
Sustainable Switch: Europe's rising racism
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Rising far-right nationalism in Europe and ongoing opposition to diversity policies by U.S. President Donald Trump have fueled a surge in anti-immigration sentiment and acts of racism targeting Black and ethnic communities worldwide.
We'll take a look at the shooting in France and the burning of an effigy of a Black player in Spain, which all took place within the same week as an anti-immigration riot in Northern Ireland.
Then we will examine the plight faced by teachers in the U.S. who focus on diversity or gender studies, and end with the ongoing legal dispute between a financial watchdog and a mortgage lending company over allegations of racial discrimination.
The shooting in France
A 45-year-old Tunisian barber Hichem Miraoui was shot by his neighbour at his home in the south of France late in May while chatting on the phone with his mother and sisters.
The shooter, Christophe Belgembe, also shot Miraoui's Kurdish neighbour, Akif Badur, in the hand, according to France's anti-terror prosecutor's office, known as PNAT.
Belgembe surrendered to police a few hours later and confessed, the PNAT said. His lawyer did not respond to a request for comment.
He posted four videos on Facebook saying that the state was "unable to protect us, unable to send them home", that he had "taken out two or three pieces of shit" and this was only the beginning.
Belgembe denied any racist or terrorist motivation, but the PNAT charged him with racially motivated, premeditated murder and attempted murder as part of a terrorist undertaking.
The PNAT's move is indicative of a broader shift in France, where the number of jihadist attacks has fallen while racist, xenophobic, or anti-religious crimes are up 11% compared with last year amid growing support for the far-right.
The effigy in Spain
Four people have received suspended jail sentences of seven to 15 months from a Madrid court after being convicted of a hate crime for hanging an inflatable Black effigy, dressed in the jersey of Black Brazilian soccer star Vinicius Jr., from a bridge before a major soccer match in January 2023.
The group also displayed a banner that read "Madrid hates Real." Vinicius Jr. plays for Real Madrid, one of the world's most successful soccer teams, in the country's top professional league.
Anti-immigration riots
Last week's newsletter included a 'Talking Points' piece on the riots in the Northern Irish town of Ballymena, which first flared after two 14-year-old boys were arrested and appeared in court, accused of a serious sexual assault on a teenage girl in the town. The charges were read via a Romanian interpreter to the boys, whose lawyer told the court they denied the charge, the BBC reported.
By Thursday, the riots spread to different towns of the British-run province, including Portadown, which is 50 km from the capital, Belfast.
Keep scrolling for today's top Talking Points stories on diversity issues in the United States.
ESG LENS
In keeping with today's theme on migration, the Lens looks at the number of people booked into immigration detention who have been charged only with immigration violations. That number has jumped eightfold since President Donald Trump took office, government data shows, undercutting his anti-crime message.
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement detention statistics show the number of detainees arrested by ICE with no other criminal charges, opens new tab or convictions rose from about 860 in January to 7,800 this month – a more than 800% increase.
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Spectator
5 hours ago
- Spectator
Kate Forbes's exit is proof the SNP has lost its way
In little over a week, the Scottish National Party (SNP) has lost two of its greatest political stars. Mhairi Black, the left-wing MP for Paisley and Renfrewshire South, threw in the towel last week, citing the 'toxicity' of politics and the party's lack of support for transgender rights. Now, the deputy leader of the SNP, Kate Forbes – regarded as a social conservative – has stepped down to spend more time with her family. The trickle of nationalist departures risks turning into a flood. Forbes's departure is the greater shock. Many regarded the 35-year-old MSP for Skye, Lochaber and Badenoch as the leading leadership challenger from the right of the party. As the SNP's first female Finance Secretary, she championed a return to pro-business economics and strongly defended the oil and gas industry. Her statement today that she doesn't want to miss 'the precious early years of family life' – she has a three-year-old daughter – came as a complete surprise. Mhairi Black, on the other hand, had long expressed her disillusionment with Westminster politics and had made it clear last year that she was standing down as an MP. However, her many supporters on the left of the SNP hoped she might seek a political future in Holyrood. Instead, she announced on 25 July that she was quitting the SNP for good. Black was highly regarded as an articulate and dynamic champion of the youth vote. When she was elected to Paisley and Renfrewshire South in 2015, defeating the Labour cabinet minister Douglas Alexander, she became the youngest MP to be elected since 1832 at 20 years old. Black went on to become deputy leader of the SNP in Westminster and, with a prominent media profile, including a show at the Edinburgh Festival, was seen by many as the future of Scottish nationalism. But last week, she cited the SNP leadership's 'capitulations on LGBT rights, trans rights in particular' as the reason she could no longer remain a party member. She also criticised the SNP leader, John Swinney, for equivocating