The Herald

Boris meets the bobbies

- By Tom Torrance

BORIS Johnson has promised “all the money that is needed” will be given to fund the thousands of officers required to police the global COP26 climate summit taking place in Glasgow later this year.

With leaders coming in from across the world for the crucial climate change talks, the Prime Minister said about 10,000 officers a day will be required at the event and he is “totally committed” to funding the operation.

The Prime Minister discussed the policing of the summit with senior officers from Police Scotland – including Chief Constable Iain Livingston­e – at the start of his two-day visit to Scotland yesterday.

Mr Johnson said: “We are totally committed to funding the police and to making sure that they have the resources that they need to do what’s necessary. We think that there’ll be about 10,000 a day.”

He said police in Scotland will be supported by about 7,000 officers from elsewhere in the UK.

He stressed work will be carried out to ensure police operations continue to take place normally during the summit.

The Prime Minister said it is important “we don’t have a situation in which all the officers from around the country are sucked into one big operation”.

Speaking to reporters at Police Scotland’s Tulliallan training college in Fife, Mr Johnson continued: “We’ve got to make sure that policing takes place normally throughout the whole of the UK during the COP26 summit in November, so we’ll be putting all the money that’s needed to make sure that happens.”

He said the UK Government is “continuing to work with the Scottish Government” on preparatio­ns for the summit.

Mr Johnson added that he is “always delighted” to work with Holyrood ministers – but First Minister Nicola Sturgeon said earlier it is “strange” that he had refused her offer to have talks in Edinburgh.

Ms Sturgeon had wanted to meet the Prime Minister at her official residence, Bute House, saying his refusal to meet her is a “missed opportunit­y”, but adding “that’s on him”.

She told broadcaste­rs: “This would be the first opportunit­y, given Covid, for us to sit down, appropriat­ely socially distanced, and have a face-to-face chat.

“I think it would have been a good opportunit­y. I was getting ready to welcome him to Bute House today.

“There’s lots that Boris Johnson and I fundamenta­lly disagree on but we both lead government­s that are trying to get our countries through Covid and so there’s a lot for us to co-operate on.”

In a letter to Ms Sturgeon, the Prime Minister said that while he is “keen to arrange an in-person meeting”, it had previously been agreed to set up “a structured forum for ongoing engagement between the Government and the devolved administra­tions” in the UK.

 ?? Picture: James Glossop ?? Boris Johnson strides out with Chief Constable Iain Livingston­e during a visit to the Scottish Police College at Tulliallan near Kincardine, Fife. The Prime Minister promised ‘all the money that is needed’ will be given to fund the thousands of officers required for the COP26 summit Glasgow later this year
Picture: James Glossop Boris Johnson strides out with Chief Constable Iain Livingston­e during a visit to the Scottish Police College at Tulliallan near Kincardine, Fife. The Prime Minister promised ‘all the money that is needed’ will be given to fund the thousands of officers required for the COP26 summit Glasgow later this year

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