Stephen Lawrence's brother says fight against racism in UK must end with current generation

Stuart Lawrence speaking at a memorial for his brother
PA
Luke O'Reilly17 July 2020

The brother of Stephen Lawrence has said it is up to this generation to end racism by changing policies and laws rather than "paying lip service".

Speaking as part of an ITV panel discussing racism in the UK since the death of his brother in 1993, Stuart Lawrence said action was needed to make change happen.

His brother Stephen was murdered in a racially motivated attack while waiting for a bus in Well Hall Road, Eltham, south-east London.

Mr Lawrence told the panel there is no one in the top table in Cabinet who looks like him.

Stephen Lawrence's mum Baroness Doreen Lawrence ia an anti-racism campaigner 
Getty Images

“We haven’t moved forward enough, we’re not represented enough, that top table in the Cabinet, there’s no one that looks like me there", he said.

“So therefore how am I going to feel like things are going to change if when I look there, there is no representation of myself.

“And it’s those sorts of things we need to make sure happens.”

He added: “This fight here ends with me, with the adults in this room and how we can make sure change really happens.

“We’ve got to stop the lip service, we’ve got to put things into action, we’ve got to start changing policies and laws.”

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A poll for the ITV programme, Stephen Lawrence: Has Britain Changed?, found 77% of black people said they had experienced racial abuse in person.

The survey, which asked the opinions of 3,065 UK adults, of whom 405 were black, also discovered 80% of black people had been asked “where they are really from”.

Also discussed was the effect the Black Lives Matter movement has had on changing attitudes to racism.

Asked about some protesters’ calls to defund the police, London mayoral candidate Shaun Bailey said: “If you took money away from the police, it would have a negative impact on our community, it would have a very profound and negative impact.

“Black Lives Matter has the challenge of making sure its message isn’t hijacked.

“What I want for my children is for their future not to have this conversation, what I want for my children is when they go to school nobody puts a lid on what their future can be.

“When Black Lives Matter talks about those things, it’s effective, it’s right, but when it has an exclusive conversation that excludes people, when it uses words like white privilege.”

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