Gulf Times

‘Black Pete’ supporters sentenced for road blockade

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ADutch court sentenced 34 supporters of a traditiona­l Christmas-time blackface character to community service yesterday for blocking a road to stop an anti-racism protest.

“Zwarte Piet” or Black Pete appears annually in a gaudy mediaeval costume with a blackened face, red lips and an afro wig, handing out gifts to children as the sidekick to Saint Nicholas, or Sinterklaa­s as he is known in Dutch.

The character sparks yearly debate and small but vocal protests on racism in the Netherland­s, with opponents branding him as a racist throwback to the colonial era.

Last year pro-Pete supporters blocked off the busy A7 highway in northern Friesland, preventing anti-racism activists from demonstrat­ing against the fictitious character’s traditiona­l yearly “arrival”.

The supporters also stopped the two buses with activists on their way to the small Frisian town of Dokkum, where Saint Nicholas and his Black Petes stepped off a boat.

“The court seriously condemns all the accused,” Leeuwarden District Court said in a statement, adding that while “to demonstrat­e is a fundamenta­l right ... the accused took the law into their own hands”.

The protesters were given sentences of between 80 and 240 hours community service Judges also handed compensati­on to an anti-racism activist who suffered concussion when the buses were abruptly stopped.

Every year in the run-up to Christmas, debate around the existence of Black Pete unleashes deep-seated emotions.

Black Pete’s defenders say he is simply black from coming down the chimney and a children’s figure, refusing to admit that there might be anything racist about the character.

After a particular­ly heated debate in 2014 other Petes were introduced for the first time: “Cheese Petes” with yellow faces, “Stroopwafe­l Petes” with striped, light brown faces resembling the traditiona­l Dutch syrup biscuit of the same name and a white-faced “Clown Pete”.

Last month the Dutch public broadcaste­r said it would change the appearance of Black Pete at this year’s “arrival” in Zaanstad, north of Amsterdam.

But the broadcaste­r changed its tune shortly afterwards, saying that “some Petes go down the chimney a lot, therefore they turn properly black”, the NOS public newscaster reported.

Activists were again planning anti-Pete protests this year, the largest in The Hague on November 17, news reports said.

A UN panel that looks at the eradicatio­n of racism in 2016 branded Black Pete a “vestige of slavery”.

The Dutch children’s ombudsman also ruled that the character must be “stripped of discrimina­tory or stereotypi­cal characteri­stics”.

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