Gloucestershire Echo

Looking at America - what we witnessed is truly shocking

- Martin Surl Police and Crime Commission­er for Gloucester­shire

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TO meet this newspaper’s print deadlines, I am required to submit copy for this column by the Tuesday before publicatio­n at the latest.

I leave the subject as late as possible to make it topical and stick to local issues to make it relevant.

I was about to submit this week’s offering when the latest pictures of the riots in America following the death of George Floyd appeared on TV.

It was easy to see why it was the first story, other than the daily update on coronaviru­s, to lead our national news bulletins.

What we have witnessed has been truly shocking – and before I continue, I accept that, so far, we have only seen what the broadcaste­rs choose to show us.

Due process must take its course and only then will we get the full picture.

That said, it appears very difficult to defend either events that lit the fuse or the authoritie­s’ response to it.

Let’s take the incident first. What possessed the officer to kneel on the neck of an alleged offender for eight minutes as has been reported?

Apart from the action itself, he must have known he was being filmed. He even appears to be engaging with the camera.

But what really disturbed me were the pleas of the victim begging to be released because he couldn’t breathe; crying for his mother fearing he was about to die.

The response from both sides, has been as violent as it was predictabl­e.

I was heartened by some of the older protestors, pleading with the young not to resort to retaliator­y violence but to find another way, and we must all support them in that endeavour.

Sadly, it is a familiar cycle and in a country where citizens have a legal right to own and carry assault weapons, is there any surprise the police response would be aggressive, though the images of heavily armed National Guardsmen throwing a ring of steel around the White House were alarming.

America may be the World’s greatest democracy yet these are recurring scenes that suggest it continues to struggle to purge itself of allegation­s of racism.

Would the police officer have acted the same had George Floyd been white is the troubling question at the heart of it.

It is said that what starts in America comes to the UK eventually. Fine for fashion and the arts, but here, where we police by consent, we must all strive together to ensure this is one trend that never takes hold.

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