The Asian Age

UK’s first woman top cop walks longest Yard

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London, Feb. 22: A woman will become Britain’s most senior police officer for the first time after the government announced on Wednesday that Cressida Dick is to be commission­er of the Metropolit­an Police.

Ms Dick, 56, will succeed Bernard Hogan-Howe as chief of Scotland Yard, in London, returning to the force after leaving two years ago for the Foreign Office.

“Cressida Dick is an exceptiona­l leader, and has a clear vision for the future of the Metropolit­an Police,” interior minister Amber Rudd said.

“She now takes on one of the most demanding, highprofil­e and important jobs in the UK policing against the backdrop of a heightened terror alert and evolving threats from fraud and cyber crime,” she added.

Mayor Sadiq Khan called it a “historic day for London and a proud day for me as mayor.”

Ms Dick’s appointmen­t is likely to stir controvers­y because of her involvemen­t in the fatal 2005 shooting of Jean Charles de Menezes, a Brazilian who was wrongly identified as a potential suicide bomber the day after four attempted bomb attacks in London. Ms Dick led the operation but was cleared of blame by a jury.

The family of De Menezes protested against her appointmen­t when it emerged that she was in the running for the top job. “We cannot be expected to accept that the most senior police officer in the country, a post that is expected to uphold the highest standards of profession­alism, to command public confidence... be filled by someone that is tainted by her failure to live up to any of those requiremen­ts,” they wrote in a letter.

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