Daily Mirror (Northern Ireland)
‘Catholics not joining PSNI due to collusion’
Chief Constable warning to MPS
HISTORICAL allegations of security force collusion are hampering police efforts to recruit more Catholics, the Chief Constable has told MPS.
Simon Byrne said the falling number of Catholic recruits was one of the PSNI’S “top worries” as he expressed concern about sliding down a “slippery slope” after peace process efforts to make the service more representative.
Giving evidence to a Westminster committee, Mr Byrne highlighted legacy claims about police colluding with paramilitaries during the Troubles as one of the obstacles.
He said the problem demonstrated the need to remove legacy investigations from the PSNI’S remit so it could focus on policing the present.
He added: “When I speak to people in communities but listen as well, there are some impediments which seem to be difficult for us.
“So the whole issue of legacy is one that will be cited as a reason for not joining the PSNI because of all those perceptions around collusion and, ‘What is the organisation I’m joining?’.
“Now, whether you accept that [collusion allegations] or not is a separate question.
“More than once we have asked that legacy is taken off the PSNI – it’s a barrier to recruitment from the Catholic community.”
On the dissident republican threat, Mr Byrne told MPS: “That makes it very difficult, particularly for colleagues from the Catholic community, to join because they have to have conversations about not telling their family per se sometimes, or moving away from friends, family and all sorts of networks, so it can isolate them.
“So we need to redouble our efforts and I think it’s only eventually when we get critical mass that we’ll achieve that.”
Mr Byrne, who was giving evidence on organised crime, said a return of the controversial 50/50 Protestant and Catholic recruitment policy was not something he was considering, but he would not rule it out in the future.
He added: “It would be foolish to discount entirely something like that returning.”
The policy was recommended by Lord Patten in peace process reforms to address the underrepresentation of officers from a nationalist background.
The measure ended in 2011 but a recent downturn in the number of Catholic recruits – linked to the dissident threat against them and their families – has prompted calls for its reintroduction. Mr Byrne noted many of the Catholic recruits who joined at the turn of the century would be retiring in coming years.
That, coupled with present-day reduced rates of Catholic recruitment, would see the PSNI go “backwards” in terms of efforts to be representative of the communities it serves.”
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