A chain of holiday parks in Britain kept an "undesirable guests" list of Irish last names in an attempt to keep out members of the Irish Traveller community, the UK equalities watchdog said Tuesday.
The list kept by Pontins, which was displayed on a staff intranet site, contained about 40 largely Irish names, including Cash, Delaney, Gallagher, Murphy and O'Brien. News of the list was broken by the i newspaper.
Britain's Equality and Human Rights Commission said Pontins was "directly discriminating on the basis of race" by refusing to serve guests of a particular ethnic group. It said staff refused or canceled bookings made by people with an Irish name or accent.
Irish Travelers are a traditionally nomadic group similar to, but ethnically distinct from, Gypsy or Roma people. They are a recognised ethnic minority in Britain, where many have lived for generations, and have long suffered discrimination.
Alastair Pringle, the equality commission's executive director, said it was "hard not to draw comparisons" with "the signs displayed in hotel windows 50 years ago, explicitly barring Irish people and Black people."