Daily Mail

Memo to new Met chief: JUST STOP PUSSYFOOTI­NG AROUND!

THE NHS Covid booster informatio­n leaflet comes in 29 languages including, ominously, Russian. Do they know something we don’t?

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LEGITIMATE protest is one thing. But this self-indulgent carnival of madness has to end.’ I could have written that this week, after the police gave Just Stop Oil lunatics carte blanche to bring London streets to a standstill.

But, actually, I wrote it 13 months ago, the day after eco-mentalists staged a sit-in on the M25. It took several hours of tortuous negotiatio­n before police finally removed them. To be fair to the Old d Bill, it was the first time they’d had to deal with a bunch of maniacs risking life and limb by plonking themselves down in the fast lane of our busiest motorway.

Since then though, they’ve had plenty of opportunit­ies to take stock and react to remove those taking part in similar disruptive action. Yet every time they flunked it. On one occasion, the officer in charge was overheard asking these anarchists if there was anything she could get them nice cuppa tea, perhaps? After that incident caused widespread public outrage, not least among the thousands of drivers caught up in the mayhem, we might have expected the police to respond to public fury by getting tough with these self-appointed, save-theplanet nutcases.

No such luck. This week, police stood back and watched for hours as the same gang of fanatics repeatedly blocked roads, preventing fire engines and ambulances responding to emergency calls — not to mention causing the maximum possible inconvenie­nce to law-abiding citizens simply trying to go about their business.

It all kicked off in The Mall, outside Buckingham Palace.

The cops were there in minutes, but instead of dragging the demonstrat­ors to the side of the road, they started diverting traffic. Same story elsewhere. Eventually, they did make some arrests, but only after specialist ‘liaison officers’ had been brought in to ask if they were sitting comfortabl­y.

On Wednesday, the new Met Commission­er Mark Rowley tried to pretend that his officers didn’t have the legal powers to move the demonstrat­ors, since they weren’t causing ‘serious disruption’. Cobblers.

What would you call deliberate­ly causing gridlock in London, if not serious disruption? And since

Rowley joined the police in 1987, one presumes he’s heard of the Public Order Act, which makes it an offence to behave in a way likely to cause a breach of the peace.

Given that angry motorists were climbing out of their vehicles and confrontin­g the Just Stop Oil mob, and would cheerfully have seen them manhandled on to the pavement and clubbed like baby seals, surely that constitute­s a breach of the peace.

Especially as Met officers recently threatened to arrest an antimonarc­hy demonstrat­or who held up a placard reading ‘Not My King’, on the grounds that it could upset royalists and provoke them to violence. Is Rowley seriously trying to suggest that had the eco-nuts blocked the Mall during the Queen’s funeral, his officers would have let them stay there all day while the cortege was re-routed?

What do you think? Rowley took over in September shortly before the Queen’s death. But her funeral wasn’t his first big test, as some have claimed. Preparatio­ns for that had been going on for years, if not decades.

No, his real first big test was this week, when a handful of anarchists decided to bring chaos to millions of Londoners. And he failed miserably. It gives me no pleasure to write this. I’ve never met Rowley, but people whose opinion I respect rate him highly.

He seemed like the right man to turn the Met round after the disastrous tenures of Bernard HyphenHowe and Dick of Dock Green.

Perhaps he still is. It’s early days. And at least he spared us from

Commission­er Neil Basu, best friend of the late George Floyd and someone who thinks the fastestgro­wing terror threat to Britain comes from the ‘far-Right’.

Rowley has made some encouragin­g noises, such as promising his officers will investigat­e every single burglary in future.

But why should we believe him when he can’t even be bothered to keep the streets of our capital city open in the face of a deranged protest by a tiny number of treehuggin­g headbanger­s?

Policing in Britain is in crisis. Specialist units such as the antiterror squad and the team which has just recorded some spectacula­r success against County Lines gangsters do a fantastic job. So do those brave coppers who put their lives on the line to keep us safe.

It’s everyday, routine keeping the peace, patrolling the streets and preventing crime which has been abandoned. I know it’s not Rowley’s bailiwick, but when knifemen struck at 9.30am in the City of London — the world’s financial powerhouse — there wasn’t a policeman in sight.

It was left to members of the public to ‘take the law into their own hands’ and tackle the criminals — just as van drivers and cabbies have been forced to confront Just Stop Oil because the police refuse to do so.

Those coppers who stood and watched the eco-loons this week

not personally to blame. It is the officer class, brainwashe­d by the Leftwing freemasonr­y Common Purpose, who are responsibl­e

the indulgent attitude towards everything from

climate change’ activists to rampant drug use.

Since the first XR months ago, I’ve the police — and

take such a softly, softly approach towards, say, Millwall supporters angry at a home defeat lying down in the Old Kent Road, or Ukip blocking a motorway to protest against illegal immigratio­n?

Ask a silly question. They’d send in the heavy mob and start cracking skulls immediatel­y.

We’ve seen service station petrol pumps vandalised, print works blockaded, bridges closed, airports and public transport disrupted by XR and its spin- offs. Yet every time, they’ve been allowed to get away with it.

NONE of this is legitimate protest, with any tangible goal. It’s Fantasy Island anarchy. These selfish, privileged, overgrown children with obvious ‘ mental health issues’ are waging war against civil society, against working people, against the weak and vulnerable they claim to champion.

How long before someone dies after a stroke victim is stopped from reaching hospital?

Mark Rowley says he wants to restore trust in the police. He could begin by putting a stop to this carnival of madness. Right now. Otherwise more angry citizens will start ‘taking the law into their own hands’ and there will be blood on the streets.

Yesterday, cops descended quickly on another Just Stop Oil sit- down in South London and handcuffed most of those involved. They made 20 arrests.

Maybe the message is finally getting through. Or else they just wanted to beat the Millwall supporters to it . . .

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