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Unrest in
England
"They spoke of
"defending" their communities against white racists, but appeared to
have ingrained anti-white or anti-Western and anti-police attitudes
themselves." Raymond Whitaker investigates the recent riots and racist
attacks committed by Asian Muslim
youths in northern England.

D-Day veteran Walter Chamberlain,
his face beaten to pulp by an Asian Muslim youth in Oldham.
"Some of the older boys are
forming a mujaheddin group," said 16-year-old Ansar. "They're our role
models, the Afghans." Another Asian teenager claims Osama bin Laden, the
alleged terrorist mastermind, is his hero, but Amjad Zaman told both of them, in
a Yorkshire accent as strong as theirs: "Stop talking such nonsense. You're
just making it up."
We are in West Yorkshire
Devonshire Park in Keighley, to be precise not central Asia, and it is easy
to understand Mr Zaman's impatience with the posturing of youths who would get
the shock of their lives if they ever met their supposed Taliban mentors. The
Islamic zealots who run Afghanistan might want to know, for example, how these
unemployed young men came by their designer sportswear, let alone the car radio
being passed around.
But Mr Zaman nodded in agreement
when the talk turns to the recent violence in Oldham, and 21-year-old Shihab
said: "We are going to stand our ground. If anyone comes to this park
looking for trouble, we're not going to phone the police, we're going to mash
them ourselves. They think that because they did it to our parents, they can do
it to us, but that's where they're wrong."
Devonshire Park looks well
maintained, but immediately outside there are drifts of shattered car glass and
discarded syringes. Ansar and his friends, second- and third-generation
Anglo-Pakistanis aged from 15 to 23, spend their afternoons here, playing
cricket or football.
Nearly all are past or current
pupils of Greenhead secondary school, where Mr Zaman helps pupils with learning
difficulties, but for some, attendance is mainly theoretical. One youth claims
racism keeps him away, but again he gets short shrift from the older man.
"If you turn up at 11am and get excluded, that's your own fault," he
said. "That's not racism." Not that Mr Zaman is much older than the
lads: he is 27. The gulf in attitudes, though, is deep and wide.
Last week Oldham's MPs and civic
leaders came to London to meet the new Home Secretary, David Blunkett. Plans are
being drawn up to tackle the causes of the violence late last month, when
hundreds of Asian youths clashed with the police, and action is being promised
within four months. It is already clear, however, that the rioting, and the jump
in election support for the far-right British National Party, resulted from
long-simmering problems.
The rest of the country learned
for the first time of the creeping residential segregation in Oldham which has
led to hardening attitudes on both sides. It also heard a new voice: that of
disaffected, unemployed Muslim youths of Pakistani and Bangladeshi descent. They
spoke of "defending" their communities against white racists, but
appeared to have ingrained anti-white or anti-Western and anti-police
attitudes themselves.
It is clear that Oldham is not an
isolated case. All along the M62 there are depressed towns where white and Asian
communities are retreating into a form of apartheid. Daily friction is reduced
by greater separation, but flare-ups, when they come, are bigger. "For
me," said Shihab, "contact with whites means only one thing:
trouble."
Older Asians are disturbed.
"Some of these people want to create a little Pakistan or Bangladesh,"
said Mohammed Sharif, a 41-year-old NHS worker in Keighley. "They don't
want to mix with whites, because they see them as a bad, un-Islamic influence,
but they say they wouldn't want to live in Pakistan either. My generation felt a
bit the same way, but we still respected our elders. We have no control over
these young people."
Dr Colin Webster, a criminologist
who made a five-year study of racial violence in Keighley, openly predicts that
there will be more unrest this summer. "Most small towns in the north have
the potential to go the same way as Oldham, such as Keighley, Rochdale, Halifax
up to places the size of Bradford," he said. "The poverty is
aggravated by a high degree of segregation which you don't find in bigger
cities. Those who can, get out, making those who are left behind feel
trapped." His words were echoed in Keighley by Shahid Ali, 22, who said:
"As soon as someone gets any qualifications, they move out of town."
At the start of Dr Webster's
study, most victims of racial attacks in Keighley were Asian families buying
rundown stone terraces in areas such as Highfield, which incorporates Devonshire
Park. "White flight" ensued, with the result that Braithwaite, the
council estate neighbouring Highfield, is now seen as a "no-go area"
by Asians. Dr Webster found that this separation reduced racial incidents and
that, by the end of his study in 1995, the majority of victims was now white.
West Yorkshire police do not keep
figures for individual towns, but, across the whole region, reported racial
incidents jumped sharply from a little over 600 in 1997/98 to 1,068 the
following year, then doubled to 2,116 in 1999/2000. While some of this is said
to be due to a greater willingness to report incidents, it lends support to Mr
Zaman's view that after a significant improvement in recent years, race
relations have taken a turn for the worse.
White racists have been blamed for
raising tension in Oldham. At the annual Keighley Gala the weekend before last,
the town was rife with rumours of troublemakers from outside. Mr Zaman said the
police had told him they were bringing in reinforcements after finding far-right
calls on the internet to infiltrate the fair. "Tension was sky high, but it
passed off peacefully," he said.
For the bored young men in the
park, however, it scarcely mattered. Rain forced us to shelter in a car with
Ansar, Shihab and another 21-year-old known only as "Snoop". "My
ambitions have all been destroyed," said Shihab. "I've been to 20
interviews or more, but they never give you the job. I went for a job at a
chicken factory, but when they see an Asian they say there are no vacancies. All
we can do is play cricket here and fantasise about being in the England
team." Did he mean the Pakistan side? "No, we live here."
Snoop said he had worked at a
hotel in Leeds, but was sacked in a dispute over time off for a Muslim festival.
He attacked Keighley's MP, Ann Cryer, for taking up the cases of Asian women who
alleged that they had been forced into marriage, saying: "How can she come
between us and our sisters, encouraging them to go to court?"
Any hint of Islamic militancy was
quickly undermined, however, when talk turned to drugs. While all said they
would not touch alcohol, they saw nothing wrong with smoking cannabis. "If
you've done a 13-hour shift, you have to have a smoke at the end of it,"
said Snoop.
Not all their views accorded with
the most apocalyptic fears of their elders, but their attitude towards the
police came close. "If we go to certain places, we get gripped straight
away," said Ansar. "The police treat us differently, the schools treat
us differently. Why is that? Because we are second-class citizens."
Many, however, question whether
unemployed white youths have a much better time of it. Even in Devonshire Park,
Shahid Ali said: "This is about class, not racism. We've got to live
together. If we fight, nobody will win." Dr Webster also believed the two
groups had more in common than either side might realise. "To a large
extent young Asians are adopting white working-class attitudes," he said.
"They have a loose cultural identity and very little political interest. It
is mainly about defending turf."
For all the talk of mujaheddin and
Islam, it is argued, young Asian males may be becoming more, rather than less,
like their white and black counterparts. But when it comes to keeping the
streets peaceful, that might not be good news.
Source: The Independent,
17 June 2001
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