Los Angeles Times

EU unveils anti-racism effort

- ASSOCIATED PRESS

BRUSSELS — The European Commission has presented a series of measures aimed at tackling structural racism and discrimina­tion, acknowledg­ing a blatant lack of diversity among the European Union’s institutio­ns.

The bloc’s executive arm set out its action plan for the next five years, which includes strengthen­ing the current legal framework, recruiting an anti-racism coordinato­r and increasing the diversity of EU staff.

The European Commission’s vice president for values and transparen­cy, Vera Jourova, said that recent anti-racism protests in the U.S. and Europe highlighte­d the need for action.

“We have reached a moment of reckoning. The protests sent a clear message, change must happen now,” Jourova said. “It won’t be easy, but it must be done.

“We won’t shy away from strengthen­ing the legislatio­n, if needed,” she said. “The commission itself will adapt its recruiting policy to better ref lect European society.”

The current College of

Commission­ers, which oversees EU policies, is made up of 27 members, one from each EU country. All the members of the team set up last year by European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen are white.

Under the plan set out Friday, data on the diversity of commission staff will for the first time be collected on the basis of a voluntary survey that will help define new recruitmen­t policies.

Meanwhile, the new coordinato­r for anti-racism will be in charge of gathering the grievances and sentiments of minorities to make sure they are reflected in EU policies.

The EU said that more than half of Europeans believe that discrimina­tion is widespread in their country. According to surveys carried out by the EU Agency for Fundamenta­l Rights, or FRA, 45% of people of North African descent, 41% of Roma and 39% of people of sub-Saharan African descent have faced such discrimina­tion.

The EU’s racial equality directive will also be assessed, with possible new legislatio­n introduced in 2022.

In the wake of the Black

Lives Matter protests triggered by George Floyd’s death in police custody in the U.S., the European Commission said it would look carefully into discrimina­tion by law enforcemen­t authoritie­s, such as unlawful racial profiling.

Meanwhile, the EU agency for fundamenta­l rights will continue to collect data on police attitudes toward minorities.

The European Commission also wants to combat stereotype­s and disinforma­tion by setting up a series of seminars and promoting commemorat­ive days linked to the issue of racism. It also encouraged member states to address stereotype­s via cultural and education programs, or the media. A summit against racism is planned next year.

“Nobody is born racist. It is not a characteri­stic which we are born with,” said Helena Dalli, the EU commission­er for equality. “It’s a question of nurture, and not nature. We have to unlearn what we have learned.”

This year, the European Parliament approved a resolution condemning Floyd’s death and asking the EU to take a strong stance against racism.

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