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Britain: Conservative Party promotes racist campaign against
gypsies
By Julie Hyland
26 March 2005
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The Conservative Party has embraced a racist media diatribe
against gypsies and travellers as a central plank of its campaign
for the general election, expected May 5.
Right-wing newspapers such as the Sun, the Daily
Mail and the Daily Express had initiated the anti-gypsy
campaign earlier this month, just as the 2004 Housing Act came
into force.
Amongst other measures, the new legislation requires local
authorities to give consideration to the site requirements of
gypsies and travellers in their areas. Eleven years ago, the Conservative
government overturned a legal requirement for local authorities
to provide adequate sites.
Rupert Murdochs Sun led the attack in deliberately
inflammatory terms. Britains countryside was being invaded
by gypsies who were setting up illegal camp sites and terrorising
local residents, it claimed. Labours legislation would encourage
this situation, by pandering to a criminal minority
at the expense of the law-abiding majority. Declaring war
on illegal sites, the Sun issued a headline call to Stamp
on the Camps.
In response, gypsy and travellers organisations denounced
the tabloid campaign as racist and lodged complaints with the
Press Complaints Commission (PCC) over the Suns coverage.
This did not prevent Tory leader Michael Howard from jumping
on the anti-gypsy bandwagon. Television cameras followed him as
he visited two unauthorised sites in Billericay, Essex, peering
through a fence at one travellers camp before discussing
the complaints of local residents.
On Sunday, March 20, Howard published a full-page newspaper
advertisement, arguing that too many people today seem to
think they dont have to play by the rules and they are using
so-called human rights to get away with doing the wrong thing.
The Tories subsequently pledged a seven-point plan for tackling
unauthorised sites including making trespass a criminal rather
than civil offence. The Sun crowed of its success in having
set the political agenda for the Tory party.
What accounts for Howards decision to embrace the Suns
campaign as a major electoral issue? After all, of the many problems
facing people in rural areas, unauthorised sites hardly figure
on the horizon.
There are an estimated 15,000 travellers caravans in
the UK, of which the majority are permanently stationed. According
to evidence given to a parliamentary select committee in June
2004, just 700 families could be considered to lead a nomadic
life.
The lifting of the statutory requirement on local authorities
to provide adequate provision for gypsies and travellers has created
a shortage of approximately 300 sites. To find some place to stay,
some gypsy families have resorted to buying land on which to site
their camps, only to have their request to develop the site thrown
out. The Sun has used a handful of instances in which families
have begun to develop sites without having received planning permission
beforehand to back up its charge that gypsies are openly flouting
the law. However, gypsy organisations have countered that as 90
percent of their applications for planning permission are rejected,
they have no choice but to create facts on the ground.
But Howards decision to adopt the Suns campaign
as his own has nothing to do with the problems, real or otherwise,
caused by unauthorised sites.
In the short term, the Tories hope that with a general election
just weeks away, they can show Labour up to be soft
on gypsies in particular and on law and order in general.
In reality, rather than re-establishing the statutory duty
on local authorities to provide sites, Labours Housing Act
stipulates only that gypsies and travellers needs
should be given consideration.
It also gives local authorities stronger enforcement powers
against illegal encampments. This follows several high-profile
campaigns by some residents in rural villages. The most notable
was at Cottenham, Cambridgeshire, where a group of residents calling
themselves Middle England in Revolt withheld payments of their
local authority tax in protest at a group of Irish travellers
moving onto a legal site near to the village.
The Tories complain, however, that Labour has not empowered
the police to enforce evictions because it would run foul of the
European Convention on Human Rights, which the Blair government
incorporated into British law in 1998. They charge that both the
Convention and the UKs Human Rights Act place the rights
of special interest groups above those of the majority.
This spurious claim appears to relate to a recent case brought
by an Irish travelling family, the Maloneys, who had sought to
use human rights legislation to challenge their eviction from
a council-run site where they had set up without official permission.
The family, which has been moved on some 50 times, most recently
by Leeds Council, argued that their right to proper housing was
being breached.
In attacking human rights legislation, the Tories hope to combine
the campaign against gypsies with another favoured bête
noir of the right wingopposition to the European Union.
Howard has denounced the Human Rights Act as a charter
for chancers and recently told a party convention in Scotland
that if it were not possible to amend the legislation, a Tory
government would scrap it.
We are all British. We are one nation, he said.
I do not believe in special rules for special interest groups.
Howard grossly inflates the powers and scope of human rights
legislation. The rights set out by the Conventionwhich,
it should not be forgotten, was drawn up in the aftermath of the
Nazi holocaust, in which at least 250,000 gypsies were murderedand
the UKs watered-down version of it, are subject to numerous
caveats.
In particular, the concept of proportionality permits
the violation of citizens rights where they conflict with
national security or public safety or with measures
necessary for the prevention of disorder or crime, for the
protection of health or morals or for the protection of the rights
and freedoms of others.
In the Maloneys case, the court of appeal dismissed their
claim on the grounds that the right of Leeds Council to take possession
of its land outweighed the familys right to a home.
The appeal court referred its decision to the Law Lords, as
it could conflict with a recent European Court of Human Rights
ruling that stipulates the government has a positive obligation
to facilitate the Gypsy way of life.
There is no prospect of the Law Lords reversing the court of
appeals decision. All it can do is issue a declaration of
incompatibility between English law and that of the Convention.
It is then up to Parliament to make any changessomething
that, especially given the recent anti-gypsy campaignis
completely ruled out.
But what Howard in effect is arguing is that affording minorities
any legal protection from discrimination and persecution amounts
to unwarranted special favours!
The Tories resort to scapegoating gypsies and travellers is
a deliberate effort to channel social resentment and grievances
in a reactionary direction.
The ruling elite is well aware that it faces unprecedented
social divisions. Committed to policies that advance the interests
of big business at the direct expense of the mass of the population,
none of the official parties can honestly address this reality.
The Tories hope to divert attention from this state of affairs,
and their own responsibility for it, by whipping up fear, intolerance
and xenophobia.
Moreover, the anti-gypsy binge has a logic of its own. What
about legislation protecting minorities or socially disadvantaged
groups, such as those outlawing racial, religious or sexual discrimination?
Presumably, these should also be scrapped, as they are concerned
solely with the rights of special interest groups.
No one should be under any illusions. The campaign against
gypsies and travellers is but a stalking horse for a broader offensive
against the democratic rights of all working people.
See Also:
Britain: government issues first control
orders imposing house arrest
[22 March 2005]
Britain: BBC documentary exposes abuse
of asylum seekers
[16 March 2005]
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