August 17, 2011

British Police Kill Indiscriminately; UK to Give Curfew Power to Police

UK to Give Curfew Power to Police

Aug 17, 2011

Press TV - British Home Secretary Theresa May has announced new measures including curfew powers for police to be considered in the wake of the last week unrest.

The new measures also include the permission to provide tools police may need to deal with future problems and a clear guidance that should be given to police officers on public order policing, according to the Home Secretary.
"Under existing laws, there is no power to impose a general curfew in a particular area, and, while curfew conditions can be placed on some offenders as part of their Asbo, criminal sentence or bail conditions, there are only limited powers to impose them on somebody under the age of 16," May said.

"These are the sort of changes we need to consider," she added.
This is while the Home Secretary rejected calls to review the government's 20 percent cuts to police budgets.
"I am clear that, even at the end of this spending period, forces will still have the resources to deploy officers in the same numbers we have seen in the last week," May further said.

"It's clear to me that we can improve the visibility and availability of the police to the public. It's more important than ever that we do so, because we are asking the police to fight crime on a tighter budget," she pointed out.
When asked about the new curfew powers, May said,
"In relation to the curfew issue, it's something that we're going to look at to address whether, and to what extent, we may need to change the law.

"There are two issues. One is the availability of curfew powers in relation to individuals who are under the age of 16. And the other is whether... At the moment the curfew powers are specific in terms of individuals and attached to individuals and it's whether more general powers are needed,” added the Home Secretary.
Labour leader Ed Miliband criticised the Home Secretary's plan to press on with police cuts, saying it left him "very worried". He spoke during a visit to Bristol, where he met local politicians and community figures in the St Pauls area, the scene of unrest and looting last week.
"It is right that we learn lessons from the policing of the riots, but the most important thing the government can do is learn lessons itself," he said.

"The lesson the public wants them to learn is that visible effective policing increases public confidence and increases safety on our streets. That is why they should rethink their police cuts," Miliband added.

British Police Kill Indiscriminately

August 16, 2011

Press TV - British police have played a significant role in triggering civil disobedience in the UK through their unprofessional and brutal way of dealing with innocent civilians.
  1. Mark Duggan, recently killed in a police shoot out in the London suburb of Tottenham and whose death sparked a wave of street protests across Britain,

  2. Ian Tomlinson, an English newspaper vendor who was killed during G20 summit protests in London,

  3. Jean Charles de Menezes, who was shot seven times in the head after the London bombings of July 7, 2005, and

  4. David Emmanuel, a British reggae singer who was killed during a police raid on his home.
All are the names included in a long list of people killed at the hands of British police forces.

Independent Police Complaints Commission (IPCC), a police watchdog that deals with complaints against police, has been established to investigate police's crimes. The IPCC's job is to make sure that complaints against the police in England and Wales are dealt with effectively, it claims. The body claims to be setting standards for the way the police handle complaints against themselves and, when something has gone wrong, it helps the police learn lessons and improve the way it works.

But they neither have learnt lessons nor have they tried to improve their performance, the example of which are:
  1. Mark Duggan, whose family said it has no trust in the IPCC. The police shooting victim's friends and family said that they don't feel the police watchdog is sufficiently independent. The police watchdog has admitted it may have wrongly led journalists to believe that Mark Duggan fired at officers before he was killed. The Independent Police Complaints Commission has confirmed that it may have “inadvertently” given reporters misleading information in the early stages of the investigation. It was initially reported that Duggan, 29, shot at police. But ballistic tests later found that a bullet which lodged itself in one officer's radio was police issue. An inquest into Duggan's death heard the father-of-four died from a single gunshot wound to the chest.

  2. Ian Tomlinson was an English newspaper vendor who collapsed and died in the City of London after he was confronted with the police while on his way home from work during the 2009 G20 summit protests. A first postmortem examination indicated he had suffered a heart attack and had died of natural causes. A video footage later showed that a baton wielding police had struck him on the leg from behind and the pushed him on the ground. The video showed no provocation on Tomlinson's part. He also was not a protester, and at the time he was struck was walking along with his hands in his pockets. The victim walked away after the incident, but collapsed and died moments later.

  3. Jean Charles de Menezes was killed in the aftermath of the London bombings of July 7, 2005. He was a Brazilian man shot in the head seven times at Stockwell tube station on the London Underground by the Metropolitan Police. Police misidentified the victim as one of the fugitives involved in the previous day's failed bombing attempts. The IPCC launched two probes into the incident, none of which brought disciplinary charges against police officers involved.

  4. David Victor Emmanuel, known as Smiley Culture, was killed on March 15, 2011 during a police raid on his home. The 48-year-old was a British reggae singer and deejay known for his fast chat style. Police claimed that the victim died of a self-inflicted wound, while officers were searching his house in Warlingham, Surrey. But a post-mortem examination revealed that he had died from a single stab wound to his heart. His death triggered peaceful protests, but it was little reported.
The IPCC was faced with a crisis in February 2008 after more than one hundred lawyers who had specialized in handling police complaint resigned from its advisory body. They lashed out at IPCC for its indifference towards complaints, favoritism towards police and rejecting complaints, which were strongly documented.

Meanwhile, there have happened more than 400 deaths at the hands of police officers in the past ten years alone but no policeman has ever been convicted of murder or manslaughter for just one single death so far.

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