Reports of racist incidents and even hate crimes across the U.K. are on the rise after Thursday’s vote, leading to concern that the divisive campaign over leaving the European Union has emboldened certain extremist elements of society. More than 100 incidents “of racial abuse and hate crime” have been reported since Thursday’s vote, according to the Independent. Many of those incidents had the perpetrators reference the vote explicitly to justify the violence.
In Hammersmith, West London, xenophobic graffiti was found at the entrance of the Polish Social and Cultural Association on Sunday morning. Although the police wouldn’t comment on what the graffiti said, Twitter users said it read, “Go Home.” Police are also investigating reports that laminated cards that read “Leave the EU/No more Polish vermin” were distributed in Huntingdon,* including outside an elementary school.
Daughter tells me someone wrote "[Child's name] go back to Romania" on the wall in the girls toilets at School today. 😢
— James Titcombe (@JamesTitcombe) June 24, 2016
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"F*cking foreigner, go back to your country": just watched this outrageous racist incident in #Hackney https://t.co/87rqFKIhOv
— Shulem Stern (@ShulemStern) June 24, 2016
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There are also many reports about growing incidents of verbal abuse on the streets against people perceived to be immigrants. “I’ve spent most of the weekend talking to organizations, individuals and activists who work in the area of race hate crime, who monitor hate crime, and they have shown some really disturbing early results from people being stopped in the street and saying look, we voted Leave, it’s time for you to leave,” Baroness Warsi, former chairwoman of the Conservative Party, said.
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This evening my daughter left work in Birmingham and saw group of lads corner a Muslim girl shouting "Get out, we voted leave". Awful times
— Heaven Crawley (@heavencrawley) June 24, 2016
Shockingly, many of the street incidents are being reported right in cosmopolitan London. A 26-year-old Frenchman visiting London, for example, says a man began shouting “leave, leave!” at him and a friend when they were overheard speaking French. A Facebook user created an album titled “worrying signs” to collect all the reports of violence and abuse.
“There is no question the U.K. is shifting to a more racist atmosphere and policies. This is a rhetoric that’s showing up in the lives of schoolchildren,” Adam Posen, the president of the Peterson Institute for International Economics, tells Bloomberg. “We’re legitimizing politics and politicians that play with racism in a much more dangerous way than Richard Nixon ever did.”
*Correction, June 26, 2016, at 3:43 p.m.: This post originally misstated where the laminated cards were distributed. It was in Huntingdon, not Cambridge.