Back to the Future
Exactly thirty years ago Brixton exploded with rage against the de
facto occupation of Brixton by the Met police. And, as I write this, all
kinds of madness is going down in various parts of London and
elsewhere.
"The Scarman Report was one of
the most influential reports in postwar Britain, yet despite criticism
of the police they escaped blame for the events in Brixton. For years
black youth had been subjected to intense racist policing. The riots
erupted at the end of the first week of an operation called ‘Swamp 81′
in which the area had been flooded with more than 100 plainclothes cops.
In two days they stopped more than 1,000 people and arrested over
100–twice the normal weekly average. As the
Daily Mirror said,
‘Nobody rules the streets of London, Brixton, or even Railton Road
except the Metropolitan Police.’ Riots started after extremely high
levels of police harassment." — ‘
Can the police be reformed?‘,
Socialist Review, March 1999
[1]
Predictably, the politicians and the police have been alleging that
it was “criminal elements from the outside” or, “copycat criminal
activity” that caused the ‘lootin’ anna burnin’ in Tottenham and
elsewhere over this past weekend. How true this is or what relevance it
has to this working class North London community is not explained.
And
what does ‘outside’ mean anyway?
“Was Saturday night an orgy of mindless violence or a cry of rage from a marginalised, disaffected part of society?” — ‘Was Tottenham’s riot a cry of rage?‘ BBC News 7 August 2011
But we’ve been here before, many times. Back at the beginning of the
1980s when under the Thatcher government Brixton, Toxteth in Birmingham,
Tottenham and other communities exploded with rage, against the ‘sus
laws’[2], used primarily against young black people and the deaths of
black people at the hands of the police.
A “cry of rage from a marginalised, disaffected part of society”? Why are they ‘marginalised’? Why are they disaffected?
“Police have condemned a wave
of “copycat criminal activity” across London in a second night of
looting and disorder following riots in Tottenham.” — ‘Copycat crime across London after Tottenham riot’, BBC News, 8 August 2011
Back in 2003 I wrote the following and as things have not basically
changed, I see no reason why these words are not as relevant today as
when I first wrote them:
Throughout the 1960s and 70s, attacks, especially on Black youth and
Asians with the indifference and outright connivance of the police rose
to unprecedented levels, with Black resistance stiffening throughout the
1970s, culminating in the ‘riots’ of the 1980-81. And just as now,
Afro-Caribbean children suffered the institutional effects of an
education policy that imprisoned them in ESN (Educationally Sub-Normal)
schools.
“It was clear that the state’s version of ‘multi-culturalism’ had
failed because it was directed not at those sections of society that
needed support, the Black and Asian community, but at the white power
structure. [A]ll…it had done was create a “race relations industry”.
“Multi-culturalism deflected the political concerns of the black
community into the cultural concerns of different communities, the
struggle against racism into the struggle for culture.
/../
“Underlying the whole of the state’s project was a divisive
culturalism that turned the living, dynamic, progessive aspects of black
people’s culture into artefact and habit and custom — and began to
break up community.” — ‘Communities of Resistance – black struggles for
socialism’ by A. Sivanandan, Verso Books 1990
/../
[B]y 1981, under the impact of Thatcherism, the lid blew off and as Sivanandon so succinctly puts it,
“[T]he youth of the benighted inner cities, black and white,
Afro-Caribbean and Asian, came together again, not so much in joint
struggle as in a blinding moment of spontaneous insurrection against the
impossibility of their common condition.”
The state’s reaction was dramatic. Commissions of Inquiry were set up
including that of Lord Scarmon’s into the Brixton ‘disorders’ and their
causes. Labour’s Urban Aid programme was exhumed and funding for black
‘self-help’ groups increased dramatically. These so-called ethnic
projects were in reality, a continuation of those initiated under the
Labour government and as Sivanandon puts it, “[T]he Tories were not
averse to taking lessons from their masters in social control.”
