Showing posts with label BNP. Show all posts
Showing posts with label BNP. Show all posts

Wednesday, 12 August 2009

Is the Baby P case a reflection of 'Broken Britain'?

Yesterday the names of the three people held responsible for allowing the death of Baby P (now known as Peter Connelly), were finally revealed.

We now know that Tracey Connelly, 28, her partner Steven Barker, 33, and his brother Jason Owen, 37, were responsible for causing Peter's death. We also know that Barker was convicted for the rape of a two year old girl.

We were led to believe that their identities were kept secret to protect Connelly's other children, but also to avoid prejudicing other active cases, so why have their identities been revealed now?

Children at risk

Surely Connelly's children will be at risk from being identified, and with their mother only receiving a five year sentence she may well be out in half that time. This presumably means that she will have to be given a new identity upon her release from jail.

If this does not happen then the risk of vigilante attacks is high, and so too the risk to her children's well-being. However, if Tracey Connelly does recieve this level of protection, then it is also likely that both Barker and Owen will too.

The problem here is that this level of protection is very expensive, and the public reaction to the government spending money on convicted criminals is not favourable at all. So the question must be posed why chose to identify those involved?

Why identify?

If it is because the public have a right to know who committed the crime then fine, but if this is the case then they should not be given new identities upon release. This is a massive waste of money, and if their identities had been concealed forever, this expense could have been avoided all-together.

In these kinds of cases there is always the temptation to paint someone like Tracey Connelly as a victim of sorts. We now know that she suffered abuse as a child and had a pretty awful upbringing, but this does not mean that what happened to baby Peter was inevitable.

If this were true then there would be many more child deaths resulting from abuse, but it just isn't. Too often teams of social workers are attached to those who have committed crimes, and they are given the option to blame what they did as adults on what happened to them as children.

'Broken Britain'

More often than not this gives people the easy way out, and this has to change. Politicians talk about 'Broken Britain', but attaching these labels to areas of society is not helpful at all.

It is as if a generation of people have been condemned to repeat the cycle of poverty, unemployment, abuse or any other detrimental cycle you can name, and there is nothing we can do about it.

Well this is patently not true. If politicians tell people that Britain is broken, people will believe it and stay resigned to their likely fates. However, if politicians begin to engage with poorer communities instead of chasing so called 'floating voters', we may just make some progress.

Communities abandoned

To take an example, in South Yorkshire Barnsley has been forgotten by the traditional political parties and people are looking for answers. This led them to elect a BNP candidate to the Euopean Parliament.

If the main-stream parties re-engage with voters here and show an interest in their needs, then this will change but it needs to happen fast, otherwise 'Broken Britain' will become a widespread reality of the politicians' own making.

The sad case of baby Peter Connelly, will I am sure be used to highlight what is wrong with today's society, but his death should not be exploited in this way. It is disrespectful to his life and just plain wrong.

What the case does show is what happens to someone when they are neglected. There is still time to help people in these situations and the so-called cycle of abuse is never inevitable, however much some people would have us believe that it is.

Monday, 8 June 2009

The worrying rise of the BNP


Last night the British National Party won their first two seats in the European parliament.


Many mainstream politicians looked shocked when this happened, but in truth this has been coming for some time. In a country where the first past the post system means that the big parties focus so much of their energy on chasing floating voters, the BNP have filled a void.

One could argue that both the low turn-out and the disgust shown at MPs' expenses could mean that many of the BNP and other smaller parties' votes were merely a show of protest and would not be repeated in a general election.

BNP play on fear

However, the fact that a racist organisation like the BNP is getting any support at all is deeply worrying. In an increasingly multicultural nation, the BNP have successfully played on people's fears over immigration and job losses.

In somwhere like Barnsley for example, BNP support shot up from 8% in 2004 to 17% in 2009. This is a classic example of a place that feels forgotten by mainstream politics. Businesses are closing down, people have lost their jobs and it is little surprise that voters are left feeling frustrated.

For Nick Griffin the BNP's leader, it has been so easy to win followers. By dropping references to his party's racist beliefs, and making dissatisfied white people believe he is the only person standing up for them the BNP have become more successful than many would have ever believed.

Debate

Under Griffin, the BNP have become the most successful British fascist party ever, surpassing Oswald Mosley's British Union of Fascists, and the fearsome National Front (of which Griffin is a former member), and this is no accident.

For too long politicians from all three main parties have chosen to ignore the rise of the BNP, suggesting that openly engaging with them would give them free publicity, but this has been firmly proved to be the wrong decision.

The Church of England should be applauded for intervening and telling people not to vote for the party, but in reality this had little effect. Labour, the Conservatives and the Liberal Democrats need to wake up to the fact that the BNP are here to stay. It is time to engage with them in debate.

Nick Griffin has been very clever in masking what the BNP are really about, but by engaging in debate with his party, the mainstream parties can retake the initiative.

Devious

Opening up a debate over the BNP's small-minded policies would show them up for what the party really is; racist bigots who happen to wear suits. This needs to happen without delay.

One of the party's new MEPs Andrew Brons, mentioned nothing of his racist beliefs in his acceptance speech last night. This is the deviousness of the far-right, they now know how to look acceptable and must be exposed.

In modern Britain there should be no room for any racist party, and politicians need to wake up to the danger that our democracy faces from hate-filled groups like the BNP; before it is too late.