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Authors of UK racism report hit back at ‘misrepresentation’

Published:Saturday | April 3, 2021 | 1:52 PM
In this file photo dated Sunday, August 30, 2020, Black Lives Matter protesters hold posters as they march through Notting Hill during the "Million People March" through central London. A government inquiry, by a panel of experts, concluded Wednesday, March 31, 2021, that there is racism in Britain, but it’s not a systematically racist country that is “rigged” against non-white people, although many ethnic-minority Britons greeted that claim with skepticism. (AP Photo/Frank Augstein, FILE)

LONDON (AP) — The commission behind a report that concluded that Britain doesn’t have a systemic problem with racism has defended itself against critics, some of whom have argued that it downplayed the country’s historic role in slavery.

In a response late Friday, the Commission on Race and Ethnic Disparities said disagreement with the government-backed review had “tipped into misrepresentation” and it took particular umbrage at accusations that it put a positive spin on slavery.

“This misrepresentation risks undermining the purpose of the report — understanding and addressing the causes of inequality in the UK — and any of the positive work that results from it,” the commission said in a statement.

The Conservative government launched the commission’s inquiry into racial disparities in the wake of last year’s Black Lives Matter movement.

The panel of experts, which was made up of 11 members from a broad cross-section of ethnic backgrounds, concluded that while “outright racism” exists in Britain, the country is not “institutionally racist” or “rigged” against minorities.

Citing strides to close gaps between ethnic groups in educational and economic achievement, the report, which was published Wednesday, said race was becoming “less important” as a factor in creating disparities that also are fuelled by class and family backgrounds.

Many academics, lawmakers unions, and anti-racism activists were sceptical of the findings in the 258-page report, with some claiming the commission ignored barriers to equality, while others said it downplayed the ongoing legacy of Britain’s colonial past as well as its role in slavery.

David Olusoga, professor of public history at Manchester University and one of Britain’s leading academics on slavery, became the latest to join in the criticism.

“Determined to privilege comforting national myths over hard historical truths, they (the panel) give the impression of being people who would prefer this history to be brushed back under the carpet,” he wrote in a piece for The Guardian newspaper published Saturday.

In their statement published before Olusoga’s article, the commission said the idea it would downplay the atrocities of slavery “is as absurd as it is offensive to every one of us” and described the personal attacks on its members as “irresponsible and dangerous.”

“We have never said that racism does not exist in society or in institutions,” it said. “We say the contrary: racism is real and we must do more to tackle it.”

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