The core of the approach to the ‘problem’ of British-born blacks had
its roots at Bristol University’s Social Science Council on Ethnic
Relations that identified the ‘problem’ as one of ‘ethnic identity’. The
youth, according to the report of the Home Affairs Committee on Racial
Disadvantage were,
“caught between the cultural expectations of their parents (the first
generation immigrants) and the social demands of the wider society….
West Indian boys have conflicted identifications with the general
representatives of their own ethnicity and the native white population.”
In other words, “Identity is all.” And furthermore as part of the
importation of the US approach to the ‘problem’ of ethnic minorities, we
read that it’s not institutional racism that’s the problem, but it’s,
“because of the impact of British social conditions on the matriarchal extended family structure of the West Indian immigrants.”
Like I didn’t grow up within an extended family structure along with
millions of other working class kids of my generation? The report goes
on to list all the ‘problems’ that the black community has including,
“‘Young West Indians…are ‘a people of the street… They live their
lives on the street, having nothing better to do: they make their
protest there: and some of them live off street crime.’ And this
hostility of black youth…has…’infected older members of the community
[where they have] time to engage in endless discussion of their
grievances.’”
The objective being to excuse the state of its institutional racism
and instead blame the West Indian community of an “inherent disability”.
As Sivanandon puts it,
“Racism, for Scarmon, was in the mind — in the attitudes, prejudices,
irrational beliefs — and these are to be found on both sides of the
divide, black and white. Institutional racism was a matter of black
perception, white racism was a matter of prejudice…and so [it shifted]
the object of anti-racist struggle from the state to the individual,
from changing society to changing people.”
Enter RAT (‘Racism Awareness Training’), an entirely apposite
acronym. RAT began its smelly life as HAT (Human Awareness Training) on a
military base in Florida as a response to the black rebellions of the
1960s. RAT grew out of the Kerner Commission (1968) that declared that
racism was a white problem, and that it was “white institutions that
created it, white institutions maintain it and white society condones
it.”
An entire, new industry devoted to ‘racism awareness’ was created
with a plethora of literature, organisations and businesses to bring
about “changing the behaviour of whites” through to “increasing the
capabilities of non-white groups. But the principle responsibility was
‘with the white community rather than within the non-white
communities.’”
An entire, new range of ‘pathologies’ emerged as a result including
racism defined as “prejudice plus institutional power” and finally
“cultural racism”. The ‘bible’ of the RAT syndrome was an education
thesis of Judy Katz who defined the problem as “Systematic handbook of
excercises for the re-education of white people with respect to
attitudes and behaviorisms.” In other words, racism was a “psychological
problem”.
Widely used in the US in the education system, RAT finally made its
way to the UK in a modified form. Under the impact of the RAT syndrome,
the entire focus of the state’s ‘fight’ against racism shifted to the
psychological domain. So for example, Home Affairs now described racial
disadvantage (the UK term for affirmative action) as “it cannot be
unfair to give help to those with a special handicap.”
To sum up RAT, Sivanandon describes their psychobabble as follows;
“[Racism] is a combination of mental illness, original sin and
biological determinism…. Racism, according to RAT, has its roots in
white culture, and white culture, unaffected by material conditions or
history, goes back to the beginning of time.”
By on the one hand divorcing racism from class and on the other by
personalising the effects of racism, the state absolved itself of
responsibility. It also sidestepped the connection between racism and
fascism for failing to recognise the link. But Martin Webster of the
National Front knew when he said “the social base of the NF is made up
of the desperate and dispossessed among the white working class.” — ‘An institutional state of denial‘ By William Bowles, 27 October 2003
The lessons not learned
Clearly nothing at all has changed in the intervening thirty years.
The economic deprivations of the 1970-80s has returned with a vengeance
and along with it the rise of neo-fascism and the inevitable reactions
of those most heavily impacted by the cuts, especially young working
class, both black and white. Tottenham which falls under the control of
Haringey Council has seen its youth services budget cut by more than
75%. There are more than 50 people for each unfilled job in the borough,
10% more people claiming unemployment benefit this year than last and
ten of the eighteen youth clubs in the borough have been closed.
