Trevor Phillips’ role in Covid-19 BAME inquiry criticised

Muslim leaders criticise ‘insensitive’ decision to appoint Trevor Phillips on review into coronavirus’s impact on black and ethnic minority people after he was accused of Islamophobia

  • 34.5 per cent of critically ill Covid-19 patients were from the BAME community
  • Harun Khan from the Muslim Council of Britain said the decision was ‘insensitive’
  • Trevor Philips was suspended earlier this year over allegations of Islamophobia
  • Here’s how to help people impacted by Covid-19

Trevor Phillips’ appointment to be part of a review into the impact of coronavirus on black, Asian and minority ethnic communities has drawn criticism from leading Muslims and an MP.

The former Equality and Human Rights Commission chair was asked by Public Health England to provide expert support for its investigation to find out why Covid-19 seems to disproportionately affect people from BAME backgrounds.

Data from the Intensive Care National Audit and Research Centre suggests 34.5 per cent of critically ill Covid-19 patients were from the BAME community.

This is despite just 10.8 per cent of the population being black or Asian, according to the 2011 census.

Harun Khan, secretary general of the Muslim Council of Britain (MCB), said on Saturday that the decision to appoint Mr Phillips to the inquiry was ‘insensitive’.

It comes after the Labour veteran was suspended from his party earlier this year over allegations of Islamophobia.

Trevor Phillips (pictured) has been appointed to review the impact of coronavirus on black, Asian and minority ethnic (BAME) communities

In a statement, Mr Khan said while the review was needed, it was ‘wholly inappropriate’ to give the role to someone who was ‘being investigated’.

‘The decision is particularly insensitive given that British Muslims overwhelmingly come from BAME communities and so many Muslim doctors have died at the front line of this pandemic,’ Mr Khan said.

Meanwhile, Labour MP Yasmin Qureshi claimed on Twitter that Mr Phillips’ appointment ‘undermines the integrity and credibility of the review’.

In a letter to PHE’s chief executive Duncan Selbie, she said she was ‘shocked and troubled’ to learn Mr Phillips had been asked to join the inquiry despite the allegations against him.

Speaking about the disproportionate data Mr Phillips told The Times: ‘This data stops you in your tracks. Anyone who maintains that this virus doesn’t discriminate is either not looking at the numbers or doesn’t want to admit the truth.’ 

He added that anyone citing structural racism should note death rates in the Bangladeshi community, among the poorest English households by average weekly income, were lower than those among white Britons. 

Harun Khan

Labour MP Yasmin Qureshi

Harun Khan (left), secretary general of the Muslim Council of Britain (MCB), said on Saturday that the decision to appoint Mr Phillips to the inquiry was ‘insensitive’. Labour MP Yasmin Qureshi (right) claimed on Twitter that Mr Phillips’ appointment ‘undermines the integrity and credibility of the review’

Mr Phillips, an anti-racism campaigner, has previously defended his statements, including that it was ‘nonsense’ to define being anti-Islam as racist as Muslims do not identify as a race.

Responding to the criticism around his appointment, Mr Phillips told the Huffington Post: ‘Everyone should be contributing anything they can to tackling this crisis.

‘Anyone can see the research Richard and I have already done on our website, which explains why we’ve been asked to help.’

The first ten doctors to die in the UK from Covid-19 were all BAME - with ancestry from regions including Asia, the Middle East and Africa. Pictured is Dr Abdul Mabud Chowdhury, 53, who passed away in hospital after a 15-day battle against the virus

The first ten doctors to die in the UK from Covid-19 were all BAME – with ancestry from regions including Asia, the Middle East and Africa. Pictured is Dr Abdul Mabud Chowdhury, 53, who passed away in hospital after a 15-day battle against the virus

PHE said Professor Richard Webber, who runs the specialist research and insight consultancy firm Webber Phillips with Mr Phillips, had also agreed to provide support to the inquiry.

‘We’re delighted to put our team – which together has more than a hundred years experience in this field – and our technology at the disposal of PHE to help it solve the puzzle of who is most vulnerable and why,’ Mr Phillips said.