19/09/2024

Alliance Calls For Urgent Action On Racial Equality Issues

The First and deputy First Minister's must speed up delivery of new measures to tackle racial equality issues and the experiences of minority ethnic people in Northern Ireland.

Alliance Executive Office Spokesperson, Paula Bradshaw MLA, made the call following the publication of the latest Racial Equality Indicators.

Speaking after a powerful testimony by the Race Relations Panel to the Committee for the Executive Office at Stormont, the South Belfast MLA stated: "We can see from the latest Indicators, which apply to 2022/3, that the vast majority of the population recognise the need for public bodies to take into account the needs of minority ethnic communities, but also that the number of racist incidents had increased markedly over the previous decade. Additionally, the figures show that young people are increasingly participating in activities with minority ethnic people, and that they celebrate this increasing diversity.
News Image
"What we heard was extremely concerning and reflected the long established, but utterly outrageous, situation in some communities whereby civil authorities are far too often ceding effective control of areas to paramilitary groups. We have normalised this for far too long, and must now recognise fundamentally that it is time not only to prioritise good relations and racial equality, but that a fundamental part of that prioritisation must be the ending of paramilitarism.

"The First Minister and deputy First Minister must recognise that they are currently presiding over the ongoing normalisation of something which is in fact profoundly sinister. There is a need for much more urgent work on implementing the relevant strategies and developing the relevant legislation around good relations and racial equality, but one building block of this work must be the eradication of paramilitary control and influence over any community anywhere.

"What is established by these indicators is that work with the goal of promoting diversity will have the broad support of the population, which merely reinforces its urgency."

Related Northern Ireland News Stories
Click here for the latest headlines.

24 February 2005
Racial equality groups to benefit from £500k funding
Local organisations which work to promote racial equality and good relations across Northern Ireland are to benefit from an improved funding scheme, totalling around £500,000.
15 November 2024
New Pathway To Support Young People With Diabetes
Health Minister Mike Nesbitt has welcomed the launch of a new Regional Young Adults' Progression Pathway designed to support young people with Type 1 diabetes as they transition to adult services.
20 December 2021
Ministers Launch Minority Ethnic Development Fund
A new Minority Ethnic Development Fund (MEDF) 2022-25 has been announced by the First Minister and deputy First Minister. Paul Givan and Michelle O’Neill have urged eligible groups to apply to the fund, which provides support for voluntary and community organisations working with minority ethnic communities.
20 June 2014
Racial Equality Strategy Consultation Launches
The First and deputy First Minister have launched a public consultation on the draft racial equality strategy. The move follows a recent spate of racist attacks and hate crimes across Northern Ireland, many of which have made headlines in newspapers throughout the British Isles.
10 December 2002
Report calls for agency to tackle racial inequality
A new body to tackle growing racial inequalities and promote good race relations in Northern Ireland should be created, a report commissioned by the Office of the First Minister and Deputy First Minister has claimed.