Remembering Stephen Lawrence is keeping alive the Lawrence agenda for change

On Stephen Lawrence Day, we must keep the spotlight on tackling institutional racism in the police, writes Richard Sudan

Stephen Lawrence died after a racist attack in April 1993 (Photo: Getty)

I WAS TEN years old when Stephen Lawrence was brutally set upon by a gang of white supremacist thugs and murdered for the crime of being black, in the wrong place at the wrong time.  It’s a familiar story.

At the time, beyond hearing my parents and others talk about the case and hearing Stephen’s name, as a small child I didn’t understand the significance of it all.

For many in my generation we grew up with the warm image of Stephen in his striped T-shirt seared into our minds, a teenager on the cusp of manhood full of promise and dreams, and loved so dearly by his family. He could have been any one of our brothers or cousins. 

His life was ripped away by racist thugs emboldened from growing up in a society in which justice for Black people remains elusive and in which anti-black racism is normalized. 

Stephen became a symbol of the deep rooted racism and fight for justice that so many families have experienced and continue to experience.

The relentless fight and uphill battle to see some of his killers brought to justice demonstrated strength of bravery and tenacity from his parents and family which is unparalleled.

In 2022 though, we have to be honest; the conditions that led to Stephen’s murder have not changed, and are arguably worse.

Normalised cultural racism and anti-Black racism, whether people like it or not has been a staple and endemic part of British society since the days of slavery and colonialism.

Yes, we can point to the avalanche of racist attacks and spike in racism during the Brexit period as evidenced by Home Office and police statistics (with the real numbers probably higher) but we see indicators of the real reality constantly.

Our black MPs receive death threats and abuse constantly.  Black Lives Matter protests are harangued and treated as ‘woke’ nonsense.  Our Black footballers are attacked online and called monkeys.

Grenfell Tower victims, predominantly non-white were cruelly mocked by individuals who have now been found guilty for their vile behaviour in the courts-they were the ones who got caught, but they were not the only ones who mocked the deaths of Grenfell victims.

The system also let the Grenfell families down.  We know that had those victims been white, the entire reaction would have been different.

But of course, as we mark Stephen Lawrence day, the major issue which still needs tackling once and for all is utter corruption, racism and incompetence which plagues the Metropolitan Police.

The investigation into Stephen’s murder was shameful beyond belief.  His family were spied on and treated like suspects with suspicion.  Those guilty of his murder evaded justice for years because of a completely shambolic and corrupted police force, not fit for purpose.

All of this was meant to usher in an era of reform and change following the Macpherson Inquiry which found the police to be institutionally racist.  We all breathed a sigh of relief.  Surely now, that what we had all known for so long had been backed up by a high profile inquiry, action would be taken to root out racism from the Met once and for all.  Not the case.

It simply hasn’t happened.  We know that stop and search disproportionately and massively impacts Black communities, as does brutal and often deadly violence experienced by Black people in police custody.  I’ve reported on the cases of Mouayed Bashir and Mohamud Hassan, who both died following injuries sustained while in police custody, in Wales.  I’ve spoken several times to both families.  The pain they feel is not something which I can put into words.

We’ve seen the horrendous reports of racism, as well as sexism which emerged following the probe into allegations of corruption at Charing Cross police station in London.  We know that the racist ‘canteen culture’ in which the police back each other all the way, is still very much a problem as it was during the disgraceful investigation into Stephen’s murder.

The outright abuse of Child Q, has enraged our communities, reopened wounds, and reminded us that even Black children in school, which should be the safest place for them, are not safe from the tentacles of racist corruption and the abuse of power.  We want the police out of schools.  Period.

And let’s not forget that recently, it came to light that Black Lives Matter activist Sasha Johnson who has been fighting for her life having sustained life threatening and life changing injuries during an attack, was mocked on a WhatsApp group which included Met Police officers.

The stench racism and corruption which has clearly been firmly rooted in the Met Police since the time of the murder of Stephen Lawrence, is so bad, that London Mayor Sadiq Khan was forced to express a lack of confidence in the Met’s commissioner leading to Cressida Dick’s resignation.

As we remember Stephen Lawrence, the best way to honour his memory and the commitment of his parents in their pursuit of justice for their son, is to keep up the pressure and momentum in demanding real reform within the Metropolitan Police.

The Met Police have suffered a public relations disaster, due to recent whistleblowing on the corruption among its ranks.  This needs to remain in the spotlight.  A new commissioner, offering flowery words and promises about reform, is not enough.  Those days are gone.  New generations will not stand for it any longer.

Something has to give.  Police reform should be one of the top priorities of our communities (and of all decent people in the wider public).

Until that happens, an institutionally racist police force will continue to pave the way for racist murderers like those who took the life of Stephen.  They’ll  know that they can do as they please, confident that the odds are stacked in their favour because of a two tier police and criminal justice system which treats black people as second class citizens.

