Parting shot:
STOPPED BY THE POLICE
Abdurahman Jafar, 32, London barrister
"My wife and I were driving through King's Cross. Police were stopping [non-white] people. I asked a policeman why. He said, 'There are a lot of people dealing drugs here'. I said, 'What's that got to do with me'? It was insulting. Just because I'm a certain colour ... the fact that he pinpoints me is horrible. It's humiliating. You don't feel part of the country you grew up in and love."
Lord Ahmed of Rotherham, 47
"Twice I've been stopped at British airports. Once I was travelling to the US from Heathrow with the Mayor of Lahore. We both had beards and brown skin. Out of 65 mostly white people we were picked out. The other time I was travelling from Birmingham to Saudi Arabia with my wife and was asked if I was taking any money with me. When I said I was, they wanted bank receipts to prove it was mine."
Michael Eboda, 41, editor of New Nation
"I was stopped and searched by 30 armed officers in 2003; I was told it was because I was black and driving a high-value vehicle. If it really was intelligence-led policing and improved communities that would be one thing, but it just antagonises people. The chance of stopping a person who is an Islamic terrorist is minimal. It is a waste of police time."
From today's Independent:
http://news.independent.co.uk/uk/leg...p?story=616329
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