The Economist - USA (2020-08-08)

(Antfer) #1

38 Europe TheEconomistAugust 8th 2020


2 fers fromsystemicbut notinstitutional
racism.Nooneknewwhathemeant.
Thereismoretoinstitutionalracism
thanpolicing.InmostEuropeancountries
somegroupswithimmigrantbackgrounds
doworseinschoolthanwhitenatives.Ex-
amsrelyingheavilyonlanguageproficien-
cyoftensplitstudentsintouniversity-or
vocational-trackeducationbytheageof12.
Residentialsegregationoccurspartlybe-
causeimmigrantsaresteeredintopublic
housingandpartlybecauseofdiscrimina-
tion.Inonestudy95%ofcallerswithna-
tiveGermanaccentsgotappointmentsto
viewhousesina wealthyneighbourhood
of Bremen,whereasonly24%of callers
withTurkishaccentsdid.
Thenthereisemploymentdiscrimina-
tion.A Dutchstudyin 2018 thatresponded
tojoblistingswithimaginaryrésumés,va-
ryingonlytheirethnicity,foundthatficti-
tiousapplicantswithnon-Westernimmi-
grant backgrounds got 30% fewer
invitations to interviews than native
whites.Depressingly, a similarstudyin
1977 gotaboutthesameresult.Inthesame
vein,in 2019 theDutchtaxauthoritywas
found to have withheld child benefits
wrongfullyfromsome11,000parents,most
with non-Western immigrant back-
grounds,overbaselesssuspicionsoffraud.
Manywerefinanciallyruinedandthegov-
ernmentwillpay them€500m($590m),
buttheauthoritywasexoneratedofracism
becauseit hadselectedthemonthebasisof
dualnationality.
Thosewhothinktermslikeinstitution-
alracismfitAmericabutnotEuropemake
somegoodpoints.Ofthe1.5mconvictsin
American prisons in 2018, a thirdwere
black,nearlytrebletheblackshareofthe
population. It is uncertain how skewed
FrenchandGermanlawenforcementare
(sinceethnicdataarescarce),butoverall
theyshootandjailpeopleatlessthana
fifthAmerica’srate,sothedamageisless
grave.EveninsegregatedEuropeancities
likeParis,nogroupapproachesthedegree
ofsegregationofblacksinAmericancities.
Europe’sgenerouswelfarestatesalsohelp
tosmoothoutracialdisparities.Moresub-
tly,“BlackLivesMatter”takesona different
flavourincountrieswhereAfricanandCa-
ribbeanminorities(oftenformercolonial
subjects)arepartof afluidhierarchyof
groupsofcolour.Whereastheincomegap
betweenblack andwhiteAmericanshas
grown since 2000, all Dutch minority
groupsarecatchingup,if slowly.
Noneofthaterasestherealityofdis-
criminationinEurope.Indeed,MsGargard
says,tobelittlethenewvocabularyofrac-
ismasanill-fittingAmericanimportisto
dodgeresponsibility:“It’sbeendifficultto
talkaboutracisminEuropeancountries
becauseweliketopretendwearetolerant,
andthatracismissomethingthathappens
intheUnitedStates.” 7

T


urkey’spresident,RecepTayyipEr-
dogan,hasalreadyneuteredthetradi-
tionalmedia,putting criticaljournalists
out of work or behind bars and using
friendlytycoonstotakeoverthecountry’s
topnewspapersandnewschannels.Now
hehastakenaimattheinternet.
Hislatest assault came onJuly 29th
whenparliamentadopteda lawdesigned
toforcesocial-mediagiantstocomplywith
Turkish requests to remove content.
Henceforth, companies such as Twitter
andFacebook willhaveto appointlocal
representativesto processsuchrequests
within 48 hours.Thosewhodonotcomply
willfacebansonadvertising,finesofupto
$6m,andeventuallybandwidthcutsofup
to90%,whichwouldmakethemunusable.
Thegovernmentsaysthelawwillpro-
tectsocial-mediausersfromabuseanddis-
information.Criticssayitwillbecomea
powerfulcensorshiptool.Turkeyalready
blocksatleast400,000websites,saysa re-
portbytheFreedomofExpressionAssocia-
tion,a rightsgroup,andchurnsoutmore
Twitter and Reddit content-removal re-
queststhananyothercountry.Armedwith
thenewrulesanda pliantcourtsystem,the
governmentwillleanevenharderonsuch
companiestotakedownpoliticallyincon-
venientmaterial,includingoldposts,says
Yaman Akdeniz, a lawyer.“Articles will
vanishfrom archives,”hewarns.“Theywill

tryto deletethepast.”
Othersareworriedaboutprovisionsre-
quiringuserdatatobestoredlocally.“The
lawsaysthegovernmentcanaccessthese
dataonlywhentheyconcerna crimeora
national-securityissueorsimilarreasons,”
saysAhmetSabanci,a techwriter,“butin
Turkeythesekindsoflawsarebenteasily.”
Withmostofthemainstreampressin
TurkeynowinthehandsofMrErdogan’s
alliesorbusinessmenwhodependonhis
governmentforlargecontracts,socialme-
diahavebeena sanctuaryfordissent.Po-
licearenowburstingintothatsanctuary.
Overthepastthreeyears,hundredsofpeo-
plehavebeendetainedforcriticisingTurk-
ishmilitaryoffensivesagainstKurdishin-
surgents in Syria. Dozens have been
investigatedonchargesofattemptingto
“destabilise the economy” with their
tweets.Wheretargetedbansdonotsuffice,
thegovernmentusesblanketones.Wiki-
pediawasbannedbetween 2017 andthis
January.“I’malotmorenervous,”saysa
popularTwittercommentator,preferring
nottobenamed.“Ifeellikethefroginthe
panwhenthewaterisstartingtoboil.”
Forthethin-skinnedMrErdogan,the
motivationseemstobeatleastpartlyper-
sonal. Tens of thousands of cases have
beenopenedagainstpeopleaccusedof“in-
sulting”Turkey’sleader,mostlyonsocial
media.(Theseinclude auser whocom-
paredMrErdogantoGollum,a power-wor-
shippingimp.)Atleast11 weredetainedon
July1stforpostingcrudecommentsabout
thepresident’sdaughter andhisson-in-
law,Turkey’s financeminister, afterthe
birthoftheirnewchild.“Thisiswhywe
shouldbringthistoourparliament,”a furi-
ousMrErdogansaid,“toremovetheseso-
cial-medianetworkscompletely,tocontrol
them.”Heseemstomeanit. 7

ISTANBUL
PresidentRecepTayyipErdogangoes
aftersocialmedia

Tu r ke y

Sultanof


censorship


Just two years after its famous bridge suddenly collapsed, killing 43 people, the Italian
city of Genoa inaugurated a sleek new replacement in the presence of the country’s
president and prime minister, as well as an air-force flypast. The feat of engineering was
impressive. But many of the victims’ relatives stayed away, objecting that the tragedy
had been turned into a carnival.

Genoa bridge reopens
Free download pdf