BLM protesters topple statue of Bristol slave trader Edward Colston
Black Lives Matters protesters in Bristol have
pulled down a statue of the slave trader Edward Colston.
Demonstrators attached a rope to the Grade II-listed
statue on Colston Avenue on Sunday before pulling it to the ground as crowds
cheered. They then jumped on it and rolled it down the street before pushing it
into Bristol Harbour.
The historian David Olusoga compared the action to
the toppling of the statue of Saddam Hussein in Iraq. However, the home
secretary, Priti Patel, urged the police to respond. She told Sky News: “I
think that is utterly disgraceful and that speaks to the acts of public
disorder that have actually now become a distraction from the cause in which
people are protesting about.”
However, Bennett told the BBC he understood that
Colston was “a historical figure that’s caused the black community quite a lot
of angst over the last couple of years”, adding: “Whilst I am disappointed that
people would damage one of our statues, I do understand why it’s happened, it’s
very symbolic.
“You might wonder why we didn’t intervene and why we
just allowed people to put it in the docks – we made a very tactical decision,
to stop people from doing the act may have caused further disorder and we decided
the safest thing to do, in terms of our policing tactics, was to allow it to
take place.”
The mayor of Bristol, Marvin Rees, said: “I know the
removal of the Colston Statue will divide opinion, as the statue itself has
done for many years. However, it’s important to listen to those who found the
statue to represent an affront to humanity.”
The bronze statue, erected in 1895, has long been a
focal point for anger at the city’s role in the slave trade and the continued
commemoration of those who were involved in it.
A petition to remove it had garnered more than
11,000 signatures. It said: “Whilst history shouldn’t be forgotten, these
people who benefited from the enslavement of individuals do not deserve the
honour of a statue. This should be reserved for those who bring about positive
change and who fight for peace, equality and social unity.”
Colston’s company transported more than 100,000
slaves from West Africa to the Caribbean and the Americas between 1672 and
1689, cramming them into ships to maximise profit.
The slaves, including women and children, were
branded on the chest with the company’s initials, RAC. Unhygienic conditions,
dehydration, dysentery and scurvy killed more than 20,000 during the crossings
and their bodies were thrown overboard.
The Bristol West MP, Thangam Debbonaire, now the
shadow housing secretary, joined calls for the statute to be taken down in
2018. She said the city “should not be honouring people who benefited from
slavery”.
Colston gave great sums of money to Bristol, but it
was earned from slavery. Debbonaire said: “Having statues of people who
oppressed us is not a good thing to be saying to black people in this city.”
Action has been taken to erase Colston’s name from
other parts of the city. Colston Hall, Bristol’s largest concert hall,
announced plans to change its name in 2017, and Bristol city council determined
in January 2018 that a second plaque should be placed on Colston’s statue
highlighting his role in the slave trade but wrangling over the wording delayed
it. A portrait of Colston was removed from the lord mayor’s office later the
same year.
Opposition to the Colston statue grew at around the
same time as the Rhodes Must Fall campaign, which called for the statue of
Cecil Rhodes, an ardent imperialist, to be removed from Oriel College, Oxford.
The college refused to accede to the demands.
The toppling of the statue follows the pulling down
of several Confederate statues during Black Lives Matter protests in the US.
Explaining the reason for the Grade II listing,
Historic England says: “The statue is of particular historical interest, the
subject being Edward Colston, Bristol’s most famous philanthropist, now also
noted for his involvement in the slave trade.”




