‘Shameful’ that black boys in London more likely to die by 18 than white boys, says Met chief | Metropolitan police

The president of the Metropolitan police said that the possibility of dying more than white men until the age of 18 in London was “shameful ..
Sir Mark Rowley spoke to Sky News on Sunday morning Trevor Phillips, where racial inequality between the victims of crime and crime in the capital is a “difficult” issue for power.
Met Police Commissioner, Police and Black Communities, “Policing is very wrong and we become much more accurate today”, “But we still make mistakes. This is no doubt. I am as cruel as possible.”
He said: “The majority of our people are good people. But when this heritage is combined with the tragedy in which some of this crime is the most severe in black communities, this creates a real problem because the inheritance creates concern.”
“Black children growing up in London are not more likely to die when they are much more likely than white men,” the commissioner said. “This is embarrassing for the city. Difficulty for us, when we reach to overcome these problems, stop and search on the streets or get the operations you are looking for, without confrontation.
“The danger goes down to an environment with less confidence. And that makes it even more difficult. But the winners of it, [are] All criminals. “
“I am very determined to find a way to cross this, because if the policing in black communities can find a way to face these problems, we can grow up with white men in London, which is not what we see right now.”
Rowley said that policing is not the only area that requires examination, and that black men are more likely to be removed from schools more than white men. He said that the criminal justice system was “close to breakage ve and could be“ annoying için for civil servants.
He said: “What is annoying is that the system – and no system can be perfect – but when the system fails to turn the life of that person and make them straight and narrow, and this becomes just a doner gate.
“Thus, more successful prisons and probation may be better in terms of bringing people to a life that matches their way.”
After the bulletin promotion
Rowley supported the “Hayati” proposals called in the Criminal Justice System report published by Sir Brian Leveson this week. In addition to other changes, Leveson wanted some crimes to be tried without the jury.
He gave the Snaresbrook Crown Court in London, which he said he had more than 100 cases listed in 2029.
He said: “If he’s one of the bail… and if a criminal court that may be four years away is for a hearing… This is unacceptable, right?”




