"The uncomfortable truth that our country
continuously fails to recognise and admit, is that black people
in the UK have been at a constant disadvantage in every aspect
of life - simply due to the colour of our skin," he said in a
statement.
Stormzy, who made history last year by becoming the first
British rapper to headline Glastonbury, said he had heard people
dismiss racism in Britain by citing his own success.
"I am not the UK's shining example of what supposedly happens
when a black person works hard. There are millions of us. We are
not far and few," he said.
"We have to fight against the odds of a racist system stacked
against us and designed for us to fail from before we are even
born."
In 2018, Stormzy announced he would fund two black British
students to go to the University of Cambridge and subsequently
funded two more.
Anti-racism protests, inspired by the Black Lives Matter
movement that started in the United States following the death
of George Floyd, have triggered a debate about how Britain
commemorates its imperial past.
Statues glorifying slave traders and colonialists have been torn
down in recent days and another Black Lives Matter march is
scheduled to take place in London on Friday.
(Reporting by Andy Bruce; editing by Stephen Addison)
[© 2020 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2020 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|
|