The Scottish Mail on Sunday

It’s great news for Ali G... now anyone can self identify as black

- By Glen Owen

ANYONE should be allowed to ‘identify’ as black regardless of the colour of their skin or background, according to Left-wing university leaders.

The Universiti­es and Colleges Union has set out its stance in a report on the ongoing row about whether men should be able to self-identify as women and be treated as female regardless of their anatomy.

The UCU’s ‘position statement’ did not just stand by its support for self-identifica­tion of gender, but also insisted people can choose their own race, saying: ‘Our rules commit us to ending all forms of discrimina­tion, bigotry and stereotypi­ng. UCU has a long history of enabling members to self-identify whether that is being black, disabled, LGBT+ or women.’

Recognisin­g ‘self-defined’ women as fully female is deeply controvers­ial among many feminists and others. Theresa May’s Government considered changing the law to allow people to choose their own gender, but Ministers have put those plans on hold after a backlash from female voters. Many female academics say they have faced harassment from students and activists for questionin­g trans-inclusive policies, and several high-profile female speakers including Germaine Greer and Dame Jenni Murray have been ‘no platformed’ from university debates for their refusal to accept that anyone who says they are a woman must be accepted as female. But the union’s position on race was last night mocked as the latest ‘nonsensica­l’ demonstrat­ion of ‘woke’ thinking imported from US campuses. The self-identifica­tion of race has proved highly controvers­ial in the US: in 2015, Rachel Dolezal resigned as an official with the National Associatio­n for the Advancemen­t of Colored People after her white parents disputed her claim to be black.

The British comedian Sacha Baron Cohen also came under fire in the US over his character Ali G, a white man from Staines who asks critics: ‘Is it because I is black?’

In Britain, the actor Anthony Lennon – born in London to Irish parents – faced criticism last year when it emerged he had won funding from an Arts Council scheme to help ethnic minority actors develop their stage careers, because he ‘identifies’ as a ‘born-again African’.

Kathleen Stock, a philosophy professor at Sussex University and UCU member, last night questioned the union’s position on race, saying it was ‘nonsensica­l, anti-intellectu­al propaganda’.

The UCU is led by Jo Grady, a lecturer at Sheffield University Management School. A union spokesman confirmed that the UCU considers it is up to individual­s to choose if they wish to be recognised as black.

 ??  ?? ‘I IS BLACK’: Sacha Baron Cohen as Ali G
‘I IS BLACK’: Sacha Baron Cohen as Ali G

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