From today, passengers booking flights on
Ryanair will be able to request not to be seated next to a racist. For just
£110 (one way) customers can avoid the perils of the random seating option, which
is free, but could result in you being racially abused and having to move in
order to placate the racist.
Or, you could boycott Ryanair and fly with
an airline that doesn’t condone racism. For the avoidance of doubt, failure to
condemn the racist abuse of a grieving disabled pensioner is tantamount to
condoning it, which leaves the company exposed should a legal case be brought against
them.
Ryanair’s defunct 1990’s style PR mantra
that, “there’s no such thing as bad publicity” (there is - the PR "guru" Max Clifford), combined with O’Leary's obnoxious pugnacity, have turned the
brand into the VHS of the aviation industry. Old fashioned, unreliable and
stuck in a time warp.
On becoming aware of the scandal, Ryanair
should have killed the story by acting quickly to condemn the racist abuse of Delsie Gayle. By outlining race related policies and
reassuring passengers that training will be stepped up to prevent further
incidents of hate crime on their flights. Opting for radio silence just exposes
the ineptitude of the all-white, male dominated Ryanair board.
Have they learned nothing from the court case 10 years ago, where 5 black men (the only black passengers on the flight) were ejected from a Ryanair plane because one white passenger complained to the captain that the calypso musicians looked suspicious? Even when censured by the courts, Ryanair refused to apologise.
Have they learned nothing from the court case 10 years ago, where 5 black men (the only black passengers on the flight) were ejected from a Ryanair plane because one white passenger complained to the captain that the calypso musicians looked suspicious? Even when censured by the courts, Ryanair refused to apologise.
Watching the heart breaking ITV interview
with Ms Gayle, I was struck when she said that she has travelled by plane for
over 53 years and had never experienced anything like that before. This vile, flagrant
racist rant was accompanied with a threat of physical violence and comes at a
time when Brexit race hate attacks are at epidemic proportions.
Not everyone who voted for Brexit was
racist but I'm pretty certain the racists voted for Brexit. That’s an important
distinction, borne out by the UN
special rapporteur on racism in May. “The environment leading up to
the referendum, the environment during the referendum, and the environment
after the referendum has made racial and ethnic minorities more vulnerable to
racial discrimination and intolerance,” she said.
Liz Fekete, director of the institute of Race Relations believes that the
referendum debate and result emboldened a lot of people. They felt justified.
They thought they could say racist things in public. They lost their shame. “Let's be honest. Racism is
mainstream. Anti-immigration is mainstream in our political culture. We have
had a political rhetoric around immigration with ministers
talking about creating a hostile environment for undocumented workers”.
I cried when I heard the EU
referendum result. I was still crying when I got to the school gates when
another mother asked me if I was okay. When I told her that I felt like an unwelcome
immigrant for the first time in over twenty years of living here, she said, “We
didn’t vote to keep people like you
out! We don’t see you as an immigrant, Tess!”.
An awkward conversation ensued about
what type of immigrant she thought she was voting to lock out of the country
and how dark the tone of the skin to qualify for deportation. Then, Demented with grief (the loss of hope to hate) - more so than anger - I went straight home and ordered a T-shirt online, with the words, “This is
what an immigrant looks like,” emblazoned across my chest. I wore it standing at
the school gates every day for a week. I still wear it now (though not every day. I only have the one...). It's my way of rebelling against the everyday racism that thrives in the toxic Tory swamp of Brexitland.
The burgeoning evidence that the EU
referendum unleashed an tsunami of far right bigotry is borne out by the daily
race hate attacks directed, not against immigrants like me, but those of a
darker hue. Women of colour have been disproportionately targeted, often in
front of their children.
A friend of mine said she went from
never being racially abused in her life to being targeted on a regular basis,
since Brexit. In a recent
incident she was told that “British people” voted for P***s like her to leave.
To which she replied, “No, you voted for the white foreigners to leave. Us
P***s get to stay!” She jokes about her repertoire of acerbic ripostes but I don't laugh. My heart hurts with all this hate.
Instead of containing the monster that
Brexit unleashed, the right wing/mainstream media is feeding it. The BBC’s
decision to portray Tommy Robinson as a martyr, silenced by the media - before giving him a 20 minute
platform to incite hatred, together with the decision to platform alt right,
racist, former Trump advisor, Steve Bannon, were either recklessly ill-judged
or deliberate attempts to stir the already simmering pot of racial tensions.
Journalism is supposed to be about speaking truth to power, not baiting the
powerless and calling it “balance”. Shame on Ryanair, shame on the Tories & shame on the BBC.
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