Sheffield demonstrates in solidarity with Black Lives Matter
Will Hornett
On 22 July Sheffield's first Black Lives Matter demonstration, a large and vibrant march around the city centre took place, beginning and culminating in big rallies of about 1,000 people.
This demonstration follows a wave of Black Lives Matter protests across the country organised largely by young, black, working class people. These are in solidarity with the massive movement in the USA that has built up as a response to the racist murders of black people by the police.
In the US in 2015, at least 102 black people were murdered by the police. That is five times the rate of the killings of white people, also horrendous crimes in themselves. In Britain, there is a growing consciousness among young black activists, radicalised by the movement in the US, that the UK is not guiltless.
For example the high profile racist murder of Stephen Lawrence in 1993, the investigation of which was marred by institutional racism and corruption, and most recently, the death of 18-year old Mzee Mohammed in police custody in Liverpool which is currently being investigated.
This demonstration highlighted the importance of viewing these racist attacks as part of a broader picture of the institutionalised racism, most immediately, of the police.
The point was made by several speakers however that this racism is embedded in more than just the police. It is embedded in the racist immigration services that make it much harder to migrate here as a person of colour than a white person. A system which detains hundreds of refugees and asylum seekers in detention centres like Yarls Wood, the vast majority of which are people of colour.
Also, cuts to local services in working class communities disproportionately affect people of colour because they are targeted at working class communities.
The organisers were clear that this is not the end, that there needs to be an extended campaign against racism, cuts, and austerity, and that this should become a movement as large and strong as we are seeing in the US.
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In The Socialist 27 July 2016:
#KeepCorbyn
No compromise with Labour right wing
Anger against Blairite 'traitors' sweeps Portsmouth Momentum
Corbyn's 'rock-star welcome' in North West
Socialist Party news and analysis
End Victorian working conditions
Tories plan further fee hikes for uni students
What we saw: UB40 backs Corbyn
Socialist Party feature
Europe and the workers' movement after Brexit
Why the Socialist Party opposed the EU
International socialist news and analysis
Turkey: no to military rule, no to Erdoğan's rule
Socialist history
Barcelona 1936: the people's Olympics
Workplace news and analysis
Fawley refinery strike against 'race to bottom'
Unite policy conference backs reselection of Labour MPs
Brookes workers continue the fight against 2Sisters
Fighting racism
Black Lives Matter demo shakes Leeds
Sheffield solidarity with Black Lives Matter
Socialist Party reports and campaigns
Pent Valley school closure judicial review blocked
An explosion in sales of the Socialist
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01/05/21


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