Research

Data on Hate Crimes and Incidents against ESEA People in the UK

What is the full picture of hate crimes and incidents directed against East and Southeast Asian (ESEA) people in the UK each year? This question has historically been difficult to answer as the specific data is not routinely reported, and there continue to be issues around how data is collected and how reporting systems work.

The ESEA Data Collective (*) submitted a series of Freedom of Information requests (Freedom of Information Act 2000) to police forces across the UK; to 48 police jurisdictions. This page gathers what we found and what we have learned so far.

We need better reporting mechanisms in order to better understand and address racism and/or other forms of hate against ESEA people. Data should be routinely collected and proactively disclosed by UK police forces. There should also be independent reporting mechanisms so that ESEA communities feel safe in speaking up about the racism, violence and discrimination that we face.

We collected data for 2019, 2020 and 2021. Therefore, below are summaries:

  • comparing rates of hate crimes and incidents in 2019 and 2020

  • comparing rates of hate crimes and incidents in 2020 and 2021

  • comparing rates of hate crimes and incidents in 2019 and 2021

To summarise across the entire UK, there was a spike in hate crimes and incidents against ESEAs in 2020 compared with in 2019, which matches the timeline of the covid-19 pandemic. Overall, across the UK, the rate of hate crimes and incidents against ESEAs dropped in 2021, compared against 2020, but remained above the pre-pandemic (2019) level.

Disclaimers

Please scroll down for our methodology and disclaimers. We have erred on the side of undercounting.

Raw Data  

Our raw data is accessible here(subject to terms and conditions of use).  Please click download, and see this source data for actual figures, noting that relative change, compared to actual change can make values appear more significant than they are. Note the maps are presented as visual aids and should not be a substitute for checking the raw data and identifying which ethnic group identifier we have used to record the hate crimes (or hate concern nominals) applicable in connection with each police jurisdiction.

* The ESEA Data Collective is driven by Voice ESEA, EVR and The Public Data Lab (King’s College London)  . The collective uses data to understand the scale of anti-ESEA discrimination in the UK. 

This page was last updated on 14 July 2023.

Comparing Rates of Hate Crimes and Incidents in 2019 - 2020

Comparing Rates of Hate Crimes and Incidents in 2020 - 2021

Comparing Rates of Hate Crimes and Incidents in 2019 - 2021

Disclaimers

2021 Project Summary

Below is a summary of the findings from the original project.

We received data from 65% of police forces

We asked 46 police forces for statistics they held about hate crimes against ESEA people in the UK from 2018 to 2021, broken down by month. Of these:

  • 30 out of 46 forces replied with data

  • 9 out of 46 did not respond

  • 4 out of 46 replied with data which was unclear/unusable

  • 3 out of 46 did not provide data

  • Population
  • Population

Why were our requests turned down?

“Unfortunately this information is not held in a searchable format.”

— Humberside Police

“..there is no easily retrievable system to extract ethnic background for complainants.”

— Staffordshire Police

Responses so far show a nearly 50%increase in hate crime incidents from 2018 to 2020

Across the forces there were 5866 hate crimes reported from 2018 to April 2021 so far, which were recorded as being directed against ESEA people. The real figure will almost certainly be higher than this as:

  • several forces did not provide data for 2018

  • data from 2021 is only provided by some institutions, and then only up until April

  • not all hate crimes against ESEA people will be reported to police

  • not all hate crimes against ESEA people will be recorded as such

  • Population
  • Population

With these caveats in mind we can see that there has been at least a 27% increase in hate crimes from 2019 to 2020 (1742 in 2019 to 2212 in 2020), based on data we’ve been able to obtain so far. Reported hate crimes have risen by nearly 50% in two years from 2018 to 2020. 2,212 incidents were reported in 2020 compared to 1,492 in 2018.

The Met Police still uses the 'Oriental' classifier to report the appearance of victims.

This is not incidental but part of their internal reporting tool (from their notes: “the data extraction was filtered using IC5 to include only victims who have South and South East Asian ethnic appearance which is classified as Oriental on SAP BI”).

