Councillor quits Labour over Starmer Bangladesh comment

4 months ago 50
ARTICLE AD BOX

14 minutes ago

By Hannah Miller, Political correspondent

Getty Images Members of the British Asian community shopping in Tower Hamlets, east LondonGetty Images

Tower Hamlets in east London has a high British Bangladeshi population

The deputy leader of the Labour group on Tower Hamlets council in east London has resigned from the party after Sir Keir Starmer made reference to Bangladesh when answering a question about the deportation of illegal migrants.

In a statement posted on X, Councillor Sabina Akhtar said: “I can not be proud of the party any more when the leader of the party singles out my community and insults my Bangladeshi identity.”

Answering questions from an audience of Sun readers on Monday, the Labour leader said: "At the moment people coming from countries like Bangladesh are not being removed."

Sir Keir had been asked what Labour was going to do to deport people who arrived in the UK illegally.

During a visit to Burton-on-Trent on Thursday, the Labour leader said he "certainly wasn't intending to cause any concern or offence" to British Bangladeshis who were "making such an enormous contribution to our country".

All he had been saying, Sir Keir added, was that as far as asylum seeker returns were concerned, Bangladesh was a safe country and one that had a returns agreement with the UK.

In a video clip circulating on social media, which the BBC has seen, his comments in Monday's Q&A session have been edited and taken out of context.

Labour has described this clip as “misinformation”.

But a party candidate in the general election - in Bethnal Green and Stepney, which is in Tower Hamlets - said there had been concern.

Rushanara Ali, the first British Bangladeshi to be elected to the Commons and MP for Bethnal Green and Bow until Parliament was dissolved last month, said: "There has been considerable concern and upset following the release of a clip of the Labour Party Leader."

She added that she had been “in close contact with his [Sir Keir's] team to relay the concerns in our community”.

She would "always work hard to ensure the interests and concerns of the British Bangladeshi community are at the heart of policy in a future Labour government", she added.

During the Sun event, the Labour leader said the number of people returned to where they came from had fallen by 44% under the Conservative government.

He pledged to "put the staff back in the returns unit" in "the first few days" of a Labour government.

"I’ll make sure that we’ve got planes going off - not to Rwanda, that’s an expensive gimmick - they will go back to the countries where people come from. That’s what used to happen," he added.

A graphic which reads 'More on general election 2024'

Pressed by the event host, Sun political editor Harry Cole, on which countries he is talking about, Sir Keir responded: “At the moment people coming from countries like Bangladesh are not being removed, because they’re not being processed.”

In May, the government signed an agreement with Bangladesh “to speed up the removal of migrants with no right to be in the country”.

In 2023, according to Home Office statistics, 12 failed asylum seekers were deported to Bangladesh, while 66 went back voluntarily.

In a video posted on X, Apsana Begum, Labour's candidate in Tower Hamlets' other parliamentary constituency, Poplar and Limehouse, said: "I will never ever stand by and let migrant communities be scapegoated.

"It is totally unacceptable for politicians, for any party, to use dog whistle racism against Bangladeshis or any other migrant community.”

According to the 2021 census, more than a third of Tower Hamlets' population were of Bangladeshi ethnicity.

A Labour Party spokesperson said Sir Keir had "proudly supported the Bangladeshi community across the UK, who make an enormous contribution to our country.

"This clip has been edited to make it look as though Keir Starmer is suggesting repatriation of British Bangladeshis. It is misinformation.

"In fact, Keir is referring to Labour's long-established policy of returning those who don't have the legal right to be in the UK to safe countries.

"Bangladesh was only used as an example, as there is already a bilateral agreement between the two countries."

Read Entire Article