MPA Chair calls for urgent work with Black Police Association
to ensure fairness of treatment for all
86/03
30 October 2003
The on-going and urgent joint work to ensure that police
officers, police staff and the wider communities they serve
are treated fairly must be “reinforced and reinvigorated”,
Toby Harris, Chair of the Metropolitan Police Authority,
said today.
Speaking at the annual general meeting of the
Metropolitan Black Police Association, Toby Harris, said:
“The last few weeks have been uniquely difficult. It
began with the Black Police Association and the National
Black Police Association publicly stating that they could
no longer encourage black and ethnic minority recruits to
join the force following the second acquittal of Supt. Ali
Dizaei.
“It culminated with the sickening impact of the BBC
programme The Secret Policeman. At this morning’s full
Authority meeting that programme was explicitly welcomed as
a service to policing as a wake-up call, albeit of the most
distressing nature, which confirmed what you and we already
know - that despite real and sustained effort, there is
still a cancer of racism within policing.
“We have all bought in to the truth that until the MPS
is more representative in the make up of its workforce, it
cannot command the confidence of the communities it
polices. And that is of course true. But while racism is
still a real and intimidating element in society the police
service absolutely must not reflect society. It must
instead be an exemplar of what we all want society to be.
“And the message? The urgency of our joint work to shift
the culture, to ensure fairness of treatment to our own
staff as well as those who we police must be reinforced and
reinvigorated.
“I know that the BPA’s response to the acquittal of
Supt. Dizaei momentarily halted that joint work. I am very
pleased that through strenuous and accommodating effort by
all parties and of course your officers, it has been
possible for Ali Dizaei to resume his police career.
“Part of the settlement that has been achieved
recognises the need to make a fundamental change in
internal processes around grievance, complaints and
disciplinary processes. You know that members of the
Authority share your longstanding frustration at the
apparent inability of the MPS to change these internal
practices particularly as they affect your members. I
believe we know what the problems are - getting them solved
is the challenge.
“That is why we have set up a high profile independent
inquiry into just these issues. I hope to be able to
announce the chair and final terms of reference of the
inquiry very soon - I have been consulting your Chairman
Leroy Logan and his colleagues on the executive about the
make up of the panel.
“Let me make it quite clear that I am determined that
the inquiry will be rigorous, transparent, incisive and
that it will produce clear, focussed recommendations which
will lead to action. We will not let this slip into the
long grass. That is an absolute commitment.
“For all of us here the fair and effective policing of
London is our absolute priority. Without joint working and
your wholehearted commitment and energy the MPS, however
well intentioned, will fail. We must and cannot let this
happen. I look forward with confidence to the progress we
together can make in the next twelve months.”
Notes to editors
Further media information
For further information, please contact:
The Press Office:
Metropolitan Police Authority
10 Dean Farrar Street
London, SW1H 0NY
Tel: 020 7202 0217/18
Fax: 020 7202 0241
Out of hours:
Pager: 07659 127 087
email: press@mpa.gov.uk