Britons fear race violence - poll |
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Almost two-thirds of people in Britain fear race relations are so poor tensions are likely to spill over into violence, a BBC poll has suggested. Of the 1,000 people asked, 60% said the UK had too many immigrants and half wanted foreigners encouraged to leave. The proportion of people describing themselves as "racially prejudiced" was at 20%, a quarter of the population. Equality and Human Rights Commission head Trevor Phillips said
the findings were "alarming". Britain's last serious race riots - when violent clashes erupted between white and Asian youths in northern England - happened seven years ago. Despite this, the poll, carried out by Mori, found three out of four people thought there was now a great deal or a fair amount of tension between races and nationalities. And almost two in three feared tension was certain or likely to lead to violence, although it is not clear whether people are imagining full-blown street riots or minor scuffles. Mr Phillips told BBC News: "What worries me is if that friction starts to catch fire - if people do genuinely believe it's going to catch fire then we're in trouble.
"This finding may reflect not what is happening today but the story that's been told of the last 40 years - that if you get people of different kinds together then eventually there's going to be trouble." The survey was commissioned to mark the 40th anniversary of Enoch Powell's infamous "rivers of blood" speech, in which he described the indigenous population's "sense of alarm and resentment" over immigration. Speaking of his foreboding, he said: "Like the Roman, I seem to see the river Tiber foaming with blood." BBC home editor Mark Easton says Powell's words, spoken to a small gathering in Birmingham's Midland hotel, still echo down the decades. He says the effect of Powell's speech was in fact to force the issue of immigration off the political agenda, with any politician who ventured to broach the subject risking being accused of playing the race card. This situation still exists 40 years later, our correspondent says. Five months ago, a Tory candidate in Birmingham, Nigel Hastilow, was forced to step down by David Cameron for saying Powell was right that uncontrolled immigration would change Britain irrevocably.
However, the BBC poll finds many people share that view. He says: "One reason politicians can debate it again, perhaps,
is that the latest wave of immigration is different. BPP Comment - now sit back and
watch the ZOG old parties climb on the immigration bandwagon! |
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