased significan­tly since the Bradford riots of 20 years ago, said Mr Afzal, who as a lawyer prosecuted some of the earliest honour killing trials and led the case against a child sex abuse ring involving underage teenage girls in Rochdale – a campaign he recounts in his book, The Prosecutor, which has just been published in paperback.

Police and other authoritie­s in Bradford were now engaging with groups of people – especially women – who had not previously had a strong enough voice, he said.

“My experience with the agencies in West Yorkshire is that they understand the need to be more diverse. They’re all still on a journey, but the first step is to recognise that you have a problem.”

They can prove you’re poor, but they can’t prove racism, so they ignore it. Nazir Afzal, former chief prosecutor for North West England.

 ?? PICTURE: GETTY ?? SPEAKING OUT: Protesters at a Black Lives Matter demonstrat­ion on Woodhouse Moor, Leeds.
PICTURE: GETTY SPEAKING OUT: Protesters at a Black Lives Matter demonstrat­ion on Woodhouse Moor, Leeds.

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