Mixed ethnicity couple forced to sell home after racist abuse
A mixed ethnicity couple who had to sell their home after racist attacks say they are not surprised by recent race hate on display in Northern Ireland.
The couple lived in east Belfast with their child at the time of the incident two years ago.
They said they had no option but to move after a neighbour targeted them with threats to kill and a restraining order was placed on him.
Alice, not her real name, said the man stood outside their home screaming racial slurs. âHe said he wanted to end us,â she said.
Alice and her husband Amir have told the BBC they felt the system was âstacked againstâ them.
The Public Prosecution Service (PPS) confirmed to the BBC that the âdefendant pleaded guilty to and was convicted of threats to kill and disorderly behaviourâ in 2022.
The restraining order was for five years, and it covered the neighbour and any associates of his, but within weeks the couple said it was breached by someone they believed was a friend of their neighbour.
Alice said they had an eyewitness and video footage of the breach, but it was not enough.
âThe PPS told us our case did not have sufficient evidence to be taken further,â she said.
âWe tried to challenge that and got told no.â
The PPS told the BBC, âall the available evidence was carefully considered, and it was determined that this was insufficient to pass the test for prosecutionâ.
âWe recognise the decision not to prosecute in the second case was disappointing to the victim,â a spokesperson said.
âWe do not underestimate the impact this offending had on the victim and her loved ones. However, we have a duty to put before the court only those cases in which the available evidence provides a reasonable prospect of conviction.â
âGoes like a sewer ratâ
On another occasion, Alice and Amir rang the police concerned because their neighbour was sitting on the street opposite their home with another man, drinking.
Their son was not home at the time, and they were worried about him being dropped off on the street near their neighbour.
âI was asked if there was another way into the house, and I said only the back alleyway where everyone keeps their bins-they said that was a valid alternative,â Alice said.
âWe realised then we were very much on our own. I will not teach my son that because of the colour of his skin, he goes like a sewer rat where bins are kept while racists walk the streets.â
Neighbourhood policing inspector for East Belfast, Insp Moutray, said: âHate crime has no place in our society, and any incident which leaves a victim feeling unsafe in their own home is unacceptable.
âWe treat all racially motivated hate crimes exceptionally seriously and proactively investigate every report we receive as we seek to ensure that those responsible are held to account for their actions.â
Alice said she was horrified by the riots and protests that took place in August, but it did not come as a shock.
âThe current situation in NI⊠Iâm not surprised to see the racists on the streets when the response to us as a family was to go by the back alleyways. We felt the whole system was stacked against us.â
âWe lost our home to this; we had no other option but to sell up and leave.â
âWatch your backâ
Amir said recent race hate has changed how he is living his life now.
âIâve lived in this country for almost 18 years, but when Iâm standing at the roadside waiting for the lights to change, I find myself taking a step away from somebody standing next to me because I donât know them-thatâs what started to happen,â he said.
âThis summer I wasnât comfortable going in to town on public transport. The recent incidents emboldened all the bigotry.
âWe have a child, I donât want to raise him afraid of the world, but at what age can I make him aware of it, and, you know, tell him; âwatch your backâ.â
Alice said they would never leave Northern Ireland, and they want to raise their son here.
âThere are more of us than them, more people who believe this is completely wrong,â she said.
Amir said that despite this not being the only racist incident he had experienced here, many people have supported him.
âThe moment the hate incident happened, our neighbours came through, people who we said hello to in passing suddenly became a source of comfort, a source of help.â