on the issue of Palestinian 'genocide'. There is little doubt that Black regarded Kate Forbes as a leading figure in those 'capitulations'. The deputy leader made clear that she 'unequivocally' supported 'single-sex spaces and women's rights', and Forbes openly praised the gender-critical author J.K. Rowling as a 'national treasure'. A committed Christian and member of an evangelical sect, Forbes also said she personally did not support abortion, although she accepted that it was the law of the land. She admitted that she would have voted against same-sex marriage had she been in Holyrood when the matter was debated in 2012. Black argued that the SNP could not remain a party of young people while clinging to such policies. Centrists may argue that the departures of these two controversial figures, in a sense, cancel each other out, allowing the party to stabilise behind John Swinney, the ultimate centrist dad. But this development will only further demoralise the party as it seeks to avoid defeat in next year's Holyrood election and has barely recovered from its drubbing in last year's general election when it lost 38 seats. The loss of two high-profile women only adds to the sense that the SNP has lost direction since the equally sudden departure of former first minister Nicola Sturgeon in February 2023. Of course, many will blame the difficulties that women face in politics, though neither Sturgeon nor Mhairi Black had young children to look after. The attrition rate for female politicians in Scotland is high. The former women leaders of the Scottish Labour party, Kezia Dugdale, and the Scottish Conservatives, Ruth Davidson, also left politics at short notice. However, as far as the SNP is concerned, it is probably more a consequence of the failure of nationalist politics than of personal issues or misogyny. Kate Forbes stood for the party leadership as recently as 2023 and lost narrowly to Humza Yousaf, who is himself standing down at next year's Holyrood elections. The former SNP minister, Fergus Ewing, who left the party last month, has said: 'With Alex Salmond's passing last year, the SNP lost the best leader it ever had; with Kate's decision, the SNP has lost the best leader it never had.' The SNP has haemorrhaged electoral support since the departure of Nicola Sturgeon and is now polling in the low 30s. The current leader, John Swinney, has been heavily criticised for his lacklustre leadership and his failure to translate support for independence, which is running at over 50 per cent in many recent opinion polls, into support for the party of independence. This latest shock will only increase murmurs of discontent about Swinney's leadership. The main beneficiary is likely to be the party's Westminster leader, Stephen Flynn, who is beginning to look like a shoo-in for SNP leader if and when John Swinney takes the long walk.


Daily Mirror
a day ago
- Daily Mirror
KEVIN MAGUIRE: Corbyn's new Left party will be the ultimate revenge mission
Who will be the first Labour MP to defect to Jeremy Corbyn's fledgling Lefter-wing rival? Names were doing the rounds before Westminster packed up for the summer. Denials too, it must be added. But the odds are one, two or disillusioned more will jump Keir Starmer's ship as the Prime Minister sets a centrist course. Particularly if Downing Street keeps suspending rebellious crew members for disloyalty. The radio chat is prominent Labour figures are waking to the danger of Corbyn's vessel, HMS Revenge capable of torpedoing Labour at the election if it wins, say, as little as 10% of the votes. It comes after a polling expert says that Keir Starmer's Labour won't be able to 'relax' even if Jeremy Corbyn's and Zarah Sultana's the new party fails. Starmer's Parliamentary majority is as wide as an ocean and deep as a pond, always vulnerable on an historically low 34% of the votes cast. The split on the Right between the Tories and Reform put him into high office. And a division on the Left could throw the PM overboard. Mocking 'magic grandpa' Corbyn's indecision, thrusting co-conspirator and fellow former Labour MP Zarah Sultana's youthful enthusiasm and a messy, pre-launch start isn't enough because the project is striking a chord with a section of the population feeling let down by Labour. Starmer's obsessed with Reform voters, viewing Nigel Farage rather than Kemi Badenoch as leader of the opposition. Fair enough. But polling found many Reform voters prefer Corbyn as a leader to Starmer. And Labour's Left flank is under attack, not only the Right. The debate ex-leader Neil Kinnock sparked within Labour over a wealth tax is expanding when advocates now include Anneliese Dodds, a rigidly conventional bean-counter in her days as Starmer's first Shadow Chancellor before opponent Rachel Reeves. The increasingly public discussion is also symptomatic of a more fundamental conversation about Labour's boldness as a Government. Corbyn and Farage are why more of the same isn't a viable option, no change in the Starmer brand of change inviting disaster. Labour does, of course, urgently need to better communicate what did the Romans ever do for us but the captain either alters course, steering to the Left, or Farage wins because Starmer ignored reformer Corbyn's challenge. Official recognition that class matters Creating 200 top civil service £430-a-week internships for bright kids from working class homes is official recognition that class matters. Labourer's son Pat McFadden, the Cabinet Office Minister and Wolverhampton Labour MP behind this drive, rightly wants to open doors frequently locked to talented young men and women from ordinary homes. Privately educated City spiv Nigel Farage's kneejerk conservative opposition to diversity