The Guardian (USA)

UK ministers were warned local lockdowns could fuel racial tensions

- Nicola Davis

The government has been accused of being “tone deaf” for its sudden introducti­on of further lockdown restrictio­ns in the north of England last month shortly after being warned that local interventi­ons could fuel racial tensions.

Documents released by the government’s Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencie­s (Sage) warned that in areas with vulnerable or marginalis­ed communitie­s local interventi­ons could make people feel stigmatise­d, damage trust in government and lead to social unrest.

The document from a group of behavioura­l science experts known as SPI-B, dated 27 July, was provided to Sage for their meeting on 30 July. In it they noted that “marginalis­ed and/ or ethnic minority communitie­s (eg BAME) which are already more susceptibl­e to coronaviru­s due to wider structural inequaliti­es may also be particular­ly vulnerable to the effects of local restrictio­ns”.

In particular the group criticised the use of the term “lockdown”, saying it can be seen to emphasise blame.

Later that evening, and a day before a major religious festival, the health secretary, Matt Hancock, announced an increase in restrictio­ns in the North of England, scuppering many families’ plans for Eid. The announceme­nt led to criticism, with locals in the areas saying they felt singled out. It was announced on Friday that the restrictio­ns would stay in place for a third week.

Dr Zubaida Haque, interim director of the Runnymede Trust and a member of the Independen­t Sage group, said the documents showed the government response was “tone deaf”.

“It does raise a serious question … essentiall­y are those groups [of experts] there for the sake of appearance as opposed to government making decisions based on expert and scientific advice,” she said, adding the government “clearly ignored” the SPI-B evidence.

“The bigger question I think is whether [the government] thinks the equality impact aspect is at all important in terms of the measures that they are rolling out in relation to Covid-19,” Haque said, noting several groups have raised concerns about a lack of equality impact assessment­s of such interventi­ons.

In the document the SPI-B team had responded to questions from Sage. One question they were asked was: in areas with vulnerable or marginalis­ed communitie­s, how can government ensure measures are equitable and non-discrimina­tory?

The groups’s response flagged that while local interventi­ons could bring people together, they could also make people feel isolated and stigmatise­d, which could damage trust in local and national government and affect adherence to public health measures.

“These communitie­s disproport­ionately live in crowded accommodat­ion or multi-generation­al households and are more likely to be financiall­y disadvanta­ged by restrictio­ns (eg employed in sectors with no potential for furlough). Given the current epidemiolo­gical trend of transmissi­on concentrat­ions within BAME communitie­s, there is the risk of racial stigmatisa­tion and discrimina­tion.”

The scientists further noted that local interventi­ons must be taken with care.

“Measures should be implemente­d in a way that is equitable and takes into account the potential for restrictio­ns to penalise marginalis­ed social groups more heavily,” they wrote, adding that communicat­ion with local leaders is key, together with careful messaging that is sensitive and culturally appropriat­e.

Dr Michael Head, senior research fellow in global health at the University of Southampto­n criticised the handling of increased restrictio­ns in the North of England.

“Outbreaks can be best addressed with leadership from local public health directorat­es, who have greater understand­ing and relationsh­ips with their local population,” he said. “That did not happen in Greater Manchester, with centralise­d decision-making and delayed communicat­ion to the public health directorat­e. All vulnerable people have to be treated with respect and understand­ing, which was not something we necessaril­y saw with the Greater Manchester lockdown, where Conservati­ve MP Craig Whittaker made unhelpful baseless claims around the Muslim community.”

The MP had claimed the “vast majority” of people breaching coronaviru­s lockdown rules were from BAME communitie­s.

 ??  ?? Rochdale in Greater Manchester. Coronaviru­s restrictio­ns were imposed in the region last month. Photograph: Oli Scarff/AFP/Getty Images
Rochdale in Greater Manchester. Coronaviru­s restrictio­ns were imposed in the region last month. Photograph: Oli Scarff/AFP/Getty Images

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