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Black Lives Matter: PM urged to deliver ‘action’ and told BAME people don’t need ‘another review’ | Politics News

Boris Johnson is under pressure to “just deliver action now” on tackling racial inequality after critics dismissed his announcement of “another review” into the issue.

Following widespread protests in the UK in support of the Black Lives Matter movement, the prime minister has promised a cross-government commission to tackle racism.

This will look at “all aspects of inequality – in employment, in health outcomes, in academic and all other walks of life”, Mr Johnson said in a newspaper column for his former employer, the Daily Telegraph.

Prime Minister Theresa May speaking in Bristol during campaigning for the upcoming European Parliament elections.
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Former PM Theresa May also conducted a review into racial inequality while in Number 10

The newspaper reported the commission will report directly to the prime minister and will have an independent chair.

It will look at inequality across the UK, not just that affecting the black, Asian and minority ethnic (BAME) community, and will be asked to produce recommendations for the government by the end of this year, the Telegraph added.

Full details of the review are due to be provided in the coming days.

Mr Johnson’s commission is set to be the second review into racial inequality to be carried out on the instructions of Number 10 in three years.

More from Black Lives Matter

In October 2017, the first data from ex-prime minister Theresa May’s race disparity audit was published.

Following Mr Johnson’s announcement, Nazir Afzal – a former chief prosecutor for the Crown Prosecution Service – noted how the last few years have also seen reviews into the justice system, deaths in police custody, the Windrush scandal, UK workplaces, and the impact of coronavirus on BAME groups.

He said: “These and others identified what needs to be done to tackle racism.

“Boris Johnson, we don’t need another review. Just deliver action now.”

David Isaac, the chair of the Equality and Human Rights Commission, also said it was “time for urgent action”.

“We know the scale of the problems we face to tackle the entrenched racial inequality in our country. It is not new,” he said.

“There have been countless reports and the data exists exposing all the issues. Now is the time for urgent action.

“We need to see a clear and comprehensive race strategy with clear targets and timescales from the government.

“We hope this new commission will help deliver that and we stand ready to work with it.”



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Mr Johnson’s former chancellor Sajid Javid welcomed the prime minister’s new commission.

But he added: “Shining a light on injustice isn’t enough. We need an action plan to tackle it.

“The racial disparity audit found the data. The commission must deliver the solutions.”

Labour MP David Lammy, who chaired the 2017 review of the treatment of BAME individuals in the criminal justice system, claimed Mr Johnson’s new commission appears to have been “written on the back of a fag packet” to “assuage” Black Lives Matter protesters.

“Black people aren’t playing victim, as Boris indicates,” he told the BBC.

“They’re protesting precisely because the time for review is over, and the time for action is now.”

Mr Lammy has urged the government to implement the 35 recommendations of his review, which published its final report two years and nine months ago.

He also criticised the prime minister for announcing his new commission in the Daily Telegraph, whose website is behind a paywall, and “buried in the middle of yet another article about Churchill”.

“If he was serious, why are there no details about how it will be staffed, its remit, its terms of reference, its timetable,” he added.

“That’s the question. It’s because it’s written on the back of a fag packet yesterday to assuage the Black Lives Matter protests.”

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Labour’s former shadow home secretary Diane Abbott, the first black female MP, said: “Black people don’t need another commission.

“They need action on existing reports and reviews.”

Liberal Democrat MP Christine Jardine, the party’s equalities spokesperson, said the commission’s findings “must not become simply another report on a shelf in Whitehall”.

“The government must implement them without delay,” she added.

8 minutes & 46 Seconds: The Killing of George Floyd

From 9pm tonight, Sky News will air a documentary narrated by Idris Elba which examines whether the global protests triggered by George Floyd’s death are a turning point for the anti-racism movement.

The programme can also be viewed on Sky News’ Youtube channel.

On Tuesday night at 8pm, Sky News will also broadcast global debate show Race and Revolution: Is Change Going to Come?

It will look at the issues raised by the Black Lives Matter protests, and examine institutional racism and how we fix it.

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