Race against
time
by Khaled Diab on 22nd
March 2021 @DiabolicalIdea
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With the resurgence of racism and
discrimination across Europe, combating it requires urgent action, not just
noble words.
The issue of racism is climbing up
the agenda of the European Union. Last Friday, International Day for the
Elimination of Racial Discrimination, the EU organised its first European
Anti-Racism Summit.
‘Racism is around us in our
societies. It doesn’t always make the headlines but it is there,’ said the
European Commission president, Ursula von der Leyen, in her opening remarks. ‘I
know we can be better than this. Europe must be better than this.’
The summit built on the EU’s Anti-Racism Action Plan for 2020-25,
which seeks to spearhead action that brings together key stakeholders in the
fight against racism and to marshal some of the EU’s budget to combat this
scourge. The commission also pledges to collect better data on racism and to
reassess the EU legal framework, proposing new legislation as necessary.
Most marginalised
Roma individuals comprise Europe’s
largest minority and also its most marginalised. Ðorđe Jovanović, president of
the European Roma Rights Centre, told the summit of the daily and profound
discrimination they faced across Europe. Jovanović not only criticised EU
anti-racism policies as not going far enough—he also questioned why these
policies were formulated by white policy-makers without sufficient consultation
of Roma communities. ‘Roma civil activists are only put in the box of victims,’
he said. ‘I’m tired of providing only testimonies.’
This lack of engagement manifests
itself in how the EU approaches police profiling, for example. ‘Profiling is
commonly, and legitimately, used by law enforcement officers to prevent,
investigate and prosecute criminal offences,’ says the action plan. ‘However,
profiling that results in discrimination on the basis of special categories of
personal data, such as data revealing racial or ethnic origin, is illegal.’
As someone who has endured ‘random checks’ in countless places
around the world, I see the inherent contradiction in describing profiling as
‘legitimate’ while saying that if this results in discrimination it is
‘illegal’. ‘Police misconduct is one of the most common forms of discrimination
facing the Roma,’ Jovanović emphasised. ‘It is often the only face of the state
that our people see.’
One particularly toxic form of
discrimination facing Roma communities, and to varying extents other poor
minorities, is environmental racism. Last year, the European Environmental
Bureau (EEB) released a report on how discrimination
against Europe’s Roma manifests itself physically—quite literally, by pushing
them to the toxic margins of society. Not only are Roma communities too often
forced to live in polluted ghettoes. They are also systematically excluded or
marginalised from basic environmental services, such as water supply and waste
management, as well as healthcare and education.
The consequences of environmental
racism have been lethally underscored by the Covid-19 pandemic, which has affected Roma communities
disproportionately, as with other marginalised minorities in Europe and
elsewhere in the world. Given its harmful and poisonous impact, the EU needs to
recognise environmental racism explicitly and put in place policies to combat
it.
Fanning the flames
While second and third-generation
immigrants, as well as members of indigenous minorities such as Jews, must
confront the ills of racism and discrimination, newcomers who arrive as
undocumented migrants and refugees have it even tougher, because they do not
enjoy the benefits of citizenship or the legal protection of an official
status. Yet public hostility towards migrants and refugees is mounting in
Europe, with right-wing and some mainstream leaders, claiming to represent the
majority, fanning the flames of xenophobia.
A report on building a wellbeing
economy which the EEB will be releasing next month, in the context of the Climate of
Change project, explores ways of combating racism and
anti-migrant sentiment through robust policies and a change in the negative
narrative on migration. EU action in this regard is welcome and necessary—but
problems in its member states are bound to percolate and resonate in Brussels.
Not only is there still a long way
to go before we achieve true equality—the ‘whitelash’ against growing
empowerment has intensified. Almost wherever one turns, from Brexit Britain to
nativist Hungary, racist politicians and policies enjoy significant and in many
cases burgeoning support.
Even centrist politicians have not
been above pandering to these bigoted tendencies. The most prominent recent
instance has been in France. Despite the fanfare surrounding Emmanuel Macron’s
defeat of the far-right leader, Marine Le Pen, in the 2017 election, the
president and his government have embraced a narrative on Islam and Muslims
that parrots her Rassemblement National.
Dark side
France has also not been immune to
the jingoism which has conquered Britain in recent years. A small example of
this is how 2021 has become the Year of Napoleon, to mark the 200th anniversary
of Bonaparte’s death. Napoleon undoubtedly exercised a massive impact on the
modern world—from the grand, such as the Napoleonic code, to the mundane, such as driving on
the right side of the road.
There is however a dark and
murderous side to the self-declared emperor of France, largely missing from
public discourse. Napoleon reintroduced slavery in France’s colonies, a few
years after the revolution had abolished it. ‘I find it particularly galling to
see that France plans to celebrate the man who restored slavery to the French
Caribbean, an architect of modern genocide, whose troops created gas chambers to kill my
ancestors,’ wrote Marlene Daut, a professor of American
and African diaspora studies at the University of Virginia.
Of course, Napoleon is not the only
problematic historical figure in Europe. Across the channel, Britain’s World
War II hero Winston Churchill, once voted ‘greatest Briton of all-time’, sparked
the Bengal famine which killed three million
during the war, among many other atrocities.
That does not mean we should excise
such men from our collective consciousness as European. It means we need to
build a more critical and honest understanding of these leaders—not raise them
on a pedestal as infallible heroes.
White Brussels
Just as national politics and
government are largely dominated by white people, the same applies to the EU.
Although Brussels is one of the most diverse cities in Europe and the world,
that is not reflected in the institutions, where members of minorities are few
and far between.
The commission and other
institutions have pledged to lead by example to promote diversity. Equinox,
a new racial-justice initiative, has come out with a blueprint on how the EU can set in motion
lasting change.
This also applies, to a lesser or
greater degree, to the civil society engaging with the institutions. Even the
European environmental movement is predominantly white and a recent
petition demands that green NGOs take more action to promote
diversity and become actively anti-racist.
The EEB, for one, recognises this
challenge. In addition to the research and campaigning on environmental racism
and justice it carries out externally, it is endeavouring to get its own house
in order, working to create greater awareness of the issues and promote
diversity within the organisation.
Biases and structures
My own career has provided me with
insights into the unconscious biases and structural issues standing in the way
of greater diversity. Most of the jobs I have done have made me feel, to paraphrase
Michael Kiwanuka, a little like a brown man in a white world. When I
started off in journalism over two decades ago, the English-language media
landscape was almost exclusively white, even when it came to those covering the
middle east.
With few role models to emulate and
no clear path for entry, the task ahead seemed daunting and required a
confidence in my abilities not necessarily shared by the world I sought to
enter.
The rejections did take their toll.
But refusing to accept the knock-backs, I kept going until I broke in and then
kept pushing the limits as far as I could. Eventually, I got my byline into
some of the world’s leading publications.
Along the way, key allies and
mentors played a pivotal role in giving me the chance to prove myself or taking
a gamble on me. When all is said and done, I have been rather fortunate. But
the Europe I want to live in is one in which members of minorities succeed, not
in spite of the system but because of it—one in which they have an equal chance of making their dreams
come true.
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