Muslims
in Europe experiencing ‘worrying surge’ in racism, survey finds
‘Dehumanising
rhetoric’ blamed as almost half of respondents say they recently suffered
discrimination
Ashifa
Kassam European community affairs correspondent
Thu 24 Oct
2024 05.00 BST
Muslims
across Europe are grappling with a “worrying surge” of racism that is being
fuelled in part by “dehumanising anti-Muslim rhetoric”, the EU’s leading rights
agency has said, as it published a survey in which nearly half of the Muslim
respondents said they had recently experienced discrimination.
Published on
Thursday by the EU Agency for Fundamental Rights (FRA), the survey of 9,600
Muslims across 13 member states found that racism and discrimination threads
through most aspects of their lives.
People
reported children being bullied in school, inequalities in accessing job
opportunities and prejudice when it comes to renting or buying homes.
Although the
survey was completed before the 7 October 2023 Hamas attacks on Israel, which
led to ferocious reprisals on Gaza, the Vienna-based agency said information
from civil society organisations and national authorities suggested that the
number of anti-Muslim incidents had continued to rise since the conflict
erupted.
“We are
witnessing a worrying surge in racism and discrimination against Muslims in
Europe,” said the agency’s director, Sirpa Rautio. “This is fuelled by
conflicts in the Middle East and made worse by the dehumanising anti-Muslim
rhetoric we see across the continent.”
After the
attacks of 7 October, officials scrambled to contain a rise in hate crimes
aimed at the Muslim and Jewish communities, ranging from an attempted arson at
a synagogue in Berlin to dozens of letters containing threats and insults sent
to Muslim councils and mosques in France.
The FRA,
speaking to Muslims in Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany,
Greece, Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Spain and Sweden, found
that 47% reported experiencing racism in the five years before 2022, up from
39% in 2016.
“What we see
is that the situation of Muslims is getting worse,” said Vida Beresnevičiūtė, a
co-author of the survey. “It’s getting more complicated to live as a Muslim in
the EU.”
The rates of
reported discrimination appeared to be closely linked to the rise of the far
right. In Austria, where the Nazi-founded anti-immigration Freedom party (FPÖ)
recently emerged as the most-voted-for party, 71% of Muslims reported recent
experiences of racism. In neighbouring Germany, where the anti-immigration
Alternative für Deutschland has been steadily gaining, 68% reported
discrimination.
Across the
13 member states surveyed, 39% of Muslims reported discrimination in the job
market, with 41% working in jobs for which they were overqualified.
A third of
respondents (35%) said they were impeded from buying or renting a house due to
discrimination, up from 22% in 2016. “The phenomena are pervasive and
persistent,” said Beresnevičiūtė. “The scope is overwhelming.”
The
consequences of this racism were wide-reaching and long-lasting. Muslims are
more likely to live in poverty, be crammed into overcrowded housing and 2.5
times more likely to be on temporary contracts. Muslim respondents were three
times more likely to leave school early than the general population across the
EU.
Particularly
concerning were the experiences of young Muslims, said Beresnevičiūtė. More
than half of Muslims born in Europe (55%) said they had felt racially
discriminated against when looking for work in the past five years, suggesting
that they were not being treated equally despite having the same language
capabilities and qualifications.
“It’s
appalling,” said Beresnevičiūtė, who noted that many Muslims reported
“overlapping” discrimination as they felt targeted over their religion as well
as their skin colour and ethnic or immigrant background.
Women who
wear religious clothing, such as a headscarf, also reported higher rates of
discrimination in the labour market. When it came to women between the ages of
16 and 24 who wear religious clothing, the reported rate of discrimination
climbed to 58%.
Few
seemingly felt it was beneficial to report their experiences, with just 6%
saying they had filed a complaint or report about a recent incident.
The FRA
called on member states to implement tougher sanctions for discrimination and
hate crimes as well as to collect equality data, including on ethnic or racial
origin, to allow policymakers to set better targets and track progress. Unlike
the UK, most EU countries do not collect census data on racial or ethnic
diversity.
Thursday’s
survey follows a report last year that found nearly half of Black people
surveyed across the EU reported discrimination and a July survey in which
nearly all Jewish respondents reported recent experiences of antisemitism.
Taken
together, the reports suggest that “racism and racial discrimination is a
persistent phenomenon throughout the EU and that it needs to be addressed,”
said Beresnevičiūtė. “And that without any specific efforts, it does not
disappear.”
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