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Warning over UK race riot danger Warning over UK race riot danger
(about 3 hours later)
The polarised debate over full-face veils could spark race riots in the UK, the head of the Commission for Racial Equality has warned.The polarised debate over full-face veils could spark race riots in the UK, the head of the Commission for Racial Equality has warned.
Excessive criticism of Muslims and over-sensitivity among some Muslims had grown, Trevor Phillips said. The debate surrounding the issue "seems to have turned into something really quite ugly", Trevor Phillips said.
"This could be the trigger for the grim spiral that produced riots in the north of England five years ago," he told the Sunday Times."This could be the trigger for the grim spiral that produced riots in the north of England five years ago," he told the Sunday Times.
Mr Phillips said a "gentle, nuanced" debate was needed.Mr Phillips said a "gentle, nuanced" debate was needed.
'Need to chill''Need to chill'
Jack Straw, Leader of the House of Commons, has said he preferred women not to wear full-face veils at his surgeries in his constituency because he believed they made communication difficult. Jack Straw, Leader of the House of Commons, recently sparked a media debate by saying he preferred women not to wear full-face veils at his surgeries in his constituency because he believed they made communication difficult.
It sparked furious debate in the media, along with stories about a Christian British Airways worker wearing a cross, and a Muslim teaching assistant wearing a full-face veil in the classroom. What should've been a proper conversation...seems to have been turned into the trial of a particular community Trevor Phillips
Mr Phillips said the polarised debate over race and religion risked a repeat of the Burnley and Oldham riots, while insisting: "This time the conflict would be much worse - we need to chill." Stories about a Christian British Airways worker wearing a cross, and a Muslim teaching assistant wearing a full-face veil in the classroom, have also made headlines.
Mr Straw feels that covering faces can make community relations difficult Mr Phillips said the polarised debate over race and religion risked a repeat of the Burnley and Oldham riots, adding: "This time the conflict would be much worse - we need to chill."
He told BBC One's AM programme people needed to feel as though they were playing a part in society, and issued a warning about allowing communities to separate. He told BBC One's AM programme people the debate surrounding Muslim women wearing theveil had begun courteously but "seems to have turned into a trial of one particularcommunity, and that cannot be right...
"We need to havethis conversation but there are rules by which we have the conversation whichdon't involve this kind of targeting and frankly bullying."
He said people needed to feel as though they were playing a part in society, and issued a warning about allowing communities to separate.
"That is the way to create a country which is not at ease with itself," he told the BBC."That is the way to create a country which is not at ease with itself," he told the BBC.
"We saw it in France last year where the French allowed north African communities to grow up completely separately, not feeling French."We saw it in France last year where the French allowed north African communities to grow up completely separately, not feeling French.
"Eventually that frustration, that exclusion boiled over into the kind of car burning we saw last year...I do not want that for Britain." Mr Straw feels that covering faces can make community relations difficult"Eventually that frustration, that exclusion boiled over into the kind of car burning we saw last year...I do not want that for Britain."
On Mr Straw's comments, Mr Phillips told the Sunday Times Muslims leaders had been "overly defensive" in attacking the Blackburn MP. On Mr Straw's comments, Mr Phillips told the Sunday Times Muslims leaders had been "overly defensive" in attacking the Blackburn MP, suggesting there was a generational issue.
"This was as much a comment about him and his generation as it was about the niqab," he wrote."This was as much a comment about him and his generation as it was about the niqab," he wrote.
What should've been a proper conversation...seems to have been turned into the trial of a particular community Trevor Phillips
"It maybe that be that people like [Mr] Straw have greater difficulty coping with the social gap that not seeing someone's face undoubtedly creates.""It maybe that be that people like [Mr] Straw have greater difficulty coping with the social gap that not seeing someone's face undoubtedly creates."
But he said later that while he welcomed the debate, it seemed to have turned into "something ugly". 'Injustice unleashed'
"What should've been a proper conversation between all kinds of British people, seems to have been turned into the trial of a particular community and that cannot be right," he said. Massoud Shadjareh from the lobby group the Islamic Human Rights Commission told BBC News 24 "ministers after ministers after ministers" had been attacking the Muslim community recently, which was unfair and "not a means of respectable dialogue".
The head of the Muslim Council of Britain, Muhammad Abdul Bari, has complained that a "drip feed" of ministerial statements on the veils issue had stigmatised the Muslim community. "I have to say the Muslim community really has been extremely calm, and extremely responsible," he said.
"Really I think the issue is not that you're fearing violence, what we should do we should fear injustice which has been unleashed in our society."
Recent evidence suggested it was the mainstream community that needed to tackle its problems with integration, but no politician had addressed this, he said.
Next month the CRE will host the largest race convention held in Europe, marking the body's 30th anniversary, ahead of its handover to the Commission for Equality and Human Rights.Next month the CRE will host the largest race convention held in Europe, marking the body's 30th anniversary, ahead of its handover to the Commission for Equality and Human Rights.