Anthony Walker and Christopher Yates, concerned about female friends late at night, walked with them to bus stops in Liverpool and London respectively to make sure that the women got home safely. Both were set upon, not far from homes they shared with their mothers, by other young men from their own neighbourhoods who had been drinking heavily or taking drugs. In Huyton, Liverpool, Mr Walker, 18, who was black, was attacked by Paul Taylor and Michael Barton and killed with a savage blow to the head with an ice axe. They were sentenced to at least 24 years and 18 years, respectively. In Barking, East London, Mr Yates, 30, a white man, was knocked to the
ground and kicked and stamped on by Every bone in his face
was broken in a ferocious attack. The similarities between the two murder cases, and the differences in
their outcomes, has left the Yates family feeling that it has been treated
unequally. I understand what Mrs Walker and her family are going
through. We are going through exactly the same thing, Rose Yates,
Mr Yatess mother, told The Times.
The judgments in the Walker and Yates cases reflect a reluctance by the authorities police, prosecutors, judges and politicians to recognise that ethnic minority groups can be perpetrators as well as victims of racism. The question of anti-white racism makes the political class uncomfortable. But it is a very real phenomenon. A Home Office report reveals that of the 22 homicides classified as racially
motivated between 2001-04, the majority of victims (12 cases) were white.
There is resentment that unemployment levels remain high and incomes
low in the Bangladeshi community while new middle-class immigrants push
up house prices. Elsewhere in the borough of Tower Hamlets, one police officer said that he had seen a rise in antisocial behaviour incidents which might be racially motivated. He said: We are seeing a new phenomenon. Asian gangs used to fight turf wars with one another. But there have been attacks on young, white professionals buying new properties here because they are seen as moving into a Bengali neighbourhood. It was in this fraught and changing environment that Mr Yates was murdered. A judge thinks his death was not the result of a racist attack. His mother begs to disagree. But because of the discomfort such cases cause, there are few voices prepared to speak out in support of Mrs Yates. The Commission for Racial Equality, asked about anti-white racism, said that there was little, if any, research on the issue. The London Borough of Barking & Dagenham, where Mr Yates lived, said its community cohesion unit did not want to comment. People from minority communities are most likely to be victims of racist crime. Results from the 2002-03 British Crime Survey show that less than 1 per cent of white people had experienced a crime that they thought was racially motivated. This compares with 2 per cent for the black community and 3 per cent among Asian groups. But 1 per cent of whites amounts to a substantial number of people and a growing problem. THE RACIAL ELEMENTS Ross Parker, 17, was beaten and stabbed to death in Peterborough in 2001.
Racial tension was running high in the days after September 11. A judge
said the killing had been racist. But the prosecution did
not present the issue of racial motivation to the jury for fear of complicating
the case. Shaied Nazir, Ahmed Ali Awan and Sarfraz Ali were jailed for
murder. Gavin Hopley, 19, was kicked to death by up to eight Asian men in Oldham
in February 2003. His watch and chain were stolen and he died in hospital.
Six men were convicted of violent disorder and theft offences but no one
has been convicted of his murder. Kriss Donald, 15, was abducted in Glasgow in March 2004, stabbed 13
times, doused in petrol and set alight.
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