Riz Ahmed reveals he has lost two family members to coronavirus

Riz Ahmed has said he has lost two family members to coronavirus, adding that the pandemic crisis is ‘reflecting and revealing the faultlines in our society’.

The Venom actor and rapper said he hopes the surge of appreciation for the NHS draws attention to prejudice against the ethnic minorities that keep it running.

Ahmed, who was born in London to a British Pakistani family, told GQ Hype: ‘I have lost two family members to Covid. I just want to believe their deaths and all the others aren’t for nothing. We gotta step up to re-imagine a better future.’

He previously revealed that his uncle Shakeel had died on the weekend of April 4, describing him as a ‘legend in his community who will be missed by so many’.

Riz Ahmed, pictured in Los Angeles in 2017, said he hopes the surge of appreciation for the NHS draws attention to prejudice against the ethnic minorities that keep it running

The 37-year-old added: ‘I’m seeing reports of India, where the government are calling it ‘corona-jihad’ and they’re trying to blame it on the spread of Muslims and they are segregating hospitals between Muslims and non-Muslims.

‘Trump is using it as an excuse to try to ban immigration and the Hungarian government is centralising power off the back of this.

The interview appears in GQ Hype online

The interview appears in GQ Hype online

‘I’m looking at the fact it’s hitting African-Americans twice as hard; I’m looking at the fact that 50 per cent of NHS frontline workers – is it 50 per cent? – are ethnic minorities.’ 

People from from black, Asian or ethnic minority (BAME) backgrounds make up 44 per cent of NHS medical staff according to the most recent figures. 

Referring to the viral video of poem Clap For Me Now, Ahmed compared it to his latest album, in which he symbolically broke up with Britain.

He said: ‘It’s almost like there is an alternate ending to The Long Goodbye! I’ve walked off, but Britney’s (a stand-in for Britain) called me back again. 

‘Britannia’s saying: ‘I need you! Come back!’ She’s saying: ‘We need you frontline staff. We need you Uber drivers. We need you shelf stackers.’

Ahmed previously revealed on April 8 that his uncle Shakeel had died over the weekend of April 4, describing him as a 'legend in his community who will be missed by so many'

Ahmed previously revealed on April 8 that his uncle Shakeel had died over the weekend of April 4, describing him as a ‘legend in his community who will be missed by so many’

‘Who are the people who, for every moment of crisis in this country, have kept this country together?

‘It’s the people at the bottom of the barrel; the people being hit hardest by this pandemic.

‘We say we love the NHS more than the royal family, more than the Army, but do we love the people who keep the NHS alive?

‘Because every time we tell people to f*** off back to where they came from, that’s not what we’re saying.

NHS staff at the Royal Derby Hospital take part in the most recent Clap for Carers last Thursday

NHS staff at the Royal Derby Hospital take part in the most recent Clap for Carers last Thursday

‘So I really hope that this revelation, this awakening, opens our minds to that reality, to the stupidity of our prejudice.’ 

Nearly three-quarters of NHS staff who have died from coronavirus are from black, Asian and minority ethnic (BAME) backgrounds, prompting the Government to launch an investigation.

There are also reports that people from BAME backgrounds have been more likely to catch coronavirus.

But NHS figures show that 82 per cent of all those who have died were classed as being white, while 18 per cent were BAME or mixed background.

A group of photographs shows some of the NHS workers who have died during the pandemic

A group of photographs shows some of the NHS workers who have died during the pandemic

Both these figures are proportionate to the ethnic composition of Britain’s population in the last census.

Ahmed continued: ‘Coronavirus is on some level an alien invasion, isn’t it? It’s bringing humanity together against the common enemy.

‘So there is this potential for this momentous, unique-in-the-history-of-our-species moment, of us all going through this crazy challenge together and only being able to get through this together.

‘And yet, in the midst of that, insofar as any crisis is a mirror, reflecting your priorities and patterns, this crisis is reflecting and revealing the faultlines in our society, the broken records that are stuck in our head, the f***eries and the power plays that are still dominating how we are running our planet, the rising intolerance.’ 

On April 8, Ahmed shared a photograph and two videos of his uncle Shakeel on his 60th birthday, writing on Instagram: ‘A charismatic storyteller, he could strike up a conversation with anyone and soon have them in tears of one kind or another – either laughing from his unique turn of phrase, or meditating on his spiritual insights.

‘His journey was the journey of my people – born in India, then moved to Pakistan, then England. 

‘He was an immigrant, then a teddy-boy in silk shirts and medallions, then a banker, and finally a devoted spiritual guide who went out of his way for others.’