The BBC however, has this to say:
“But if it were poverty alone
were the driving factor, one would expect communities in the cities of
the north of Britain, not the south, to have been in flames on Saturday
night.” — ‘Was Tottenham’s riot a cry of rage?’
As if to answer the BBC’s question, riots broke out in my
neighbourhood, Brixton as well as in Enfield, Hackney and other
communities but no doubt the BBC puts them down to ‘copycat riots’? More
sinister is the allegation that these are ‘Twitter coordinated Riots‘.
For the BBC the only measure of frustration and rage are the
unemployment figures but the BBC ignores the impact of policing on
working class communities. After all it was the shooting death by the
police—allegedly with a machine gun at point-blank range—of Tottenham
resident Mark Duggan last Thursday that triggered the initial reaction,
followed by the police allegedly batoning a 16-year old girl on Saturday
at a protest rally organized by Duggan’s family over the way his death
had been handled by the Independant Police Complaints Commission, tasked
with investigating Duggan’s death.[3]
The subtle propaganda interplay between the BBC and the police is
revealed by how the BBC report, ‘Was Tottenham’s riot a cry of rage?’
shifts the emphasis from the real conditions of working people to “low
morale” in a police force that has seen its funding cut by 20%. This is
how the BBC report put it:
“Morale among the police
officers dealing with this incident [in Tottenham], and within the
police service as a whole, is at its lowest level ever due to the
constant attacks on them by the home secretary and the government in the
form of the Winsor and Hutton reviews into police pay and conditions.”
The inference being I assume that “low morale” and cuts in police
funding led to a riot in Tottenham? Clearly the political class fear
increasing and spreading ‘social unrest’, especially amongst the BBC’s
‘marginalised, disaffected part of society’, who clearly feel that they
have nothing to lose. This is what a resident of Tottenham had to say on
the subject:
Having grown up in Tottenham,
I’m deeply saddened that it has taken a riot to highlight the complex
problems that blight the area. Yesterday on BBC News’s rolling coverage,
a local shopkeeper described the scenes as “US-style inequality”. This
is an inequality that has persisted ever since I took up residence in
Tottenham aged seven, and the kind of inequality that went largely
ignored. Tensions between the people and the police have always been
known. Yesterday youth worker Symeon Brown perfectly articulated this
tension, stating on BBC News that “there is a sense that the police are
not for us”. It has taken a riot to put Tottenham’s problems on the
national agenda. — ‘Twitter didn’t fuel the Tottenham riot‘, Reni Eddo-Lodge, the Guardian 8 August 2011
Notes
1. See the Scarmon Report,
an investigation into how the death of Stephen Lawrence was handled by
the police that concluded that the “Metropolitan police was
institutionally racist”. Nothing has changed. In fact a high-up police
officer stated on BBC radio some years back that it was impossible to root out institutional racism in the police, that’s how deep it goes in British society.
2. “Stopping and searching suspects [sus] will become easier for
police, the Government promised yesterday. But Home Office changes fall
well short of Tory plans to slash red tape. The Government has been
panicked into action by David Cameron, who said outdated search laws
designed to protect ethnic minorities and the young from harassment must
go. — ‘Return of ‘sus’ laws as police are given powers to stop and search without giving reason‘, Daily Mail, 31 January 2008
3. An eyewitness says the girl’s beating was in response to a champagne glass she was holding that she threw at the police.
“After she was hit with police batons, rioters threw missiles back at
the police officers, according to other accounts from onlookers.” — ‘London riots: 16-year-old girl and police clash – video‘.
Elsewhere, the Daily Telegraph tells us that,
“The 16 year-old was said by some witnesses to have thrown a stone at
a line of officers during the initial protest at Tottenham police
station.
“She was then allegedly knocked to the ground, and as the crowds
retaliated it led to two squad cars being set alight at the start of a
night of violent disturbances and looting.” — ‘‘Attack’ on teenage girl blamed for start of Tottenham riot’.