Alerted by social media to the fact that two men of Asian origin were being lifted in Glasgow’s most multi-cultural district, a crowd gathered and as a circle of police officers faced a growing protest, with one demonstrator squeezing himself under the van, the police commander took the decision to release the men and cool the situation. But within hours the political temperature reached boiling point.
“This action was unacceptable,” tweeted First Minister Nicola Sturgeon. “To act in this way, in the heart of a Muslim community as they celebrated Eid, and in an area experiencing a Covid outbreak was a health and safety risk.”
This was repeated by Scottish Labour leader Anas Sarwar, who said: “It is particularly unacceptable that this is happening during a pandemic, in an area that has a spike in cases and on the day of Eid.”
Scottish Justice Secretary Humza Yousaf said the situation should not have arisen and added: “I abhor Home Office immigration policy at the best of times, but to have taken the action they have today is at best completely reckless, and at worst intended to provoke.”
MP Kirsty Blackman, until recently the SNP’s deputy leader in Westminster, went further by suggesting the party was an active participant. “We have achieved something today,” she said. “Just imagine what we can do with independence.”
Set aside the specifics of the case, it is quite something when both the First Minister and the leader of the Scottish Labour Party are saying that the operation should not have taken place during a major religious festival.
Apart from the men not being Muslim, by extension it means the police need to think twice about arresting Christians at Easter or Jews at Passover. But if anyone was being reckless it was Mr Yousaf, by suggesting it was a deliberate provocation, with undertones of racism, which risked ramping up tension against officers when the commander on the ground was trying to do the opposite.