Category: UK

  • British people are committing suicide to escape poverty. Is this what the State wants?

    British people are committing suicide to escape poverty. Is this what the State wants?

    Run Down PropertyIn the last few months of his life, Craig Monk attempted several overdoses and was described as ‘vulnerable’ by his family.

    An accident a few years before had resulted in the partial amputation of his leg and he had suffered unnecessary, and anxiety-inducing, obstructions in receiving state assistance – even though his disability was clear for all see.

    Over time he slipped further into poverty, the ends could no longer meet.

     

    Finally, the fear of there not being a light at the end of his personal tunnel overwhelmed him and Mr. Monk, a 43-year-old from Burnley, was found hanging in his home in October last year.

    I would love to say this is an anomaly, a one-off. That here was someone who was psychologically unhinged and motivated by his own selfish considerations. I cannot. For there is far more to it than that.

    As I write there have been almost 150 deaths related to sick and disabled citizens who fear being plunged further into poverty as our benefit system – designed to protect the vulnerable – increasingly cuts people adrift leaving them to fend for themselves.

    For some people the solution is clear and irreversible – as it appeared to be for Mr. Monk.

    And, for that matter, Helen and Mark Mullins.

    The Mullins had physical and mental disabilities to contend with and had spent months fighting the notoriously complex disability process at the Department for Work and Pensions.

    Starved, literally, of sufficient financial assistance, the couple’s weekly food intake was bolstered by the vegetables they received from a soup kitchen in Coventry, a 12-mile round trip that they made weekly on foot.

    The Mullins couldn’t afford a fridge and so kept food in the garden shed. Eventually they could no longer stretch their non-existent budget to heating their home and they spent their remaining months living in one room.

    Captured on camera by a roving reporter shortly before their death, Mr Mullins, criticised the system:

    “They have no problems suspending benefits,” he said, “They just put a tick in a box and they alter your life.”

    So it was that the Mullins’ life was altered irreparably and, dreading another cold and hungry winter, they were found side by side, in an apparent suicide pact in November 2011.

    Just another statistic, really. Barely worthy of a footnote – or so it would appear.

    Even the most conservative estimate claims that 24,000 people worldwide die from hunger each day. Of course you may say, as people do, that such a thing would never happen in the UK.

    That, due to our ‘bloated’ benefits system – the one the red-top tabloids claim to know so much about but actually know less than could be reasonably written on a matchbox – no one in our land will have to die from cold or starvation.

    I wonder if you can help me out here, then. What is the difference between people dying from starvation and people killing themselves before they have to face that certain misery?

    Not that the people dying are only suicidal. Some have been pushed to the brink by the Coalition’s continued use of the much criticised ATOS system, designed to tell how ‘fit for work‘ someone is.

    This French company and model – (any reason why we can’t design and run our own?) – is cushioned with a whopping 100 million tax-payer funded pounds per year to move claimants from benefits to work.

    The company was heavily attacked in the Harrington Report because its medical reports frequently failed accurately to reflect the assessment process or the circumstances in which they were conducted.

     

    ATOS nightmare stories are legendary. People have suffered all manner of attacks – from anxiety to heart – during the process and the testing has proven unreliable according to the latest figures from HM Courts and Tribunals service.

    Following a Freedom of Information request, the mental health charity Mind have released appeal figures for the period April to October 2011. They make for alarming reading.

    They reveal that over the six months, almost half of the people who appealed against their ruling won their cases. That’s 37,100 who had previously, quite wrongly, been found fit for work.

    This success rate increased to 67 per cent when people were represented by, say, a lawyer or a benefits adviser. 

    Consider that. Sixty-seven per cent of assessments were found to be wrong. That’s a huge failure rate by anyone’s standards, and an expensive one too. Amounting, as it does, to some 50 million pounds to administer appeals each year.

    And that’s only the financial cost. What about the human cost of it? Where already vulnerable people are systematically broken down. Some never to recover.

    Stephen Hill, 53, needed heart bypass surgery but was told he was fit to work and would be withdrawn from Incapacity Benefit in November 2011. This despite him winning a previous appeal against an assessment.

    One month later, Boxing Day to be precise, and Stephen was dead from a heart attack.

    His brother Anthony said: “The worry put so much pressure on him.”