Comments Form

5 Comments

  1. | Criquitt Walters

    Justice for my brotha and his family

    Reply

  2. | MakeEmMad74

    Excellent read Mr. Sudan, no doubt racist culture in the U.K. miserably reflects the same structure of Injustices as the U.S. HuEMan beings with moral backbones can never take their foots of the devils neck.

    Reply

    • | Winston Brooks

      Despite all this racism, black people still prefer to live in the UK than in a black run country. Why.

      Reply

  3. | Abeda Uddin

    I remember that day very well. We were both the same age( he died on my 18th birthday and he was slightly older so peers who never met). Racism still does exist even more so for black people. I always do wonder what would have happened to him if he was still alive. I really do hope things can change

    Noticed the racism more recently at work where some of my black colleagues were forced into leaving by people who consistently were moaning about them for actually doing their jobs

    Reply

  4. | Chaka Artwell

    “In 2022 though, we have to be honest; the conditions that led to Stephen’s murder have not changed, and are arguably worse,” writes Mr Sudan, and his words are true.
    Her Majesty’s Subjects of African-heritage must understand and comprehend how the Labour Party specifically with their 2010 Equalities & Human Rights Act, led through Parliament by Labour’s Harriet Harman MP have destroyed the Commission for Racial Equality: the only statutory institution that existed at the time of Stephen Lawrence’s murder to specifically advocate and assist African-heritage people to combat skin-colour prejudice; discrimination and racism.
    In 1993, Her Majesty’s African-heritage Subjects also had the protection of the 1976 Race relations Act.
    This Act helped African-skinned people to confront institutional; Employers, Educational, Police and Judicial skin-colour prejudice; discrimination and racism. Labour’s 2010 Equalities Act effectively repealed the 1976 Race Relations Act.
    Harriett Harman’s 2010 Equalities Act reduces skin-colour prejudice; discrimination and racism to a paragraph- In practice the Equalities Act has concentrated far more on LGBTQIAP+; and Middle-class feminists concerns.
    When Stephen Lawrence was murdered, England had the successful and statutory Commission for Race Equality (CRE) and regional Racial Equality Councils (REC).
    Sir Tony Blair, for reasons that have not been explained, abolished the CRE and the REC in 2006.
    The abolition of the CRE and the REC has been disastrous for Her Majesty’s Subjects of African-heritage because it has deprived African-heritage people of a valuable Statutory Instrument.
    Many of Her Majesty’s Subjects of African heritage opposed Sir Tony Blair’s plan to abolish the CRE and the REC. England’s African-heritage Subjects correctly feared the replacement Equality and Human Rights Commission (EHRC) would quickly marginalise; neglect and ignore institutional skin-colour prejudice; discrimination and racism.
    The fears of Her Majesty’s Subjects of African-heritage regarding the EHRC were accurate.
    By 2012, the EHRC had informed African-heritage campaigners that skin-colour prejudice; discrimination and racism were no longer a priority.
    By 2018, when Her Majesty’s Subjects of Caribbean-heritage were being illegally exiled to the Caribbean, the EHRC had sacked all of its senior staff of African-heritage, whilst the EHRC was busy persecuting Mr Corbyn’s Labour-led Party and actively campaigned for LGBTQIAP+ issues.
    When Stephen Lawrence was murdered, Her Majesty’s Subjects of African-heritage had access to statutory funded CRE and REC assistance to counter skin-colour prejudice; discrimination and racism.
    As we remember the murder of Stephen Lawrence; as we remember the willingness to see Stephen Lawrence as a menace to society by the Metropolitan Police Constables who arrived and witnessed the dying moments of Stephen’s life, and treated Stephen as the villain.
    As we remember the Lawrence family’s three-year struggle for justice for their son; whilst the Press, the Political Parties and others were content to see Stephen as a villain.
    For three years the Labour and Conservative Party regarded Stephen as the villain.
    The national Editors and Reporter for three years also reported as if Stephen was the villain instead of a victim of murder.
    Skin-colour racism against African-Caribbean-heritage people was on public display in 1990’s England.
    Nevertheless, English people, appalled at the murder of this young Caribbean-heritage youth, reported the names of the young Caucasian men involved in the murder but the police ignored their calls and continued to treat Stephen as the villain for three years.
    It was the intervention of President Mandela that caused Parliament to demand a thorough investigation into Stephen Lawrences’ murder in 1996.
    I do not know how Her Majesty’s Subjects of African-heritage, especially following 2018’s illegal exiling of Caribbean-heritage people, are not demanding the immediate recommissioning of the CRE and the regional REC to specifically advocate on behalf of Her Majesty Subjects of African-heritage. If the CRE and the REC had not been abolished by the Labour Party in 2006, then perhaps the illegal exiling of Caribbean-heritage people in 2018 would have been challenged and prevented.

    Reply

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