Tag: UK

  • UK’s ex-minister: Israel should have apologized

    UK’s ex-minister: Israel should have apologized

    Jack StrawIsrael should have apologized to Turkey for its deadly raid on the Mavi Marmara aid ship, but instead allowed relations to deteriorate, according to United Kingdom’s former Foreign Secretary Jack Straw.

    “Israel could – and should – have apologized in a full-hearted manner, but in a way that neither humiliated nor embarrassed them. Once the apology had been issued, and accepted by Turkey, both countries would have had a platform for the restoration of normal relations,” Straw wrote in a commentary for the Hürriyet Daily News.

    “Instead, relations have deteriorated, from tepid, then to cold, and now to freezing… Israel has only itself to blame,” he wrote. Comparing the situation today to the sympathy for Israel during the Six-Day War in 1967, Straw said Israel has become isolated due to “its arrogance; its cavalier approach to international norms; and the inability of its leaders to act in a statesmanlike, strategic way.”

    Click here to read the full commentary by United Kingdom’s former Foreign Secretary Jack Straw.

    Hurriyet Daily News

     

  • UK: David Cameron calls in US ‘supercop’ William J Bratton to stop England riots

    UK: David Cameron calls in US ‘supercop’ William J Bratton to stop England riots

    William J BrattonUS ‘Supercop’ William J Bratton, who fought gang violence and street crime in New York and Los Angeles, is to advise David Cameron on how best to deal with recent riots in cities including London, Manchester and Birmingham.

    Mr Bratton will meet the prime minister next month to share his knowledge and provide tips on how the UK can avoid further disorder.

    He believes making police forces more ethnically diverse could be one way of reducing racial tension and said the lessons learned in previous rioting in the US can be applied to the UK.

    Now working as a security consultant and chairman of Manhattan-based security firm Kroll, the 63-year-old claimed law enforcers in the UK need to work more with community leaders and civil rights groups to calm racial tensions.

    ‘Part of the issue going forward is how to make policing more attractive to a changing population,’ he said, pointing to the success of similar initiatives in New York and LA.

    Earlier this month, Mr Bratton took part in a panel at the second annual National Sports Safety and Security Conference and Exhibition, New Orleans, where fan violence was high on the agenda.

    Metro

     

  • UK Birmingham riots: Intense anger after deaths of three young men

    UK Birmingham riots: Intense anger after deaths of three young men

    forensicCommunity leaders appeal for calm after three British Asians rammed by carload of suspected looters in Winson Green

    Community leaders in Birmingham are working all-out to calm intense anger in the city’s British Asian community over the deaths of three young men who were rammed by a carload of suspected looters.

    West Midlands police arrested a man near the scene and recovered a vehicle, which forensics experts are examining. They later launched a murder inquiry.

    Groups of residents in Winson Green, the inner-city area where the men were killed as they tried to protect local businesses in the early hours of Wednesday, openly warned of inter-communal violence if the murder inquiry fails to produce rapid results.

    Their anger was passed on by the local Labour MP for Ladywood, Shabana Mahmood, and the Bishop of Aston, Rt Rev Anthony Watson, who joined a meeting at Dudley Road mosque, which locals claimed was on looters’ hitlist of targets where money might be found. The victims, brothers Shazad and Munir Hussein, 32 and 30, and Haroon Chohan, 19, were among some 80 young men who turned out after a gang tried to ransack the nearby Jet petrol station on Monday night.

    The bishop warned of possible reprisals and events “potentially having an ugly race dimension”. Shortly after he spoke, a screaming and swearing African-Caribbean woman challenged a group of British Asians in a side street off Dudley Road, saying: “Your attitude is how riots start,” before a friend bundled her into a car and drove off.

    Another group of British Asian men said they had seen the fatal incident, which was over in seconds but saw the victims flung into the air as a black Audi rammed into them. One, who declined to give his name, said: “Of course it was deliberate. No way was it an accident. The driver went on to the pavement and rammed them. He knew what he was doing.”

    He said that four carloads of young African-Caribbeans had cruised down Dudley Road and there had been no doubt about what they were planning. He said that he had given evidence to the police.

    “These were bright young guys we’ve lost,” he said. “They knew the meaning of work and got themselves decent jobs. The brothers had a carwash which was another business which might have been targeted, and Haroon worked as a mechanic in a garage.

    “They were well-known round here. One of them only got married in March and his wife was expecting their first child in four months’ time.”

    The bishop said that extended families were part of a very strong network in the community – he had met Haroon’s uncle and older brother – which added to the strength of feelings.

    Haroon’s father Jahan joined appeals for calm, holding a photograph of his son in the doorway of his home at Winson Green. He said: “He was trying to help his community and he has been killed.

    “He was a very well-liked kid. I can’t describe to anybody what it feels like to lose a son. He was the youngest of three, and anything I ever wanted done, I would always ask Haroon to sort it out for me.

    “A day from now, maybe two days from now, the whole world will forget and nobody will care.”

