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‘East African accent’ is offensive
mndaily.com
By Guled Ibrahim
Thursday, April 08, 2010

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In recent public safety alerts, the University of Minnesota Police Department has consistently utilized the phrase “East African accent” as a descriptor of criminal suspects. But what does this phrase entail? Is its use necessary? The use of the expression is at best superfluous, leaving many perplexed as to why it is used so often.

The e-mails, sent by the UMPD on Feb. 23, 26 and March 20 all contain the suspect descriptors, “a black male, between the ages of 25 and 30, with short, curly hair.” This is the particular set of information University police Chief Greg Hestness should have had in mind when he announced, “We seek to fulfill our obligation to provide our community with required information,” in his March 24 letter to The Minnesota Daily.

However, the same e-mails from the aforementioned dates needlessly contained, “The suspect(s) spoke with an East African accent, [or] spoke to each other in a foreign language with an East African accent.” Is every victim a linguist? Do they have a linguist on site to determine whether the suspect enunciated the English language in an east, west, north or south “African” accent?

The use of the phrase East African is distasteful, offensive, unnecessary, and it is by nature stereotyping. The expression presents a two-pronged dilemma for certain members of the University community. First, it condenses the diverse region of East Africa to a single ethnic people. Second, it burdens the Somali minority with those implications.

Chief Hestness explained in his letter that the UMPD is “open to description suggestions,” which at first glance reads as an encouraging prospect. But is it really?

What the statement likely meant to say is, “We are open to being provided with a politically correct method in which we can openly marginalize a people.” The suggestion is not one to take seriously. Now let us think of a polite way to curse.

Guled Ibrahim
Somali Student Association president


Comment

g21v

What is your problem?

Minneapolis has a huge Somali community, but they are not the only East Africans that live in the Twin Cities. If law enforcement referred to anyone that *looked* like a Somali as a Somali, perhaps some Ethiopians or Eritreans might feel wronged. The Somalis would feel like they are being stereotyped and taking the blame for crime for which they are not responsible.

East Africans and West Africans tend to look differently. Both look somewhat differently from African-Americans that have been in this country for generations. Including descriptors provides more information to accurately identify suspects.

The police are just trying to do their job and still be respectful of your culture by not just labeling everyone as 'Somalis'.

Please, get over yourself.


 





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