Women's Trust in Metropolitan London Police
"Quite rightly, as far as I can see, my team felt that this is now an unlawful gathering which poses a considerable risk to people's health.""I don't think anybody who was not in the operation can actually pass a detailed comment on the rightness and wrongness... This is fiendishly difficult policing."Police Commissioner Cressida Dick"[I am] deeply concerned [by the scenes on Clapham Common and that Dame Cressida had] committed to reviewing how this was handled.""I plan to chair a meeting of the government's crime and justice task force on Monday to] look at what further action we need to take to protect women and ensure our streets are safe.""The death of Sarah Everard must unite us in determination to drive out violence against women and girls and make every part of the criminal justice system work to protect and defend them."British Prime Minister Boris Johnson
Many who gathered at Clapham Common held signs protesting violence against women Reuters |
Thousands
of women made certain they appeared at a Saturday night vigil for Sarah
Everard, 33, a marketing executive who was abducted as she walked home
alone after parting with a friend, and never reached home. A police
officer has been found responsible for her death. A shocking revelation
that has infuriated and mobilized British women to protest their lack of
safety in public, where many women fear to be out alone on the streets
at night.
Organizers
had cancelled the vigil after police had persuaded them that under the
circumstances with lockdown in effect, its legality and its safety were
under question. Despite the cancellation women decided to attend and to
take part in the vigil. "We're
still in a pandemic, unlawful gatherings are unlawful gatherings,
officers have to take action if people are putting themselves massively
at risk", stated Metropolitan Police Commissioner Cressida Dick.
This,
in the wake of a violent police intervention at the vigil. And it was a
step much too far for the women in attendance at the vigil and later
for women throughout Britain who were not in attendance but were
infuriated by the clumsy use of aggressive police tactics against the
women at the vigil. Where some women were manhandled, violently sent to
the ground, manacled and placed under arrest by London's finest.
The
public, infuriated, are calling for the dismissal of Commissioner Dick,
and she has responded by defending her force for their forceful action
under circumstances where she claims the public's safety and security
were at risk. By the presence in mourning of thousands of women,
grieving over the murder of a young woman, vulnerable and alone in the
dark on a London Street, where an officer of the London Police committed
an odiously grievous crime.
One
woman, with flaming red hair, wearing a mask, was badly manhandled,
thrown to the ground surrounded by police, stifling her right to protest
in a free and open society against the murder by one of their own of
one of her own. Arms behind her back, handcuffed the way a violent
criminal would be for expressing her sorrow and fury at the helplessness
of women preyed upon not only by violent men-at-large by by the very
security force whose job it is to protect them.
Photo by Mario Mitsis/WENN |
"We absolutely did not want to be in a position where enforcement action was necessary. But we were placed in this position because of the overriding need to protect people's safety. Hundreds of people were packed tightly together, posing a very real risk of easily transmitting [sic] COVID-19.""A small minority of people began chanting at officers, pushing and throwing items."
Photo by Mario Mitsis/WENN |
"[I attended the vigil to support women who] cannot walk down the streets themselves because of the fear of men.""[The police actions were] disgraceful.""Before then, it was just peaceful protest. I was arrested by police for standing there. I wasn't doing anything.""They threw me to the floor. They have pictures of me on the floor being arrested.""And I'm 5-foot-2 and I weigh nothing."Patsy Stevenson, dangerous red-haired woman threatening a platoon of London Police
At the vigil one individual smashed the rear view window of a police van, while many others shouted "arrest your own" and "shame on you".
Politicians from across the political spectrum found reason as they
viewed the scenes of police action circulated online, to criticize the
handling of the situation by the Metropolitan Police. Four people,
according to police were arrested for "public order offences and for breaches of the Health Protection Regulations".
There were "many
missed opportunities throughout the day for police to work with
organizers to create a completely safe vigil so that people could go and
have a moment of sorrow and a moment of resistance",
remarked the opposition Labour Party's point person on domestic
violence, Jess Phillips. A national outpouring of grief and anger
resulted from the brutal killing of Sarah Everard, a young life lost, no
less than at the hands of a police officer.
She
was seen last at 9:30 p.m. March 3, wending her way home from a south
London home of a friend. Her killer, Wayne Couzens, 48, left her body in
woods in Kent, where it was later found. He was charged with kidnap and
murder. With the force since 2018 he was tasked with patrolling
diplomatic premises of embassies. He had held posts at Downing Street
and the Palace of Westminster.
Labels: Fear of Violence, Female Vulnerability, Metropolitan London Police, Murder, United Kingdom
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