UK Labour suspends prominent MP over racism letter

Diane Abbott. (Reuters)
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Updated 23 April 2023
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UK Labour suspends prominent MP over racism letter

  • Diane Abbott, who has been a lawmaker since 1987, was the first Black woman to be elected to parliament in Britain

LONDON: Britain’s main opposition Labour Party has suspended high-profile lawmaker Diane Abbott over a letter she wrote in which she said the prejudice experienced by Jewish people was similar to, but not the same as, racism.

Labour, which polls indicate is likely to form Britain’s next government after an election expected next year, faced accusations of discrimination and harassment against Jews under its former leader Jeremy Corbyn.

The equalities watchdog found in 2020 Labour had serious failings in the party’s handling of persistent antisemitism complaints.

Abbott, 69, was responding to a writer’s claims that Irish, Jewish and Traveler people suffered racism. 

She said that their experiences were similar to racism but that there were differences.

“They undoubtedly experience prejudice. This is similar to racism and the two words are often used as if they are interchangeable,” she wrote.

“It is true that many types of white people with points of difference, such as redheads, can experience this prejudice,” she said in the letter. 

“But they are not all their lives subject to racism.”

Abbott, who has been a lawmaker since 1987, was the first Black woman to be elected to parliament in Britain, and is a close ally of Corbyn for whom she served as the party’s spokesperson for home affairs.

In her letter to the Observer, Abbott said that “in pre-civil rights America, Irish people, Jewish people and Travelers were not required to sit at the back of the bus. In apartheid South Africa, these groups were allowed to vote. And at the height of slavery, there were no white-seeming people manacled on the slave ships.”

She later apologized “unreservedly” and withdrew her remarks.

“The errors arose in an initial draft being sent,” she said in a message posted on Twitter. 

“But there is no excuse, and I wish to apologize for any anguish caused.”

A spokesperson for Labour party said she had been suspended pending an investigation.

British politicians condemned her comments made in the letter.

The energy secretary, Grant Shapps, who is Jewish, said on Twitter that “once again, Jewish people have to wake up and see a Labour MP casually spouting hateful anti-Semitism.”

Corbyn himself was suspended and blocked from standing as a Labour candidate at the next general election expected next year after claimingantisemitism in the party during his leadership had been “dramatically overstated” for political reasons.

Britain’s equalities watchdog said earlier this year the Labour Party had made sufficient changes over the last two years to tackle antisemitism.


UN rights chief appeals for $400 million as crises mount and funding shrinks

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UN rights chief appeals for $400 million as crises mount and funding shrinks

  • The UN office is appealing for $100 million less than last year, after a significant scale back of its work in some areas
  • Volker Turk’s office undertook less than half the number of ⁠human rights monitoring missions compared to 2024
GENEVA: UN human rights chief Volker Turk appealed for $400 million on Thursday to address mounting human rights needs in countries such as Sudan and Myanmar, after donor funding cuts drastically reduced the work of his office and left it in “survival mode.”
The UN office is appealing for $100 million less than last year, after a significant scale back of its work in some areas due to a fall in contributions from countries including the US and Europe.
“We are currently ‌in survival ‌mode, delivering under strain,” Turk told ‌delegates ⁠in a ‌speech in Geneva, urging countries to step up support.
In the last year, Turk’s office raised alarm about human rights violations in Gaza, Sudan, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Ukraine, and Myanmar, among others.
However, due to slashes in funding, Turk’s office undertook less than half the number of ⁠human rights monitoring missions compared to 2024, and reduced its presence in ‌17 countries, he said. Last year it ‍received $90 million less in ‍funding than it needed, which resulted in 300 job ‍cuts, directly impacting the office’s work, Turk said in December.
“We cannot afford a human rights system in crisis,” he stated.
Turk listed examples of the impacts of cuts, noting the Myanmar program was cut by more than 60 percent in the last year, limiting its ability to gather evidence.
A ⁠UN probe into possible war crimes in the Democratic Republic of the Congo is also struggling to become fully operational due to limited funding, while work to prevent gender-based violence and protect the rights of LGBTIQ+ people globally has been cut up to 75 percent, the office said.
“This means more hate speech and attacks, and fewer laws to stop them,” Turk stated.
The UN human rights office is responsible for investigating rights violations. Its work contributes to ‌UN Security Council deliberations and is widely used by international courts, according to the office.