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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Friday, April 20, 2001 |
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Tories woo ethnic minorities
By Hasan Suroor
LONDON, APRIL. 19. One day Britain could have an Asian or a black
Prime Minister and he would be a Tory - just as the first Jewish
and the first woman Prime Ministers were Tories, the Conservative
party boasted on Tuesday even as it emerged that it planned to
field only 14 non- white candidates in the coming general
elections, mostly in ``unwinnable'' seats.
Only two ethnic minority candidates - Mr. Mohammed Riaz and Mr.
Shailesh Vara - have a chance of winning and if wishes were
horses one of them could well ride into Downing Street one
``fine'' morning, which itself is a rare occurrence in this part
of the world. Both are being groomed to project a multicultural
image of the party as it tries to broaden its appeal. While Mr.
Riaz, who is a businessman, has been appointed adviser to the
Tory chief, Mr. William Hague on race issues, Mr. Vara - a
Ugandan Asian solicitor - got top billing at the last party
conference where he spoke in defence of its stand on asylum
seekers. The boast about a future Tory Asian Prime Minister comes
even as the party is under increased pressure to stop
``pandering'' to racial prejudice amid reports that Tory
activists in some areas were distributing ``racist'' literature
in the run-up to the elections. Despite the central leadership's
warning to Tory candidates not to use racially provocative
language in their election campaign, local party activists were
reported to be persisting with hardline rhetoric on immigration
and asylum - the two issues on which Tories claim to be more in
tune with the public mood than their liberal critics.
However, Tory leaders sought to dismiss this as a local
phenomenon saying grass roots activists of all parties tended to
pander to neighbourhood sensitivities. They insisted that the
controversial leaflets were not authorised by the central
leadership which remained committed to a multiracial agenda that
could one day produce a non-white Tory Premier. ``In the same way
that the Conservative Party was the first party to have a Prime
Minister of Jewish background, the first party to have a woman,
we're quite likely to be the first to have a prominent black or
Asian politician as our Prime Minister,'' a Tory M.P., Mr. Peter
Bottomley said.
The Opposition, however, was not impressed arguing that similar
talk by Mr. Hague in the past did not prevent him from making his
infamous ``foreign land'' speech in which he accused the Labour
of turning Britain into a foreign country because of its ``soft''
approach to immigration and asylum. ``His critics point out that
he is willing to do anything to steal Labour working class
votes,'' a commentator said. Labour and Liberal Democrats have
taken exception to a Tory pamphlet which accuses Labour of being
soft on the ``floods of bogus asylum seekers'' and ``importing
foreign nurses with HIV'' to meet local shortages. Central
leaders dissociated themselves from the pamphlet saying it was
written by an ``inexperienced'' activist who had since been told
not to distribute it. The jury is still out on it.
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