    It is certain to get worse, for despite the ATOS assessments being repeatedly proven to be wrong, ministers are preparing to restrict legal aid for those seeking to overturn unjust decisions.

    So what we have is a system that is recognised as faulty, and we intend to remove the legal means by which to challenge its numerous errors. This comes in addition to the intended removal of benefits during the period of the appeal.

    The message from Cameron and Clegg’s Coalition to disabled and sick people is clear. Accept what we say, or we will make life a (barely) living hell. And for some people that has proven too dire a prospect to contemplate.

    Only a few weeks ago, during the voting of the Welfare Reform Bill, media commentators accused disability campaigners of ‘being paranoid’ and of ‘making a song and dance about nothing’.

    They said that this Coalition, despite appearances to the contrary, would protect our sick and disabled. Oh yes, really?

     

    Just one week after the morally-bankrupt Welfare Reform Bill was granted royal assent, the Coalition announced widespread closure of Remploy, nationwide factories that employ disabled people. 

    Thirty-six of its 54 factories were picked for the chop with potential compulsory redundancies of more than 1,700 disabled workers.

    “So much for helping disabled people back into work,” said Steven Preece from the pressure group Social Welfare Advocacy.

    The result is an untenable situation for disabled people. The possibility for earning a living has been seriously reduced – and this trend will continue as Disability Living Allowance is cut and will no longer enable some disabled people to work.

    At the same time, the State will reduce the hard cash available to the claimant and will also pile on pressure to be assessed for millions of invisible jobs in a market place with almost three million unemployed.  

    The current ‘new thing’ for our disabled and sick to endure is the anxious wait for ‘the brown envelope’ from the DWP. So far a thousand or so disabled people have received instructions about getting back into work even though some have been given fewer than six months to live.

    Extremely sick – some terminally so – and disabled people will be poked and prodded by physical assessors and blocked and humiliated by the clerical ones. Turn this way, turn that way. Walk, but not too fast. That may classify you as ‘not disabled enough’ or ‘too disabled’ – both state of affairs come with sanctions. Cattle truck, anyone?

    It has to stop. Now. Our Coalition have pushed disabled people further into a type of poverty that we assume only exists in dictator-led countries. And we’re not one of those, are we?

    How can Iain Duncan Smith have the temerity, the sheer barefaced cheek, to say that ‘no one will lose out’ in these reforms?

    Why doesn’t he ask the mother whose Down’s syndrome child will likely end up almost £700 a year worse off, as a result of changes to their Tax Credits. Or the 50-something man recovering from a stroke who will lose hundreds from his yearly allowance? Well that’s the heating off for next winter, then.

    The people our Government has lashed out at do not have gold-plated pensions from any number of companies that they may sit on the board of – as many Lords and MP’s do – and they live a hand-to-mouth existence.

    What a world of mixed-up values and reprehensible morals. Where our Members of Parliament kick 12 bells out of vulnerable people but allow the extraordinarily wealthy to leap through tax loopholes designed to protect their already huge stash. 

    I have no objection to people acquiring material wealth through hard work – good for them I say. I do, though, draw the line at one rule for the rich and one for the poor.

    According to the Land Registry, the UK is currently losing more than £1bn in tax as the rich and famous register some 94,760 properties – from townhouses and castles to country estates – into offshore companies.

    Such tax dodgers include, among numerous others, Sirs Bob Geldof and Mick Jagger.

    The problem for the Con-Dems is their protection of the rich over the naked dismissal of the poor, is increasingly transparent.

    Due, in no small part, to this newpaper’s continued exposure of inequities such as ‘Sweetheart Deals’ where companies including Goldman Sachs and Vodaphone are routinely allowed to skip away with a tax bill substanially lighter – to the tune of billions – than it should be. Hey! billion pound deficit, we know how to fill you.

    Cameron and Co’s actions are not only unjust but politically suicidal. The electorate, being essentially fair, will reject this Coalition at the election. They will be hoist by their own petard.

    MP’s could do much worse than to look at the court of public opinion when it comes to their handling of the disability crisis. According to charity Papworth Trust, almost nine out of 10 respondents felt that disabled people are treated badly. Unfortunately too, for MP’s, a whopping  82 per cent said that politicians were unfair with disabled people.

    The Coalition do not want to continue ignoring polls. Take, for example, a specially commissioned YouGov survey, designed to test the national pulse towards benefits.

