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Page summary This resource is from the News section. This page contains press release 75/06, in which the MPA highlights its pressure on the police to rethink the use of special stop and search powers is having an effect. Sections available here: Content Counter-Terrorism stop and search powers called into question 75/06 Pressure by the Metropolitan Police Authority for the police to rethink the use of special stop and search powers is having an effect. Toby Harris, MPA member with special responsibilities for counter-terrorism, said:
His call followed a candid reflection by Andy Hayman, Metropolitan Police Assistant Commissioner in charge of counter-terrorism nationally, who acknowledged at the final hearing of ‘Counter Terrorism: The London Debate’, the Metropolitan Police Authority's programme of community engagement to counter terrorism, that the benefit of police counter-terrorism stop and search powers under Section 44 of the Terrorism Act 2000 could be outweighed by the damage done to community relations. Mr Hayman said:
William Nye, director of counter-terrorism and intelligence at the Home Office, told the hearing the government constantly assessed whether the counter-terrorism measures struck the right balance between liberty, equality and security.
The final report on 'Counter-Terrorism: The London Debate' will be tabled in public at the full Metropolitan Police Authority meeting on 22 February 2007. The Commissioner, SIr Ian Blair, will respond to it then on behalf of the police. The report's findings will draw upon the views of over a thousand diverse Londoners who have been engaged through this consultative process. Its concrete recommendations will provide a mandate for change for the better in the way the Met, other agencies and communities themselves together tackle the terrorist threat we face. Notes to editors1. Further information about the MPA’s programme of events
can be found at: 2. Confidential anti-terrorist hotline: 0800 789 321 3. Crimestoppers: 0800 555 111 4. Communities Together helpline: 0800 028 2390 Further media informationFor further information, please contact the MPA press office |
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| News > Press releases > 2006 > 75/06 | |||
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