FIRST & FOREMOST ASIAN WEEKLY IN EUROPE
inside: Indian, Chinese troops disengage at three locations in Eastern Ladakh SEE PAGE - 26
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Let noble thoughts come to us from every side
13 - 19 JUNE 2020 - VOL 51 ISSUE 7
BRITAIN STILL RACIST?
ED to attach Nirav Modi’s assets under law enacted 2 years ago SEE PAGE - 26
Kuwait wants to reduce number of overseas workers SEE PAGE - 22
India, Australia upgrade strategic talks to Minister level SEE PAGE - 23
Rupanjana Dutta
The Macpherson Report, in 1999, used ‘institutionally racist’ to describe UK’s police force following an enquiry into the death of Stephen Lawrence, the black teenager who was fatally stabbed in 1993. Twenty-one years later and the Black Lives Matter protests in London are still expressing grievances about the disproportionate targeting of BAME communities by the police.
Racism affects all people of colour or from minority ethnic backgrounds. But when it comes to black people, they face a certain kind of prejudice, propagated by other ethnic minorities as well as white majorities. Usually when it comes to minority communities, it is easy to put all of them under same umbrella, but, the prejudices that each community faces are entirely different from another. Black Lives Matter campaign has taken a strong form in Britain. People protesting the death of George Flyod tore down the controversial bronze statue of Edward Colston, a 17th-century slave trader in Bristol, leading widespread controversy. They also vandalised the Mahatma Gandhi statue in the Parliament square along with the statue of Winston Churchill.
Lord Meghnad Desai, Chairman of the Gandhi Memorial Statue Trust told Asian Voice, "There are reports that the statue of Mahatma Gandhi in Parliament Square in London was defaced by demonstrators marching for Black Lives Matter. “Black Lives Matter is a worthy cause which Gandhi would have supported and marched along with. It is sad that a man who dedicated himself to fight prejudice, oppression and imperialism has been treated with such callous disrespect. Gandhi was not a racist. As Nelson Mandela, who should know, said about him. “The values of tolerance, mutual respect and unity for which he stood and acted had a profound influence on our liberation movement and my own thinking.
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US envoy apologises after Gandhi statue vandalised in Washington SEE PAGE - 23
After talking of expanding G-7, Trump invites Modi to summit SEE PAGE - 25