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A minority report from the British armed services
What is it like to be one of the approximately 12,000 recruits from ethnic minorities currently serving in the British military? That was the question photographer Kit Oates wanted to address when, earlier this year, he embarked on a project to take portraits of members of the British army, Royal Navy and Royal Air Force from minority backgrounds. “I was interested in recruits who might not have been born here, or whose parents weren’t, but who have decided to serve in the armed forces in this country. I thought it was an interesting area in a year when so much has been happening in Great Britain; I wanted to highlight another facet of our multicultural society.”
The Ministry of Defence was initially slow to provide access, but Oates believes his request was strengthened by recent reports that ethnic minorities are poorly represented in the British military – making up about 7% of the armed forces, with particularly low numbers in the navy and the RAF. “The British army needs to reflect British society,” defence secretary, Philip Hammond, said in June. “This is clearly a challenge now; to recruit from the ethnic minorities within British society in proportions that reflect that society.” (via The Observer)