    The message that came back was clear and unequivocal. People hold great suspicion and dislike for the current benefit system but did not support the cuts aimed at disabled people. A miniscule 11 per cent, only, supported cuts to disability.

    Of course that hasn’t stopped the Government from continuing to try and whip the country into a benefit hysteria. Take, for example, the DWP’s own figures last week which were widely circulated in the media and stated that some 37 per cent of people claiming disability were actually fit for work.

    This amount, it should be pointed out, clashed with the reality of the situation – which found that the figures in the pilot schemes were only 22 per cent and the result of the appeals had yet to come in. 

    A DWP press officer was thus forced to admit that yes, this would result in a significant drop in numbers from that released to the press. See how rumours get started?

    “It also doesn’t acknowledge the fact that the assessments are so inaccurate and many will not have the strength to appeal despite being wrongly classified as “Fit for Work”.” Says Sue Marsh, co-author of ‘Reponsible Reform – The Spartacus Report’.

    “They will then have only Job Seekers Allowance to rely on and face exactly the sanctions a non-disabled person would. On less money than before.”

    How have we allowed such worldly extremes where some are wealthy beyond measure – and others are pushed to the outer edges of society and forced to live a type of twilight existence?

    Where some are so materially rich that if they lived to be hundreds of years old – and never did another days work in their lives – it would not dent their coffers and others die for want of a warm bed and a regular meal. Such disparities are obscene.

    However there is hope for campaigners. It may be that much of the Welfare Reform Bill will prove to be illegal as it appears to clash with a number of human rights and could certainly face legal challenges.

    This issue is not about so-called ‘scroungers’, who – aside from it being a vile, dehumanising term that should be beneath us – are few and far between. Let us not forget that the fraud disability rate is less than one per cent. No, the issue is the basic human needs that this Government is failing to take care of.

    But hey, what’s the death of one or two, here and there? We have so much more to think about, right?

    You know the things that preoccupy most of our time. Like, for example, the reality show judge trending on Twitter because a ‘sex tape’ purporting to feature her has been leaked onto the internet. Now that’s news. Apparently. She’s glamorous, you see, and wealthy too.

    The same, sadly, cannot be said about those who consider themselves a burden to society and are too poor to carry on living. 

     

     

     
    The Daily Mail

  • EU squanders £100m on train line in Turkey

    EU squanders £100m on train line in Turkey

    BRUSSELS bureaucrats have handed more than £100million to Turkey to build a high-speed rail link – in case the country joins the EU.

    There will be no return on investment from the railway for Brussels
    There will be no return on investment from the railway for Brussels

    The staggering sum does not have to be paid back and there will be no return on the investment.

    The cash is from a £12.1billion fund to support nations hoping to join the EU to which Britain contributes £120million a year.

    News of the money for the rail link between Turkey’s two biggest cities, Istanbul and Ankara, provoked outrage last night.

    Tory MP Douglas Carswell labelled the EU’s decision “bizarre”.

    He said: “Other countries that have given money to Turkey, such as China, expect a return on their capital.

    “It is funny how a communist country understands the fundamental principal of capitalism while the EU elite are giving money to Turkey without looking for a return on their investment.”

    Euro MP William Dartmouth, Ukip’s trade spokesman, called for an end to funding for countries awaiting membership.

    He said: “I cannot see how this project would really benefit the EU. The fact that British taxpayers’ money is going towards funding a new railway line in Turkey when our Government is forcing huge cuts on services and infrastructure at home will no doubt appal many people.”

    Work on the 331-mile high-speed train line began in 2003. The EU’s European Investment Bank has so far ploughed £1billion into the project in loans on top of the £100million grant.

    Other countries that have given money to Turkey such as China expect a return on their capital.

    Tory MP Douglas Carswell

    EU official Jean-Christophe Filori defended handing over the sums, saying the line will help European businessmen get to Ankara quickly to sign contracts.

    But public appetite in Turkey for joining the EU is waning and last night one of their senior officials warned they would not wait forever.

    Turkey’s chief negotiator on EU accession Egemen Bagis said his country was committed to joining the 27-member bloc but admitted they were not in favour of adopting the euro currency – despite it being a condition for entry.

    Mr Bagis touted Turkey’s sway in the Middle East as a major boon for Europe should it be allowed to join the EU.

    via EU squanders £100m on train line in Turkey | World | News | Daily Express.

