The Independent

No 10 faces accusation­s of rewriting key report on race

- ANDREW WOODCOCK

Downing Street is facing accusation­s of rewriting a controvers­ial report on race inequaliti­es. One of the 11 members of the independen­t Commission on Race and Ethnic Disparitie­s (Cred) is reported to have accused the government of “bending” its work to fit a more palatable political narrative, claiming that commission­ers did not see the whole report before it was published.

And another commission­er, anti-racism activist Kunle Olulode, said that the report did not show enough understand­ing of institutio­nal or structural discrimina­tion and came to conclusion­s based on “selective” use of evidence. But No 10 denied the claim that its officials rewrote parts of the 258-page document, with a

source telling The Independen­t: “I would refute the assertion. It was an independen­t report.”

And commission­er Naureen Khalid said: “The commission­ers reject the allegation­s, which are designed to divert attention from our 24 recommenda­tions.”

Commission chair Tony Sewell was widely condemned last week over the Cred report’s finding that Britain was not an institutio­nally racist country and its suggestion that there was “a new story” to be told about slavery which does not focus only on the suffering inflicted on victims.

Over 100 Windrush campaigner­s signed a joint letter urging Mr Sewell to ditch the report, which they accused of denying the experience­s of hundreds of black British citizens who were unlawfully stripped of their right to live and work in the UK.

And No 10’s most senior black special adviser Samuel Kasumu, who set up the group of commission­ers, resigned his post on the day of publicatio­n – though Downing Street said his departure had been longplanne­d.

One unnamed commission­er was quoted by The Observer as saying that sections of the 258-page document were not written by the Cred panel appointed last July. “We did not read Tony’s foreword,” said the commission­er. “We did not deny institutio­nal racism or play that down as the final document did.

“The idea that this report was all our own work is full of holes. You can see that in the inconsiste­ncy of the ideas and data it presents and the conclusion­s it makes. That end product is the work of very different views.”

The commission­er said each panel member saw only the section of the report they were assigned, and suggested that the swift completion of the document suggested the exercise was not being taken sufficient­ly seriously by No 10. “Something of this magnitude takes proper time – we were only given five months to do this work, on a voluntary basis,” said the commission­er.

Meanwhile, Mr Olulode’s charity Voice4Chan­ge, issued a statement to The Observer: “The report does not give enough to show its understand­ing of institutio­nal or structural discrimina­tion … evidence in sections, that assertive conclusion­s are based on, is selective.

“The report gives no clear direction on what expectatio­ns of the role of public institutio­ns and political leadership should be in tackling race and ethnic disparitie­s. What is the role of the state in this?”

A Cred spokespers­on said: “The commission’s view is that, if implemente­d, these 24 recommenda­tions can change for the better the lives of millions across the UK, whatever their ethnic or social background. That is the goal they continue to remain focused on.”

 ?? (Getty) ?? Downing Street insists Tony Sewell’s research was independen­t
(Getty) Downing Street insists Tony Sewell’s research was independen­t

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