Boris Johnson has been told he must apologise for his past “racist” comments before his support for Black Lives Matter will be taken seriously.
The prime minister has issued a video message, recognising the death of George Floyd had awakened “a widespread and incontrovertible, undeniable feeling of injustice” among black people.
But playwright and campaigner Bonnie Greer said the support would carry more weight if Mr Johnson acknowledged the hurt caused by his notorious newspaper articles.
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One described African people as having “watermelon smiles”, another said women in burqas looked like “bank robbers”, and Mr Johnson also wrote that seeing “a bunch of black kids” scared him.
“Boris has said some things in the past that were unkind, that were hurtful, that were racist,” Ms Greer said.
“He should begin any speech he gives on this subject with an apology for his past mistakes and a personal vow to do better.”
Ms Greer added: “He is the leader. It just takes one address and it heals – and he needs to do that.”
In the message, posted on Twitter, Mr Johnson recognised “discrimination in education, in employment, in the application of the criminal law”, adding: “We are all right to say black lives matter”.
He said: “We who lead and who govern simply can’t ignore those feelings because in too many cases, I am afraid, they will be founded on a cold reality.”


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The Edward Colston statue has been pulled down by Black Lives Matter protesters in Bristol. Colston was a 17th century slave trader who has numerous landmarks named after him in Bristol. Pictured is the statue covered up before it was pulled down
Tom Wren / SWNS

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Protesters pulling down a statue of slave trader Edward Colston
William Want Twitter account/AFP

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Protesters pulling down a statue of slave trader Edward Colston
William Want Twitter account/AFP

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A protester presses his knee into the neck of the Edward Colston statue
Tom Wren / SWNS

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The protest rally was in College Green, Bristol
Ben Birchall/PA Wire

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The Edward Colston statue is defaced
Tom Wren / SWNS

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Tom Wren / SWNS

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A crowd gathers
Tom Wren / SWNS

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Protesters dragging the statue of Edward Colston to Bristol harbourside
PA

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The statue is rolled along the street before being dropped into a nearby river
SWNS

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Tom Wren / SWNS

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Tom Wren / SWNS

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Protesters throw the statue of Edward Colston into Bristol harbour
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Ben Birchall/PA Wire
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TWITTER/SELLOTTIE via REUTERS

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PA

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The Edward Colston statue has been pulled down by Black Lives Matter protesters in Bristol. Colston was a 17th century slave trader who has numerous landmarks named after him in Bristol. Pictured is the statue covered up before it was pulled down
Tom Wren / SWNS

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Protesters pulling down a statue of slave trader Edward Colston
William Want Twitter account/AFP

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Protesters pulling down a statue of slave trader Edward Colston
William Want Twitter account/AFP

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A protester presses his knee into the neck of the Edward Colston statue
Tom Wren / SWNS

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The protest rally was in College Green, Bristol
Ben Birchall/PA Wire

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The Edward Colston statue is defaced
Tom Wren / SWNS

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Tom Wren / SWNS

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A crowd gathers
Tom Wren / SWNS

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Protesters dragging the statue of Edward Colston to Bristol harbourside
PA

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The statue is rolled along the street before being dropped into a nearby river
SWNS

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Tom Wren / SWNS

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Tom Wren / SWNS

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Protesters throw the statue of Edward Colston into Bristol harbour
PA

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Ben Birchall/PA Wire
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TWITTER/SELLOTTIE via REUTERS

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PA
However, he added that, because ethnic-minority communities were paying a “disproportionate price” during the pandemic, he could not support protests that broke the rules.
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Mr Johnson has repeatedly refused to apologise for his newspaper articles, including when he was branded a “racist” in the Commons by the SNP leader last year.
During the general election campaign, he was confronted in a live TV debate and accused of fuelling the UK’s problem with racism.
But he declined to backtrack, saying: “Of course, in so far as my words have given offence, over the last 20 or 30 years that I’ve been a journalist, people have taken those words out of my article and escalated them. Of course I’m sorry for the offence that they have caused.”
Mr Johnson then he referred to his own Muslim great-grandfather, who he said came to Britain because it was “a beacon of generosity and openness”.
In 2018, the future prime minister was investigated under the Conservative party’s code of conduct over his comments about veiled Muslim women.
But the panel cleared him, finding he had been “respectful and tolerant” and was fully entitled to use “satire” to make his point in his Daily Telegraph column.
Later, asked why the prime minister did not address criticism that he had made racist comments in the past, his spokesman said: “He has addressed them on a number of occasions in the past.”