  • School curriculum slimmed down

    School curriculum slimmed down

    İngiltere’de “Evrim Teorisi” ilkokullarda okutulacak

    By Angela Harrison Education correspondent, BBC News

    State-funded schools have to follow the national curriculum
    State-funded schools have to follow the national curriculum

    The government has published its plans to slim down the national curriculum followed by primary and secondary schools in England.

    Foreign languages will be compulsory for older primary school children.

    And computing will replace the more general information and communication technology (ICT) subject, as expected.

    The new curriculum sets out detailed “essential knowledge” expected for core subjects of English, maths and science from children aged from four to 16.

    But schools are to have more freedom in what they teach on other subjects, so there is less detail on those.

    The new courses for children up to the age of 14 are due to come in from autumn next year. GCSE-level changes are due to come in a year later, tied in with changes to GCSEs for some subjects.

    The curriculum has to be followed by state-funded schools that are not academies.

    More and more schools – especially secondaries – have become academies. These are free to set their own curriculum, although the government says the national framework it is setting out can be a guide for them.

    The new draft proposals for the curriculum say all state-funded schools must provide an education that is “balanced and broadly based and which promotes the spiritual, moral, cultural, mental and physical development of pupils at the school and of society, and prepares pupils at the school for the opportunities, responsibilities and experiences of later life”.

    All schools have to publish their curriculum online.

    ‘British progress’

    The government says the new curriculum will promote more rigour in mathematics, where there will be a greater emphasis on arithmetic, while scientific programmes will be “more ambitious” with a stronger focus on scientific knowledge.

    For the first time, primary school children will have to taught about evolution.

    In English, officials say the curriculum should “embody higher standards of literacy” and have a new emphasis on the great works of literature.

    Another aim is “to develop their [children’s] love of literature through reading for enjoyment” and to help them “appreciate our rich and varied literary heritage”.

    As expected, there is also an aim to help children learn confidence in public speaking and debate.

    In history, children should be given a clear “narrative of British progress” with an emphasis of heroes and heroines of the past, the proposals say.

    As expected, children will learn a complete history of Britain under the new curriculum.

    The youngest children, as today, will be taught about key historical figures and from seven, youngsters will be expected to learn a detailed chronological history of Britain, from the Stone Age through to the end of the Cold War and the fall of the Berlin Wall.

    In geography, there will be a focus on using maps and learning key geographical features – from capital cities to the world’s great rivers.

    Computing replaces ICT and this will include online safety and programming.

    The plans for children from four to 14 are out for consultation and a further consultation on GCSE-level changes will follow later.

    via BBC News – School curriculum slimmed down.

  • Blonde, 34, who died after being raped twice and beaten in Turkey ironically told family she ‘felt safer there than in UK’

    • Beverley Mitchell was living in the resort town of Fethiye with her boyfriend who is believed to have repeatedly beat her
    • The IT worker was raped twice – once by two men, inquest heard
    • Her boyfriend disappeared after she died leaving her family little hope of finding out exactly how she died
    • Miss Mitchell’s father warned other young women about emigrating to Turkey

    By Tara Brady

    PUBLISHED: 17:42 GMT, 6 February 2013 | UPDATED: 17:46 GMT, 6 February 2013

    A British woman who was living abroad because she thought it was safer than the UK was repeatedly beaten and raped twice before she died in Turkey, an inquest has heard.

    Beverley Mitchell moved to Turkey after she was offered a job working in the picturesque resort town of Fethiye which is popular with many British tourists and ex-pats.

    Despite her parents telling her to come home on a number of occasions, the 34-year-old thought it was safer to stay in Turkey.

    Tragic: The inquest heard Beverley Mitchell was beaten and raped twice before she died in Turkey Tragic: The inquest heard Beverley Mitchell was beaten and raped twice before she died in Turkey

    But an inquest into her death heard that Miss Mitchell was repeatedly beaten up by her Turkish boyfriend, raped twice – once by two men – and later died in hospital after her partner delayed taking her there.

    Her boyfriend, referred to in the inquest only as ‘Shahin’, then disappeared leaving Turkish police and British authorities little hope of finding out what had happened to her.

     

    More…

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    Her father, Ken, said Miss Mitchell would regularly call him and her mother Patricia at their home in Berkshire to tell them of the beatings she experienced.

