The Scotsman

Bristol mayor defends city’s anti-racism record following the acquittal of Colston Four for toppling slave trader statue

- By ROD MINCHIN

Bristol's record in tackling racism and inequality has been defended by the city's elected mayor in the wake of the Colston acquittals.

Marvin Rees said he wanted to deliver "real, substantia­l systemic change" for the people of Bristol and that meant focusing on issues of housing, education and employment over "symbolic acts".

He spoke out to defend his record after Rhian Graham, 30, Milo Ponsford, 26, Sage Willoughby, 22, and Jake

Skuse, 33, were found not guilty of criminal damage during a Black Lives Matter protest in the city in June 2020.

The bronze memorial to Edward Colston, a 17th-century slave trader, had stood on a plinth in Bristol city centre for more than 100 years before it was toppled and rolled into the nearby harbour.

There has been controvers­ary since the not guilty verdicts and Attorney General Suella Braverman said it had caused "confusion", and she was "carefully considerin­g" whether to use powers which allow her to seek a review on specific points of law.

Mr Rees, the first black mayor elected in the UK, said the acquittals were "less significan­t" for the city than for the defendants. "In the lives of the four individual­s it is incredibly significan­t because their futures faced a bit of a fork in the road in some ways," he told Sky's Trevor Phillips on Sunday.

"For the work on race inequality in Bristol much more widely, it is less significan­t because when we're tackling race inequality, we are looking at those underlying drivers of political and economic inequality.

"The verdict itself doesn't actually touch on those very real and immediate issues."

Mr Rees said that "symbolic acts", such as toppling Colston, should not be a replacemen­t for "real substantia­l systemic change".

"It's one of the warnings I make all the time that we have to be careful about symbolic acts and mere events perhaps being substitute­d for acts of real substantia­l systemic change," he said.

"Make no mistake about it, I don't like the idea of the statue being up in the middle of the city and I'm glad it's not there.

"I think that the debate around our history, who we choose to celebrate as a country, is important.”

 ?? ?? 0 Colston was involved in Britain’s slave trade past
0 Colston was involved in Britain’s slave trade past

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