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Pupils should be better educated about Britain’s role in slave trade – Starmer

The Labour leader said children should know about the actions of people like Edward Colston, whose statue in Bristol was toppled by protesters.

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Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer has called for a broader curriculum to be introduced which better explains Britain’s role in the slave trade.

Sir Keir, during a Q&A on Thursday, reiterated his previous comments that the decision to forcibly remove slave trader Edward Colston’s statue was “wrong”, but argued that more education was needed about the part played by famous Britons in slavery.

During a Black Lives Matters protest in Bristol on Sunday, demonstrators toppled the statue of Mr Colston before sinking it into the city’s harbour, where it has since been recovered by Bristol City Council, with plans to place it in a museum.

The statue was pulled down amid worldwide protests triggered by the death of George Floyd, who died after a white police officer held him down by pressing his knee into his neck for almost nine minutes in Minneapolis on May 25.

The former director of public prosecutions said there had been a “narrowing” of the school curriculum “over recent years”, and called for it be given a wider-scope, focusing on information beyond that needed to pass exams.

The Opposition leader added: “Obviously there has been a lot discussion in the last few days about our history in the slave trade, probably more discussion in the last few days than there has been in the last few years.

“While I think pulling down the Colston statute in Bristol in the way it was done was wrong, I do think that statue should have been brought down a long time ago.

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Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer said a broader curriculum should be brought in to better educate pupils about Britain’s role in the slave trade (Jonathan Brady/PA)

“That bit of history ought to be something we know about from school, it shouldn’t be something we are learning because something happened last weekend – it should be something that we all know about as part of the curriculum.

“So I would be in favour of broadening the curriculum.”

His comments come after a cross-party group of more than 30 politicians, led by Liberal Democrat leadership contender Layla Moran MP,  wrote to Education Secretary Gavin Williamson calling for a re-evaluation of the history syllabus in light of the global Black Lives Matter protests.

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Protesters dragging the statue of Edward Colston to Bristol harbourside during a Black Lives Matter protest rally in memory of George Floyd (Ben Birchall/PA)

And London Mayor Sadiq Khan has also announced a new commission to review the capital’s landmarks, with a statue of noted slaveholder Robert Milligan removed from outside the Museum of London Docklands this week.

Meanwhile, a website called “topple the racists” has compiled a list of around 60 statues and other memorials across the UK it argues should be taken down, because they “celebrate slavery and racism”.

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