HIGHWAY
CODE FOR MULTI ETHNIC BRITAIN
(3 October 2005)
Today
Trevor Phillips, Chair, Commission for Racial Equality (CRE) spoke
at the Conservative Party Conference Muslim Forum in Blackpool about
the need for people to get along in a society which is increasingly
multiethnic. Mr Phillips said: "Globalisation means that the
rules of multiethnic Britain are under constant challenge as we
encounter new cultures and our own culture changes. We need a modern
highway code, our unwritten handbook for getting on with each other,
if we are to live together successfully.
"Today
we have millions of cars in Britain - of all kinds, shapes and colours.
But they all have to share the same road space. In order for us
to do that safely there are some hard rules - laws such as the need
to pass a test of proficiency before we gain a licence to drive.
There are also some rules of the road which express our common understanding
of how to deal with our different ways of behaving, and which help
us to manage awkward situations, where no-one is breaking a law
but our differences could lead to conflict.
"Britain
has always been multiethnic - we have our hard laws that bind us
all to parliamentary democracy, equality of men and women, the care
of children, settling our disputes peacefully and so on. But we
also have many unspoken rules, which are the equivalent of the highway
code for our multiethnic society.
"We
respect others ways of worshipping. We compromise on dress codes
- what we wear at work may not be what we wear at home. And above
all we use the English language for everyday intercourse with others.
"We
need to find ways of reaching a national agreement on some of these
issues. We need to update our highway code of conduct to meet the
needs of the multiethnic society."
Mr
Phillips went on to talk about the need for everybody to play a
role in this. He continued: "Government cannot just decree
those rules. We all need to debate and agree them and they must
work in our everyday lives. And, just as nothing in our highway
code should undermine the fundamental laws of the road, our updated
handbook must preserve our fundamental values - we all obey the
same laws.
"That
is why we welcome the Government's proposal for a Commission on
Integration which will study these issues of principle. I hope it
will address some of the everyday problems.
"We
at the CRE have tried to start the process of avoiding the dangers
of a segregated, unequal society. But in the debate we have begun
there is so much more to be discussed and decided.
"We
first, of course, have to agree that we want to get along - such
an agreement would be the greatest prize possible in a world riven
with ethnic and religious strife. We can create a Greater Britain,
as Britons of genius have done before. It's our generation's challenge.
I think we are up to it, but only if we all work together."
Commenting
on the speech by Trevor Phillips, the Mayor of London's Director
of Equalities and Policing, Lee Jasper, said today 'Trevor Phillips
has got his facts wrong. The census analysts at the Greater London
Authority, and leading researchers nationally, have found that London
and the rest of Britain are becoming less, not more, segregated.
Any chair of the Commission for Racial Equality who does not know
whether councils should print documents in several languages, or
holy days like Yom Kippur should be respected, or whether 'coloured'
is an appropriate term, should seriously consider whether he is
in the right job.'
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