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Britain: Burnley hit by riots
By Richard Tyler
27 June 2001
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Burnley has become the third northern town to be hit by riots
sparked by racist attacks and police provocations in the last
month, following Oldham and Leeds.
On Saturday and Sunday nights, groups of white and Asian youths
had clashed in the town. Petrol bombs were thrown at a pub, shops
looted and several cars burnt out. The immediate cause seems to
have been two incidents on Saturday night. An Asian family complained
about noise coming from a party being held next door. According
to local residents, the house in Francis Street, Daneshouse, Burnleys
poorest neighbourhood, is normally unoccupied, but at weekends
it is the scene of all-night parties. In response to the complaint,
some whites at the party threatened, We will sort you out.
According to one report, a van then arrived, which local Asian
residents believed had been used by the racist British National
Party during the general election. ITN television news also reported
a large group of white youths marching on the predominantly Asian
Stoneyholme Estate.
As groups of white and Asian youths began clashing, riot police
were called in, making several arrests. Elsewhere in the town,
a gang of white males wielding hammers attacked an Asian taxi
driver, who suffered a fractured cheekbone. As a result, cab drivers
have taken their vehicles off the road, and say they will not
return until they feel safe. Duncan Allan, secretary of the Burnley
Private Hire Association, said, Ninety-five percent of our
member drivers are Asian and they feel very vulnerable, they are
scared.
Shahid Malik, a member of the Labour Party National Executive
Committee and a representative of the Commission for Racial Equality,
was hit in the face with a police riot shield on Monday night
and treated for concussion at Burnley General Hospital, receiving
six stitches above his left eye. Malik said, It was a completely
unprovoked assault by police officers. I was actually trying to
calm down a situation which potentially was going to get out of
hand. As blood poured down his face, he told a television
reporter, I was face to face with one of the officers and
said, Its OK, there are no problems here. Then
he lifted his riot shield with the edge up and smashed it straight
into my face. I was still standing and I was in shock. I said,
What are you doing, Im not trying to cause trouble,
Im trying to stop it.
His father Rafique Malik is the towns deputy mayor and
witnessed the attack. He described how his son was attacked by
up to four officers as he tried to defend himself. They
tried to hit him with the shield and I saw Shahid put his hand
underneath it to protect himself. Three or four officers pounced
on him, pinned him down and started beating and kicking him. By
the time he was standing he was bleeding all over, Councillor
Malik said.
The police have tried to play down the likelihood of outside
involvement in the racist attacks that sparked off the weekends
riots. According to the police, Burnley has no history of racial
tensions. Those from Asian ethnic backgrounds comprise just six
percent of the towns 92,000 population. Although relatively
small in number, official figures do record over five racial incidents
a week over the last year in the Pennine Division, which includes
Burnley.
The British National Party were active in the town in the run
up to the June 7 general election, where they stood a candidate
and polled 11.2 percent of the vote. This was their second highest
result after nearby Oldham, where the BNP polled 16.4 percent.
Neo-fascist organisations such as the BNP have been able to
capitalise on the poor conditions that confront many of Burnleys
residents, white and Asian alike. They falsely claim that Asians
and those from other ethnic minorities receive privileged treatment
over whites when it comes to housing and other council services.
A closer examination of the social conditions in Burnley not only
exposes such crude racist lies, but also shows that members of
the towns ethnic minorities are more likely to suffer above
average levels of unemployment and deprivation and live in areas
of poorer housing with few amenities.
Social statistics produced by both the local and regional councils
paint a devastating picture of town in decline, with pockets of
extreme poverty. Although the unemployment level in the town matches
the UK average of 3.3 percent, the decimation of the local textile
industry has adversely affected the Asian population.
The area at the centre of the weekends riots, Daneshouse,
is the second most deprived ward in Lancashire and the 62nd most
deprived of over 8,100 wards in England. Burnley contains three
wards ranked in the poorest three percent in England. Poverty
in Lancashire as a whole has risen under Labour: 12 percent of
the countys wards rank in the bottom 10th of all wards in
England, up from seven percent in 1999. Daneshouse is also the
sixth worst in England for child poverty, and eighth worst for
income deprivation
The 1999 Annual Report by the towns council notes that
wage levels are relatively low in Burnley, with many
Burnley residents suffering relative economic poverty.
Nearly one in eight of the towns households do not contain
anyone in work, ranking it third in England and over a fifth of
households with children in Burnley do not contain a wage earnerthe
59th highest percentage in England.
Over one third of Burnley households include someone with a
long-term limiting illnessthe 12th highest percentage in
England. A 1995 survey found that the people of the Burnley, Pendle
and Rossendale area had the worst dental health out of 178 English
health districts.
The council attributes many of these health problems directly
to poor housing, characterised by large numbers of 19th
century terraced houses of low value, many of which are unfit
for human habitation. It continues, The problems are
also becoming worse, faster than they can be tackled. Unfitness
levels are increasing, from 17 percent of private sector housing
in 1992 to 27 percent now.
In the last seven years, Burnley Borough Council has made cuts
totalling £3.1 million, largely as a consequence of central
government capping the amount of funds devolved to
the town. The town hall has sought to plug the gap by raising
more revenues from local residents through Council Tax, which
have risen from just under a third of all income in 1994 to over
half in 2000. The major area of savings the council has implemented
has been by reducing its own workforce from 1,216 in 1992 to 872
in 1998, coupled with the privatisation of services such as refuse
collection.
Conditions in Burnley are by no means unique. Poverty, bad
health, sub-standard housing, a lack of amenities and poor local
services are a daily reality for millions of working class families,
the old and infirm. The resulting growth of inequality has produced
social tensions throughout Britains urban areas. Together
with the right wing character of official politicswith its
xenophobic treatment of asylum seekers and other outsidersthis
creates conditions where extreme rightwing groups such as the
BNP feel encouraged to spout their racist filth, and provoke clashes
with immigrants and those from ethnic minorities.
See Also:
Britain: Oldham riots sparked
by deliberate cultivation of racism
[29 May 200]
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