What happened to the Rishi Sunak I knew at school?
Sarah Everard’s death caused such shockwaves in British society that it was impossible for the police and politicians to stay away from it. This is not just because of the visceral reaction of so many women to a case that so many of them can relate to in their own fears about trying to go about their own business. It is also because of those missed opportunities to intervene, which are not unique to Couzens. In so many cases, whether involving a police officer or not, there are red flags about a man’s behaviour long before he turns to sexual violence and murder. Whether or not Dick feels she should take responsibility for the fact that her force was overlooked those warnings, she will have to provide an answer, not just regarding what happened in this case, but about how she will change things to ensure that similar failings don’t lead to another case.
Harriet Harman’s letter to Cressida Dick
Dear Commissioner,
Following the heartbreaking and horrifying killing of Sarah Everard by a serving Metropolitan Police officer, women’s confidence in the police will have been shattered. Women need to be confident that the police are there to make them safe, not to put them at risk. Women need to be able to trust the police, not to fear them.
I have written to the Home Secretary to set out a number of actions which must be taken to rebuild the shattered confidence of women in the police service
I think it is not possible for you to lead these necessary actions in the Metropolitan Police. I am sure that you must recognise this, and I ask you to resign to enable these changes to be taken through and for women to be able to have justified confidence in the police.
Yours sincerely,
Harriet Harman QC MP
Harriet Harman’s letter to Priti Patel
Dear Priti,
I am writing to you following the horrifying and heartbreaking evidence that has come out in the sentencing hearing of Wayne Couzens for the killing of Sarah Everard.
Women must be able to have confidence in the police. They must be able to trust them, not fear them. A serving police officer abducted Sarah Everard using his powers of arrest in order to then rape and kill her. The confidence of women in the police will have been shattered. It is clear that there had been all too many warning signs about him which had been swept under the carpet. It cannot be rebuilt with the attempt to reassure that this was just, as the Metropolitan Police Commissioner said, one “bad’un”.
Women’s confidence in the police can only be rebuilt with substantive and immediate change and so I propose the following:
1. All serving officers against whom there is an allegation of violence against a woman must be suspended. 2. There must be a new rule that there is immediate suspension of any officer against whom an allegation of violence against a woman is made. 3. On conviction or admission of an offence of violence against women an officer must be immediately dismissed from the force. 4. As part of the pre-screening of recruits to the police there must be a scrutiny of their attitudes to violence against women including engagement of violence during sex. 5. There must be fresh checks on any officer who transfers between forces for allegations of violence against women. 6. All current serving officers must complete a course which teaches them to examine their own attitudes to violence against women and recognise signs in their colleagues. 7. Failing to report a fellow officer for an allegation of violence against women must be treated as gross misconduct leading to dismissal.
I think it is impossible for the Metropolitan Police Commissioner Dame Cressida Dick to oversee this programme and I have therefore called on her to resign.
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