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COMMISSION TO ENFORCE
MULTI-RACIALISM (Big brother
update!)
Communities must
work together to root out
extremism, (!)a cabinet minister said on Thursday, as the
government unveiled a new body to help promote social cohesion.
Communities Secretary Ruth Kelly, speaking at
the launch of the Commission on Integration and Cohesion, said it was
time for a "new and honest debate" about what was causing segregation.
Kelly said it was important
to assess whether the promotion of a multicultural society had actually
helped contribute towards the seclusion of some communities.
"I believe ... we have moved from a period of
uniform consensus on the value of multiculturalism to one where we can
encourage that debate by questioning whether it is encouraging
separateness,
"In our attempts to avoid imposing a single
British identity and culture, have we ended up with some communities
living in isolation of each other with no common bonds between them?"
"I think we face the clear possibility that
we're experiencing diversity, no longer as a country, but as a set of
local communities.
She said diversity was a huge asset and
immigration had helped boost the economy, but warned it meant global
tensions were now being reflected on Britain's streets.
"NON-NEGOTIABLE RULES"
"Even within the framework of mutual
tolerance, I believe that there are non-negotiable rules understood by
all groups," she said. "Those who seek to cause conflicts and tension
in our communities must be marginalised by the responsible majority."
The commission is being launched two weeks
after police said they had thwarted a plot by British Islamists to blow
up trans-atlantic airliners.
It again threw the spotlight onto Britain's
Muslim community which critics have accused of not doing enough to
tackle extremism. However Muslim leaders in return say the government
is not giving them enough help.
Following last year's suicide bomb attacks on
London, the government set up a Muslim task force to examine why many
young men felt alienated.
However many Muslims described the initiative
as little more than a publicity stunt that did little to address
underlying problems. Kelly said the new commission "is not and must not
be a talking shop".
"It's a practical exercise which will look at
what actually works for communities on the ground," she said.
The commission will aim to extend research
carried out in the aftermath of serious race riots in northern England
in 2001.
Inquiries following that violence reported
that many communities were totally divided with little or no contact
between ethnic groups, fuelling tension and suspicion.
"We will want to focus on how we can break
down divisions that exist between communities and we will certainly
want to focus on the practical things that communities can do to tackle
extremists in their midst," said Darra Singh, the commission's
chairman.
Its findings will be made in a report next
June and Singh admitted they did not have much time.
"There's no more important issue than how we
get on with our neighbours. The commission is a real opportunity to get
to grips with this challenge" he added.
BPP Comment:- You are going to get multi-racialism and forced integration whether you like it or not! How long before they start looking at schools which are "too" White and bussing in non-Whites? |