    ‘She used to cry over the phone and plead with us to get her out of there but the next moment we would get a phone call saying he’s apologised’, said Mr Mitchell.

    ‘I never believed any of it – she was always in fear of her life.’

    Picturesque: The pretty town of Fethiye in Turkey where Beverley Mitchell died Picturesque: The pretty town of Fethiye in Turkey where Beverley Mitchell died

    Mr and Mrs Mitchell, from Calcot, near Reading, visited their daughter months before her death but said on their trip she had seemed happier.

    ‘If we’d have known she was unhappy that day we would have found some way to have brought her back but you can’t say to an adult “you’re coming home with us.”‘

    Mr Mitchell said his daughter had been offered a job by a friend when the IT company she was previously working for went bust and so decided to stay in Turkey.

    ‘She said she felt safer there than she did over here, surprisingly enough,’ he told the inquest in Newbury, Berkshire.

    ‘When you take it at face value, Fethiye is a nice place.’

    Beverley Mitchell (pictured) was asked to come home by her parents on a number of occasions Beverley Mitchell (pictured) was asked to come home by her parents on a number of occasions

    Christopher Sandford, a British shopkeeper who befriended Miss Mitchell in Fethiye, told the hearing that although she had initially seemed happy he would often see her covered in bruises or drunk – and that she had told friends she turned to alcohol to take away the pain of the beatings.

    ‘You would see her come in with bruises,’ he told Berkshire coroner Peter Bedford.

    ‘She was very thin and not eating properly,’ he added.

    ‘We knew of Shahin. He wasn’t in our circle of friends but we knew of him and I can only describe him as one of the many Turkish rogues.

    ‘The perception is it happens to so many British single women, from 15 to 90, they fall in love with a good looking guy and end up spending all their money on him. Shahin was of that ilk.’

    The inquest was told how Shahin was controlling of Miss Mitchell and her friends suspected she was being forced to spend all her money on him, leaving her without enough to eat.

    Another of Miss Mitchell’s friends, Steve Tristram, said in a statement given to the hearing that on May 24 last year she had been raped by two men.

    Local Turkish newspapers reported that the men had been armed with guns. 

    However the coroner said that he had been given no evidence this was the case.

    ‘She appears to have been followed by two men who dragged her to the ground and raped her,’ said Mr Tristram’s statement.

    ‘On leaving the police station with her Turkish boyfriend Shahin, he attacked her, blaming her for being raped and beat her again.’ 

    Mr Tristram also said Miss Mitchell had reported to Turkish police that she had been beaten. 

    However she did not name Shahin as the perpetrator, as she was ‘terrified of him.’

    Miss Mitchell had also reported she had been raped before in Turkey.

    The coroner heard Miss Mitchell fell ill in the fortnight before she died and would rarely leave the house.

    Another friend, named as Willy, visited and suggested Shahin take Miss Mitchell to hospital but when he returned at around 5pm he found her unconscious.

    He then called an ambulance and Miss Mitchell was rushed to Fethiye State Hospital but later died July 16, 2012.

    Mr Tristram’s statement said: ‘If Shahin had taken her to hospital at 9am, would the outcome have been different?’

    Mr Bedford said he had only been given her cause of death as ‘respiratory failure’, and being of ‘pathological origin’, and that a second post mortem examination carried out in the UK was also inconclusive.

    However, two toxicology reports both said she had not consumed alcohol or drugs and there were no signs she was bruised or had suffered any injury.

    Mr Bedford said that Shahin had given Turkish police a statement in which he described Miss Mitchell as a ‘friend’.

    The inquest was told that Shahin had since vanished and that Turkish police were not investigating the matter further.

    Mr Bedford said: ‘There’s no evidence that the beatings, the alleged rapes or anything of that kind were a factor and the description from Steve and Willy of vomiting and sweats suggests a more disease-related problem.

    ‘I have no clinical evidence beyond that.’

    Mr Bedford said he had no option but to record an open verdict and that although there was scope for this to be re-examined should more information come to light – he doubted this would be the case.

    Speaking after the inquest Mr Mitchell warned other young women about the perils of emigrating to Turkey.

    ‘How many other people, young women, will move in the future, or have been to Turkey and fall into the same trap.

    ‘My advice to any young woman is that it’s not as safe a place as people think.

    ‘She was just looking for love and never actually found it.’

