NOTTINGHAM – Three out of five Muslims in Nottingham has been victims of hate crimes, a new study has revealed.
“Hate crime is rising in our cities,” Sajid Mohammed, leader of Citizens UK subsidiary Nottingham Citizens, told The Independent.
“Everyone from the new Home Secretary to Nottingham schoolgirls as young as 12 have ended up victims of hateful slurs.
The new study was conducted by Citizens UK, in collaboration with academics from Nottingham Trent University, and the University of Nottingham.
Based on the experiences of 1,202 people in Nottingham, the report, titled Still No Place For Hate, found 35 percent of all people surveyed in the city had experienced a hate crime, an increase of six percent since the last report in 2014.
It found more than half (51 percent) of Asians and British-Asians in Nottingham had reported being victims of hate crime, while the same applied to 45 percent of people identifying as black, 47 percent of people identifying as LGBT+, and 34 percent of women.
The report showed Muslims were the only religious group more likely to have suffered from criminal behavior “you believe to have been at least partly motivated by prejudice”.
One respondent said they had been called a “dirty terrorist”, while another said she had been told to take off her “f****** headscarf” in the city center.
“I wear the Islamic dress and the perpetrator was shouting that I was hiding a bomb,” one respondent said.
“On another incident whilst driving in my car, a passerby was shouting and calling me Bin Laden.”
One woman said she was called a “terrorist slut”, while another said someone had spat on her hijab.
“Regularly am followed when I go out in a hijab and abused the whole journey back home,” a woman reported. “Regularly get abuse online and on Facebook.”
One Muslim respondent said she now felt “unsafe and unwelcome” in the city because of the way she dresses. Another said she felt “very anxious at times, especially when a national terrorist incident happens”.
Change
Mohammed, the leader of Citizens UK subsidiary in Nottingham urged communities to do more efforts to counter rising hate.
“Communities can and must change this and we need cooperation from all levels of government right up to the prime minister,” he said.
“We also need others to act, including an end to hate crime complacency amongst social media companies, tougher action from police forces and better media reporting as part of a national response.”
According to the study, Brexit was reported to be the most common motivating factor for hate crimes.
“Brexit elections seems to have given the British students in my school the sense of superiority over foreign students,” one respondent said.
Another said the vote to leave the European Union had left immigrants feeling “less welcome”.
Muslims were not the only victims of the rising wave of hate crimes.
Clive Foster, Nottingham Citizens leader and Senior Pastor of the Pilgrim Church said: “I was racially abused in the city center, just before Christmas, while I was waiting for a friend. I was shocked and hurt, I contacted the police and reported it, but I never heard back about any progress or outcomes.
“Hate crime needs to be taken seriously or trust in the police will be eroded and we will see divided communities.
“This report serves as a reminder that we can all do more to challenge hate and stop it becoming a cultural norm.”
According to the figures reported by the paper, there were 80,393 hate crimes in 2016-17, compared with 62,518 in 2015-16, the largest increase since the Home Office began recording figures seven years ago.