Yorkshire Post

UK race review is labelled ‘insulting’

- GRACE HAMMOND NEWS CORRESPOND­ENT ■ Email: yp.newsdesk@jpimedia.co.uk ■ Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

COMMISSION: Britain is no longer a country where the “system is deliberate­ly rigged against ethnic minorities”, says a review that has been criticised as insulting and divisive.

The Commission on Race and Ethnic Disparitie­s said several other factors impact life chances more than racism, in a report in the wake of Black Lives Matter.

BRITAIN IS no longer a country where the “system is deliberate­ly rigged against ethnic minorities”, according to a landmark review that has been criticised as insulting and divisive.

The Commission on Race and Ethnic Disparitie­s said geography, family influence, socioecono­mic background, culture and religion all impact life chances more than racism, in a report commission­ed in the wake of the Black Lives Matter movement.

It also criticised the “confusing” way the term “institutio­nal racism” has been applied, saying this should only be used when deep-seated, systemic racism is proved and not as a “catch-all” phrase for any microaggre­ssion.

Labour said the report was a “divisive polemic” which has insulted people by downplayin­g institutio­nal racism, while unions said the report was “deeply cynical” and denied the experience­s of black and minority ethnic workers.

In a foreword to the report, commission chairman Dr Tony Sewell said some communitie­s are haunted by historic racism and there was a “reluctance to acknowledg­e that the UK had become open and fairer”.

He said the review found some evidence of bias, but often it was a perception that the wider society could not be trusted.

Dr Sewell wrote: “Put simply, we no longer see a Britain where the system is deliberate­ly rigged against ethnic minorities.

“The impediment­s and disparitie­s do exist, they are varied, and ironically very few of them are directly to do with racism.

“Too often ‘racism’ is the catchall explanatio­n, and can be simply implicitly accepted rather than explicitly examined.”

The commission said it takes racism seriously and does not deny it is a “real force” in the UK.

But it said there is an “increasing­ly strident form of anti-racism thinking that seeks to explain all minority disadvanta­ge through the prism of white discrimina­tion”.

This, it says, diverts attention from other reasons for disparitie­s of outcome.

Shadow Women and Equalities Secretary Marsha de Cordova said: “To downplay institutio­nal racism in a pandemic where black, Asian and ethnic minority people have died disproport­ionately and are now twice as likely to be unemployed is an insult.”

Labour MP David Lammy said the report was an “insult to anybody and everybody across this country who experience­s institutio­nal racism”.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson said the Government will consider the recommenda­tions.

He added: “The entirety of Government remains fully committed to building a fairer Britain and taking the action needed to address disparitie­s wherever they exist.”

The 264-page report makes 24 recommenda­tions, which the commission says have “tried to account for the messy reality of life” and are aimed at all disadvanta­ged people.

These include calls for increased scrutiny of body-worn police footage of stop and searches, more detailed, publicly available data, more local recruitmen­t within police forces, and improved training to help officers interact with the communitie­s they serve.

A pilot should be developed in four police areas where young people with low level possession of class B drugs should helped by public health services and diverted away from the criminal justice system, it recommends. It also calls for an Office for Health Disparitie­s to be establishe­d, to tackle health inequaliti­es.

A insult to everybody who experience­s institutio­nal racism.

Labour MP

David Lammy.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom