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Issue 549/ 4th - 10th Aug 2012

Front Page

Somaliland News

News Headlines

Blind Couple’s Wedding Ceremony Becomes Talk Of The Town

UK Ministry Of Defense Plans New Wave Of Unmanned Marine Drones

Local and Regional Affairs

How Mo Farah Rejected The "Plastic Brit" Charge

Somalia: Failed State Or Fantasy Land?

Clinton’s East African Trip Focuses On Oil, Somalia, And Security

Somali Comedian Latest In String Of Media Deaths

Somali Pirates Serve As Inadvertent Marine Conservationists

Egypt’s Ikhwan Leader Badie Meets With Comptroller General Of Somalia’s Muslim Brotherhood

Drugmaker GSK Chases Volume Over Profit In Africa

Editorial

Will Ugandan Ebola Add To Somali Woes?

Features & Commentary

How Much Money Will It Cost To Rebuild Somalia?

Involve Mo Farah And Somalia Will Be Gold

Somalia: New Constitution Puts The Cart Before The Camel

Somalia's Next Step

International News

Opinion

The Somali Diaspora: Too Much Hope Placed In The Wrong People

Abdullahi Yusuf: A Somali Warlord’s Life And Days

Obstacles To Progress: Somalia’s Fault Lines

Somalia: Al-Shabaab In The Mafrishes?

How Mo Farah Rejected The "Plastic Brit" Charge

By George Eaton

Before the opening of the Olympics, the Daily Mail ran a series of stories on those athletes it called "plastic Brits". By this ugly term, it referred to those in the British team who were born overseas and later acquired citizenship. Under the guise of reporting a "controversy" (controversial to no one but itself), the paper complained that "11 per cent of the 542-strong squad were born abroad." Thus, as Sunder Katwala noted previously, competitors such as Mo Farah (born in Somalia) and Bradley Wiggins (born in Belgium) were, according to the Mail's definition, "plastic Brits".

Now many of those same Brits have triumphed, my guess is that the Mail will quietly forget that it once disparaged them as "plastic". It may even use this moment to celebrate the successful multiethnic society it normally does so much to hinder (one witnesses a similar volte-face when overt racists such as Nick Griffin, whose party swims in the swamp of hatred created by the right-wing press, appear on Question Time or other public platforms and are noisily denounced by the Mail and the Daily Express).

Should anyone revive the "plastic Brit" charge, however, here is how Mo Farah, his voice denoting impatience, responded last night when asked by one journalist if he would have preferred to run as a Somali.

Look mate, this is my country.

This is where I grew up, this is where I started life. This is my country and when I put on my Great Britain vest I'm proud. I'm very proud.

Was the Mail listening?

Source: New Statesman



 


 


 



 



 


 



 



 

 


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