    Calling for calm and no attempt at revenge, he said: “I don’t blame the government, I don’t blame the police, I don’t blame nobody. It was his destiny and his fate, and now he’s gone.”

    Long queues of friends and relatives waited outside the house to pay their respects as other family members spoke of the tragedy. Numbers increased in the early afternoon, in spite of the onset of rain which police hoped would deter a third night of violence.

    Sobia Nazia, a cousin to the brothers, said: “They were brothers to everybody. They used to look out for everyone. They were heroes. I heard people describing them on Facebook as brothers to one and all.

    “People who only just knew of them haven’t slept all night. It’s made a huge impact, more than we thought.”

    Another mourner embraced Sobia and the victims’ younger sister who was welcoming mourners into the house, and said in Urdu: “They died martyrs.”

    The sister was too upset to reply, but Sorbia said firmly: “We don’t want anything more to happen – just the culprits brought to justice. We don’t want other families to suffer. It’s the youth. They have no knowledge, they have no jobs and they are bored.”

    Feelings have also been inflamed by an alleged 20-minute delay before an ambulance arrived, with other locals saying that police riot vans had got in the way. Frantic efforts to resuscitate the men failed and two died at the scene. The third died shortly afterwards at the nearby City hospital.

    Other men said that they had been told by overstretched police to protect their own businesses. He said: “They were too busy looking after all the big places in the centre, chasing the mob all night rather than cracking down.”

    For the second day running, British Asian businesses in areas such as Soho Road, the bazaar-like mile of shops in Handsworth, were guarded by large numbers of men.

    The incident plunged England’s second city into fresh tension after a night which saw sporadic raids on shops but a much lower level of violence than on Monday night. A determined attempt by a fluid mob of some 200 looters to break into the iconic Bull Ring centre was quickly foiled, partly thanks to fences and four privately-hired dog teams.

    Over £500,000 damage was done on Monday to Emporio Armani in the Bull Ring while security men with fire extinguishers kept looters out of Harvey Nichols.

    More than 80 arrests were made on Tuesday and 19 men appeared in court in the city on Wednesday morning.

    The Guardian


  • UK Prime Minister: We will do “everything necessary” to restore order

    UK Prime Minister: We will do “everything necessary” to restore order

    london riotsPrime Minister David Cameron has said the Government will do “everything necessary” to restore order following the third night of violence and looting across London and other cities.

    The Prime Minister has condemned the “sickening” scenes that have been witnessed and called the violence “criminality – pure and simple” which needs to be confronted and defeated.

    Mr Cameron praised the great bravery shown by police and extended huge sympathy to those affected.

    Following a meeting of COBR(A), the emergency planning committee, Mr Cameron announced that all police leave has been cancelled and tonight there will be 16,000 police on the streets with reinforcements from across the country.

    There have been 450 arrests over the last three days and the PM said he was determined that justice will be done and those involved will “feel the full force of the law”.

    “We will make sure that court procedures and processes are speeded up and people should expect to see more, many more arrests in the days to come.  I am determined, the government is determined that justice will be done and these people will see the consequences of their actions.

    “And I have this very clear message to those people who are responsible for this wrongdoing and criminality: you will feel the full force of the law and if you are old enough to commit these crimes you are old enough to face the punishment.  And to these people I would say this: you are not only wrecking the lives of others, you’re not only wrecking your own communities; you are potentially wrecking your own life too.”

    Mr Cameron also announced that Parliament will be recalled on Thursday for one day to discuss the developments.

    Prime Minister’s Office



  • UK capital London sees second night of clashes

    UK capital London sees second night of clashes

    EnfieldClashes broke out between police and rioters in Enfield, north London, tonight, in a second night of violence in the capital.

    Dozens of riot police officers, some with dogs and batons, charged at a group of more than 100 youths after the windows of dozens of shops were smashed.

    Police were called to the town centre at around 6:30pm after youths attacked police cars, while high street shops came under attack from bricks and slabs of concrete, according to witness reports.

    Running battles between the youths and police continued through the evening, as bricks were hurled at police vans attempting to lockdown the area.

    Pictures posted on the social networking site Twitter showed an HMV store which appeared to have been looted and a number of police vans parked outside a Tesco, which had earlier been the scene of some scuffles.

    The Metropolitan police said it had extra resources out across London following the troubles in Tottenham on Saturday night, which saw buildings, police cars and a bus burnt out in the high road, resulting in 55 arrests.

    Riots broke out after protests over the death of Mark Duggan, who was shot by police, turned violent.

    Several arrests have been made after shops were looted, according to Scotland Yard.

    Many shopkeepers in Enfield closed early, fearing a repeat of yesterday’s violence.

    Ben MacDonald, who lives in Tottenham, said as he dropped a friend in Enfield earlier today he saw that the HMV and T Mobile shops had been vandalised by a group of teenagers.

