Anti-racism
campaigner’s London book events cancelled amid threat of far-right violence
Freedom of
speech groups alarmed after events to promote book by Hope Not Hate employee
are called off
Ben Quinn
Sat 23 Nov
2024 06.00 GMT
Hanif
Kureishi, Billy Bragg and freedom of speech groups have voiced alarm after a
number of venues cancelled events to promote a book by an anti-racism
campaigner amid threats and fears that the recent riots have emboldened the far
right.
An east
London bookshop this week became the latest venue to pull plans to promote
Rebel Sounds, a book about the role music plays in the fight against racism and
other struggles.
It follows
the scrapping of similar events at bookshops and pubs over the last few weeks,
and the cancellation by the BFI London film festival (LFF) last month of a
screening of a documentary about the far right.
Joe Mulhall,
the author of Rebel Sounds and director of research at the anti-racism
organisation Hope Not Hate, said: “Sadly, it feels like we are going
backwards.”
Mulhall held
an event at a secret location last Sunday night after a pub cancelled what was
intended to be an evening of discussion and music about the book.
“The irony
wasn’t lost on us that we were having to meet in secret when this is a book
about people being forced to do things in a clandestine way in the past in
Britain because of the rise of the National Front or other countries because of
repressive regimes,” he said.
“You can’t
blame small independent venues like bookshops and pubs but you would think that
the LFF is big enough that they shouldn’t have cancelled. They have the
capacity and resources to protect an event if they wanted to.”
Another
bookshop that cancelled a few weeks ago after receiving threats has now pulled
out of plans to restage the event in December after getting new threats
immediately after it was listed online.
Threats have
been made by email and in phone calls, while extremists from groups angered by
Hope Not Hate’s work have been publishing numbers on social media and urging
supporters to call.
Police were
called to a branch of Waterstones in late September when a far-right activist
took a seat in the front row and attempted to disrupt the event.
The
development has shocked artists and veterans of anti-racist campaigns who had
believed the days of venues being in fear of the far right had been consigned
to the past.
But the
summer violence – described by Keir Starmer as far-right riots – has
contributed to a changed atmosphere. It comes after the far right and
conspiracy theorists have mobilised aggressive protests against venues hosting
shows featuring drag queens reading to young children.
Bragg, the
socialist singer-songwriter whose own anti-fascist activism through music
features in Mulhall’s book, told the Guardian: “This reminds me of the 1970s
and 80s when we had to do solidarity gigs for people.
“People’s
safety is so important but we need to stand up to this kind of thing, which
really is a freedom of speech issue and in this case there are threats of
violence.”
Kureishi,
whose fiction has drawn from his own experience of the threat posed to British
Asians by the National Front in his youth, said he was shocked to hear about
Mulhall’s experience. Another British writer, Guy Gunaratne, said: “That these
readings are now being conducted clandestinely should concern everyone
committed to free speech.”
Jemimah
Steinfeld, the CEO of Index on Censorship, said she was concerned about what
appeared to be a “worrying trend”. “If even an organisation like the BFI is
afraid then what hope is there for smaller venues and what message does it send
out? You have to put the people working at those places first, but we are also
seeing a retreat into safer spaces and it’s something we as a society will
regret.”
Daniel
Gorman, the director of English PEN, said: “English PEN is deeply concerned
that threats from the far right have led to venues cancelling planned events
with writers and artists. This is part of a worrying trend curtailing the
freedom of expression of authors and performers.”
Last month
the LFF cancelled the screening of Undercover: Exposing the Far Right, a
documentary that followed Hope Not Hate campaigners. It remains unclear whether
the BFI was acting in the face of viable threats.
Kristy
Matheson, the director of the LFF, said: “I took onboard the expert opinion of
colleagues around the safety and wellbeing risks that the screening could have
created for audiences and the team and that informed our decision.”
The
documentary’s director, Havana Marking, said: “I don’t think it as taken
seriously enough in London at the beginning and then there was a panic. What
needs to really happen now is that there is a conversation to ensure this does
not happen again.”
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