Tackling racism in policing
European Union Agency for Fundamental Rights
Fundamental rights are the life blood of the EU. Ultimately we exist to help everyone in the EU to live in dignity.
Racist comments, more frequent stops and even violence - this is how people of different ethnic backgrounds experience policing in Europe. Yet, the lack of national data makes it difficult to fully assess the magnitude of the problem and design effective responses, finds the first ever EU-wide report on racism in policing from the EU Agency for Fundamental Rights (FRA). The Agency calls on EU countries to systematically collect data on police misconduct, make reporting safer and recording of police incidents effective, and increase diversity in police forces.
“Incidents of ethnic profiling and excessive use of force are expressions of racism in policing that EU countries need to address,” says FRA Director Sirpa Rautio . “A vital component of policing is to protect all communities. But racist practices erode people’s trust and risks fuelling exclusion in our societies. We call on EU countries and police authorities to take urgent action to stamp out racism in policing.”
Racism in policing has far-reaching effects, fuelling social exclusion and harming trust in police forces.
FRA’s first EU-wide report on racism in policing highlights the deeper, structural issues that need to be uprooted from policing practices across the EU.
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The study supports EU countries in tackling racism in policing. It identifies gaps in their regulatory frameworks and proposes concrete steps for action:
The report is available here: https://europa.eu/!BMCQ8c