    He said: “A police car turned up trying to deter them, but instead they turned on the police car, jumped on the roof and absolutely trashed it.”

    Local resident and freelance journalist, Chris January, told theTelegraph: “It’s a tinderbox at the moment, there’s 300 youths aged between 12-18 waiting by the station masked up. We’re just waiting for it to kick off. There’s riot police everyone and they’ve closed the station.”

    Nick de Bois, Conservative MP for Enfield North, said the disorder in Enfield was encouraged via social media websites:

    “There seems to have been a very well organised campaign over social media to try to engineer trouble here in Enfield. It has almost become a self-fulfilling prophecy,” he told LBC radio.

    “There is no element of injustice that they are here for. They are here quite simply to cause trouble, to hurt local businesses and shops. This is nothing more than illegal criminal behaviour and I just hope that if the police conclude their investigation, that they do make arrests and those that are guilty receive a serious punishment from the courts.”

    The Telegraph

     

  • UK: Police Chief constable and his deputy arrested and suspended

    UK: Police Chief constable and his deputy arrested and suspended

    Cleveland police chief coCleveland police chiefs suspended after arrestsChief constable and his deputy suspended following questioning over fraud and corruption allegations

    The chief constable of Cleveland police and his deputy have been suspended by their police authority after being arrested by detectives investigating fraud and corruption.
    Sean Price, the chief constable, Derek Bonnard, his deputy, and the former force solicitor Caroline Llewellyn, were taken in for questioning in the early hours of Wednesday as part of a wide-ranging investigation into allegations of corrupt practices.
    The arrest of the two most senior officers in the force has left Cleveland police in crisis and comes after the resignation three months ago of the chairman of the police authority, which is also under investigation.
    Price is also the subject of a separate investigation by the Independent Police Complaints Commission (IPCC) that he used “undue influence” to get an individual appointed to a position within the force.
    Price, Bonnard, and Llewellyn, who recently received £213,379 in a voluntary redundancy payoff, were questioned by detectives at a police station in North Yorkshire on suspicion of misconduct in a public office, corrupt practice and fraud by abuse of position. The criminal inquiry, being run by Warwickshire police with the help of officers from North Yorkshire, is understood to be a major and complex investigation that includes an examination of the awarding of business contracts by the police authority.
    As part of the investigation searches were carried out at properties linked to those who were arrested. Shortly after the three were taken in for questioning members of Cleveland police authority – which has previously strongly backed the chief constable – held an extraordinary meeting behind closed doors where they voted to suspend Price and Bonnard.
    In a statement a spokesman for the authority said: “Cleveland police authority can confirm that it has been made aware of potential conduct matters involving chief officers of Cleveland police.
    “The authority can confirm that two chief officers have been suspended from their posts with Cleveland police while the investigations are being considered. It should be emphasised that suspension is a neutral act and it should not be inferred from the decision to suspend that the potential conduct matters have been proven in respect to the two chief officers concerned.”
    The authority added that it had referred the matters to the IPCC.
    The inquiry by Warwickshire police began after a review by Her Majesty’s Inspectorate of Constabulary into the way some individuals within Cleveland Police Authority “may have conducted some of its business”.
    After the review misconduct issues were passed to the IPCC and the criminal investigation began under the command of Keith Bristow, chief constable of Warwickshire, using North Yorkshire detectives.
    A spokesman for Warwickshire police said: “Police officers conducting a criminal investigation into a number of people with current or past associations with Cleveland police authority and the manner in which the authority may have conducted some of its business have arrested three people on suspicion of misconduct in a public office, fraud by abuse of position and corrupt practice.
    “Two men and a woman were arrested and have been taken to a police station in North Yorkshire where they will be interviewed.”
    Shortly after the Warwickshire investigation began in May the chairman of Cleveland police authority, Dave McLuckie, resigned. He could not be contacted yesterday but has denied any wrongdoing.
    The IPCC inquiry into Price is ongoing. It is investigating an allegation which emerged out of the HMIC review, that the chief constable used “undue influence” to get a job for McLuckie’s daughter.
    Price has responded to the IPCC inquiry by threatening legal action. “I completely refute the accusation, which I regard as malicious as I took no part in the recruitment process,” he said. “I further believe the allegation is mischievous in seeking to cause comparison with recent events in other forces.
    “I want the matter to be cleared up as soon as possible and I am sure that everyone will realise the damage that such an allegation could have on my personal standing and confidence in the force. In addition, I am taking legal advice regarding any action I may take in the future.”
    Price, who has been chief constable of the force since 2003, is on a remuneration package of £191,905 this year. The salary includes a payment of £54,421, which the police authority agreed to pay him to stop him being poached by other forces.
    Under his watch crime has gone down in the Cleveland force, one of the smallest in the country.
    Cleveland police would not comment on the arrests. They referred all inquiries to Warwickshire police.
    The IPCC said in a statement: “The IPCC can confirm that it has been informed of developments and would anticipate referrals from the police authority.”

    The Guardian