From our response to the Sewell Report: “Organisational racism can be seen in action in how British statutory agencies, such as the Metropolitan Police, continue to use terms such as ‘Oriental’ to identify and categorise anyone assumed to be of East and/or Southeast Asian heritage. The deployment of such derogatory terms in official policies and data collection highlights the continued colonial attitude towards ESEA people by British institutions. The 2021 Census too, fails to collect disaggregated data by ethnicity, using instead the umbrella category "Asian - Other” for non-Chinese ESEA people.”  

Over 60% of institutions we’ve received data from report an increase in hate crimes against ESEA people from 2019 to 2020

From January 2019 to January 2020 hate crimes reported to have increased in 19 out of 30 (over 60%) of institutions from which data was provided. This includes:

  • A 200% increase from 4 to 12 in Dyfed-Powys from 2019 to 2020

  • A 192% increase from 12 to 35 in Essex from 2019 to 2020

  • A 160% increase from 10 to 26 in Devon and Cornwall from 2019 to 2020

  • A 133% increase from 36 to 84 in South Yorkshire from 2019 to 2020

  • A 117% increase from 6 to 13 in Cumbria from 2019 to 2020

  • A 105% increase from 21 to 43 in West Yorkshire from 2019 to 2020

  • A 91% increase from 11 to 21 in Hertfordshire from 2019 to 2020

  • A 80% increase from 323 to 581 in Metropolitan Police from 2019 to 2020

  • A 78% increase from 9 to 16 in Cheshire from 2019 to 2020

  • A 72% increase from 72 to 124 in Police Scotland from 2019 to 2020

  • A 46% increase from 46 to 67 in British Transport Police from 2019 to 2020

  • A 36% increase from 11 to 15 in Bedfordshire from 2019 to 2020

  • A 36% increase from 11 to 15 in Sussex from 2019 to 2020

  • A 29% increase from 14 to 18 in Durham from 2019 to 2020

  • A 14% increase from 36 to 41 in Northern Ireland from 2019 to 2020

  • A 8% increase from 164 to 177 in South Wales from 2019 to 2020

  • A 3% increase from 35 to 36 in Gloucestershire from 2019 to 2020

  • An increase from 0 to 5 in City of London from 2019 to 2020

What kinds of hate crimes were reported against ESEA people?

Responses from police force record a wide variety of hate crimes against ESEA people, including:

  • “Assault occasioning actual bodily harm”

  • “Aggravated common assault or beating”

  • “Burglary”

  • “Criminal damage”

  • “Malicious communications, stalking and harassment”

  • “Racially aggravated public fear/alarm/distress”

  • “Robbery”

  • “Sending letters etc with intent to cause distress or anxiety”

  • “Sexual assault”

  • “Threats to destroy or damage property”

  • “Threats to kill”

  • “Violence against the person”

What kinds of reporting issues came up in our requests?

“Unfortunately, results on racial hate crimes against specifically people of only East Asian or South East Asian heritage are not available since no ‘East Asian’ or ‘South-East Asian’ options exist in any of the ethnicity dimensions.”

— Essex Police

“It is not possible for our systems to identify ethnicity of East Asian or South East Asian. The fields available for ethnicity are A1: Indian, A2: Pakistani, A3 Bangladeshi, A4 Chinese, A9 Any Other Asian background and M3 White and Asian.”

— Sussex Police

What should be done to improve reporting of hate crimes against ESEA people?

Current crime reporting mechanisms do not provide a clear or consistent picture of hate crimes against ESEA people in the UK. To improve reporting we would like to see:

  • Remove the term ‘Oriental’ from Police reporting systems and categorisation.

  • Police forces proactively publishing data on hate crimes against ESEA communities with consistent reporting formats. In response to our FOI requests we had PDFs, Excel files, emails and other materials with different data structures, fields and levels of detail.

  • Recognition of crime and abuse against ESEA people in reporting systems. At the moment crime reporting systems do not recognise ESEA people from many backgrounds, and sometimes broader classifiers are used such as “Asian -other”. This makes it hard to account for how ESEA communities are being targeted.

  • More support for community-based reporting systems for hate crime and abuse against ESEA people. We’d like to see funding, support, and awareness activities around mechanisms for reporting and responding to hate crimes and abuse against ESEA people through other channels, not just the police.