IRR News 17 – 31 March 2022
As the House of Commons reinstates most of the clauses of the Nationality and Borders Bill removed by the Lords, this is no time to give up. Months of brilliant campaigning and steadfast support in the Lords means that the legislation has now entered what is commonly referred to as the ‘ping pong’ stage, where the Commons votes, and the Lords, with its powers of delay, sends the legislation back. The bill, which relies for its legitimation on the Brexit state’s promise of ‘strong borders’, aims to further embed the hostile environment for migrants and refugees. But as research by Sophia Siddiqui, published this week on IRR News shows, it also emboldens far-right vigilantes to exploit gender issues, hunting down ‘immigrant criminals’, in the name of protecting women. In Weaponising violence against women, Siddiqui homes in on the far-right campaign that followed the tragic murder in Tullamore, Ireland, of schoolteacher Ashling Murphy, as well as the formation of a Polish so-called ‘citizens police’ which, in the name of ‘defending our women’, has attacked students and others, mainly from Africa and south Asia, fleeing the war in Ukraine.
If strong borders are justified as means of safeguarding women from migrant crime, then the same twisted logic of safety – this time in relation to protecting girls from ‘gangs’ and drugs – was presumably what motivated teachers at an east London school to call the police on a 15-year-old black teenager. The details of the strip-search by police officers of Child Q on school premises are now well known. Last week we published a resource, including a solidarity statement from Professor Gus John, on the case that has drawn attention to ‘adultification’ bias – where black and global majority children are held to adult standards.
More case studies of how racism impacts on women and girls can be found in our regular calendar of racism and resistance, from the NHS charges for maternity care for migrant women, that damage the health of mothers and babies, to warnings that the government’s Homes for Ukraine scheme lacks safeguarding checks, putting refugees at risk of exploitation. We also provide a rolling update on developments in the Child Q case, including evidence that 23 of 25 children strip-searched in Hackney and Tower Hamlets last year, were black, and an admission from the Hackney Base Unit Commander that the Met has a problem with officers viewing inner-London children as adults and that the Child Q incident would not have happened to a child in the Cotswolds. These stories and thousands more can be found on our newly launched Register of Racism and Resistance – a searchable archive of all calendars dating back to 2014.
And finally, the IRR was delighted to have been asked to contribute to the Northern Police Monitoring Group’s (NPMG) 2022 report on Reflections and Resistance. An online launch will take place on Tuesday 26 April, with speakers from IRR, NPMG and Abolitionist Futures – register here to attend.
IRR News team