What would you call something that attacks people based on
culture and tradition, their lifestyle, portraying them with over-emphasised
facial features? Would that be racist? Or ‘humour’?
UKIP deputy leader Suzanne Evans would go with the latter
definition. Last week she retweeted a spoof screenshot of a ‘Taliban dating
site’. It shows a distorted picture of a big-nosed bearded man in the top left,
has options to choose women, camels or goats, and shows pictures of women
wearing the burkha, who live in caves or tents.
This has nothing to do with the beliefs or practices of the
Taliban and everything to do with racist stereotypes relating to Arabs.
Moreover it was retweeted from an account that contains some
of the most extreme racist and offensive content imaginable, including a photoshopped
picture of what is claimed to be a young naked ‘Christian woman’ having her
throat cut by a gang of ‘islamist’ men, with the caption ‘Ah, the religion of
peace’. Other tweets follow the ‘white genocide’ and ‘anti-racist is a code word
for anti-white’ themes common to white supremacist sites in the US, adopted
here in the UK by elements of the EDL and race-hate groups.
Another element of this ‘humour’ is that one of the women in
the picture is described as being a ‘French Journalist’. This may be a
reference to Belgian Joanie de Rijke, was captured and raped by the Taliban in
2008, later vilified by right-wing parties in the Netherlands and elsewhere for her
attitude to her captors after she was ransomed and released. It may also reference British
Journalist Yvonne Ridley who converted to Islam after her release.
Bearing this in mind, why is the deputy leader of UKIP still
defending her tweet, and going beyond that to claim that people criticising the
post are ‘siding with the Taliban’, or that she was doing this off the back of
writing a UKIP pamphlet where she wanted to emphasise the rights of women?
She claims in her article (published on the extreme
right-wing site Breitbart) that terms like ‘racist’ and ‘offence’ are too often
bandied about in some kind of ‘leftist witch-hunt’ which prevents people from
speaking out about issues if they are ‘the wrong colour’. Is this the same
sentiment supported by the originator of her tweet, that ‘anti-racist is a code
word for anti-white’?
As a politician with a senior post in a party, she should be
aware that she will be (rightly) under public scrutiny. Yes, we would not
expect someone in her position to be tweeting this kind of thing – whether the
picture is inherently racist or not - or to be referencing rape and kidnap as ‘humour’.
For Ms. Evans information, unlike Presidents Bush, I do not and never have supported the Taliban.