would keep out White working class sons as well as daughters and Black and gay Britons in a country dominated by people, well, exactly like him. And Kemi Badenoch should be careful what she wishes for after her instinctive Conservative Party dismissal of McFadden's plan. If the Tories selected the best person for the job then Kemikazi would be on the dole. Nigel Farage defends former Reform MP and "monster" James McMurdock Nigel Farage's Reform UK defended one of the Hard Right party's few MPs, James McMurdock, after the mother of a former girlfriend branded him a 'monster' and court documents revealed he was jailed for repeatedly kicking the young woman until two security guards pulled him off. McMurdock broke with Reform only after questions were subsequently asked about Covid loans totalling £70,000 he claimed so when Farage screams about 'Lawless Britain' there are growing numbers thinking the wannabe PM should start closer to home. Donald Trump's British mini-me is apeing the 'American carnage' rhetoric of his US hero in the hope he too will con his way into monarchical tyranny. Don't get me wrong, much is wrong with modern Britain yet hard statistics, most notably in an authoritative Crime Survey for England and Wales based on people's real life experiences, records how overall crime is down on the 1990s. That will be of absolutely no comfort to anybody mugged, attacked and burgled or to a fantasist Farage deliberately ignoring facts. Lawless Reform is a real danger. Capitalism has always worked for the wealthy few - not the many Supreme Court judge Robert Reed neatly summarised capitalism in the £45billion car finance victory for banks and dealers. 'No-one,' opined the legal eagle, 'could reasonably think that any participant was doing anything other than considering its own interests.' The Arthur Daleys and legalised loan sharks were fixing deals to profit themselves, not any customers taken for a ride. That is how capitalism works and is why many of us, including me, are confirmed democratic socialists. Britain would be a far better country owned, controlled and operated by us for us rather than a wealthy establishment extracting every last buck out of us. Going up Talking about how aged 16 he was abused might be difficult for Chris Bryant but the Arts and Telecoms Mnister deserves huge credit when speaking publicly will help other teenagers preyed on by sexual predators. Going down When the UK Government owed £24milliion from a Covid VIP lane contract it's difficult to understand, after introduction messages were released, why Cameron crony and Tory peer Peter Gummer aka Lord Chadlington is still in the House of Lords Speaker's corner Nobody offered diabetes medicine for free. Pharmaceutical companies didin't go, 'wow, this is really important. People will really die without this. We'll just give it away for free'.' Anti-Violence Minister Jess Phillips was spot on that helping girls and women attacked by men can't be left to volunteers and needs to be treated like other big issues. 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Scottish Sun
a day ago
- Scottish Sun
I was sexually assaulted hundreds of feet in air while on paraglide ride during Tunisia holiday… I felt violated & dirty
Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) A BRITISH holidaymaker claims she was sexually assaulted in the air by a paraglide operator. Mum-of-three Michelle Wilson, 52, says the man pressed himself against her and groped her during the thrill ride in Tunisia. 7 Michelle Wilson claims she was sexually assaulted in the air by a paraglide operator Credit: PP. 7 Michelle says the man pressed himself against her and groped her during the thrill ride in Tunisia 7 Michelle was taken on the flight with a young Tunisian operator strapped behind her She said: 'I felt violated and dirty and was scared.' Michelle was taken on the flight with a young Tunisian operator strapped behind her. Footage shows him positioning himself so he was directly behind Michelle, who was wearing a bikini, and pressing up against her. Michelle, from Southport, Merseyside, said: 'I could feel the back of my bikini bottoms being pulled and he was pulling the strap. He must have been tightening the harness to get me closer. 'His legs straddled around me, he had one hand up on the parachute, the other wasn't. Then I felt him touch my leg. 'He was groping me and was moving back and forth into me and was talking to me in Arabic. I felt him pressing against me. 'I kept arching my back. I felt violated and dirty and was scared. He was only a young lad, maybe around 20. 'It was a horrible experience and I was really scared. I felt helpless hanging in the air.' She burst into tears when she landed and complained to the water sports centre's manager, then to the local police. Michelle paid £6,000 for the holiday in Sousse with her daughter, 17, her 16-year-old twin boys and her daughter's friend, also 17. Tunisia and the island of Djerba But she said she felt unable to enjoy the rest of her trip and 'didn't feel safe until I was at home'. She said: 'As women you expect a bit of banter from men in these countries, but this wasn't banter, it was a sexual assault.' Michelle believes her attacker has since been arrested. Her insurance company and the Foreign Office are assisting in the case. EasyJet said: 'The safety and wellbeing of our customers is a priority, and we are continuing to support Ms Wilson. 'We are also liaising closely with our hotel partner to look into the reports.' 7 Michelle said: 'I could feel the back of my bikini bottoms being pulled and he was pulling the strap' 7 Footage shows Michelle on the paraglide ride 7 The Brit mum said she 'didn't feel safe' for the rest of the holiday