    Verdict: Open

    Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2274508/Blonde-34-died-raped-twice-beaten-Turkey-ironically-told-family-felt-safer-UK.html#ixzz2KCPKVBCB
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  • UK Fast-Track Reforms For Senior Police Positions

    UK Fast-Track Reforms For Senior Police Positions

    PoliceThe Home Secretary is expected to unveil a shake-up of police recruitment that will allow new starters to escape the compulsory two years on the beat.

    Under current rules all police must enter at constable rank, but the proposals to be unveiled by Theresa May later are understood to include direct entry at superintendent level.

    Ms May is also believed to be planning to change the law so foreign police chiefs will be able to run British forces for the first time.

    The overhaul is part of a package of reforms that were drawn up by ex-rail regulator Tom Winsor in the most wide-ranging review of police pay and conditions in more than 30 years.

    Under his proposals, “exceptional” applicants would have the chance to rise from civilian to inspector in just three years.

    Successful businessmen and women, along with members of the armed forces and the security services, should all be encouraged to apply to the fast-track scheme, Mr Winsor said.

    Mr Winsor, who is now Her Majesty’s Chief Inspector of Constabulary , previously said he wanted to end the notion of policing as an intellectually undemanding occupation.

    He added that the “brightest and best” applicants with skills “distinctly above those of factory workers” were needed.

    Metropolitan Police commissioner Sir Bernard Hogan-Howe told a policing conference earlier this month that it was time to “consider and support” direct entry.

    He added that he would like to see one in 10 senior officers recruited from outside the police force.

    In addition, a proposal to allow candidates from the US, Canada, Australia and New Zealand, among others, to front up forces in England and Wales is expected.

    Current legislation prevented US “supercop” Bill Bratton, former head of the New York police, applying to take charge of the Metropolitan Police in 2011.

    Mr Bratton gained a reputation for introducing bold measures to reduce crime, heading police departments in New York, Boston and Los Angeles.

    In his first two years at the helm of New York Police Department, reports of serious crime dropped 27%.

    But Mrs May dashed any chances of him becoming Britain’s top police officer when she underlined the importance of the Scotland Yard commissioner being a British citizen for national security reasons.

     

     

    Sky News

  • G4S police outsource deal collapses

    G4S police outsource deal collapses

    G4SMultimillion-pound plans by three police forces to outsource services to the firm at the centre of the Olympics security debacle have collapsed.

    Hertfordshire Police and Crime Commissioner David Lloyd said the Bedfordshire, Cambridgeshire and Hertfordshire Strategic Alliance had discontinued negotiations with G4S.

    The three forces were looking into working with G4S in a bid to save £73 million by outsourcing support functions.

    The proposals involved switching 1,100 roles, including human resources, IT and finance to the security contractor.

    But doubts were raised after the company was forced to admit severe failings over the Olympics security contract last summer, which led to police officers and 3,500 extra troops being deployed to support the operation.

    In a statement, Mr Lloyd said: “I have always said that I would make my decision once the evidence was received and assessed. It is now clear that the G4S framework contract through Lincolnshire Police was not suitable for the unique position of the three forces.”

    But he added that outsourcing to other companies would still be considered.

    Mr Lloyd said: “I am already in discussion with other market providers and will continue to talk with G4S about how they can assist policing support services in Hertfordshire. My clear position is that all elements of support work will be considered for outsourcing or other use of the market. I made my decision based on evidence and on the recommendations from the Chief Constables. I still believe that substantial elements of policing support services will be best delivered by the private sector and will ensure that this option is immediately pursued.”

    Kim Challis, chief executive of G4S Government and outsourcing solutions, said: “We have put forward a compelling proposition to the police forces of Bedfordshire, Cambridgeshire and Hertfordshire which would have guaranteed them savings of over £100 million over the next 10 years, allowing them to meet the financial challenge of the Comprehensive Spending Review without compromising on efficiency or public safety.

    “Our proposition was to operate back office services at the volume and scale required to deliver significant savings to forces, enabling them to concentrate their resources on frontline roles: it was never about replacing police officers. This has already proved to be the case in Lincolnshire, where we have a successful partnership which, in less than a year, has seen us deliver savings in running costs of around 16%. We continue to work with a number of signatory forces on the Lincolnshire Police contract, including Hertfordshire, to see how we can help them to generate the savings they need.”

     

    Sky News