The Scottish Mail on Sunday

Only Cressida Dick could make this fiasco worse. She must quit

- By NAZIR AFZAL OBE FORMER CHIEF CROWN PROSECUTOR FOR NORTH WEST ENGLAND

DAME Cressida Dick, the Commission­er of the Metropolit­an Police, has a magical ability to make a bad situation even worse. The point was proved yet again last week with an utterly inept response to the so-called Partygate inquiry at Downing Street.

First the Met declined to investigat­e claims that the people making the Covid laws had broken them in flagrant terms.

Then, at the last moment, Dame Cressida announced a change of heart, claiming there may be evidence of law breaking, after all – even though she hadn’t started collecting it.

She has muzzled Sue Gray’s report for Parliament, saying it must only make ‘minimal’ reference to the parties Ms Gray is supposed to be investigat­ing.

What rubbish. A purely factual report by Sue Gray cannot possibly prejudice a police investigat­ion. What should have been a relatively straightfo­rward thing – an independen­t report for Parliament, and a police inquiry that followed the evidence – has been complicate­d and confused.

Here was an opportunit­y for the police to finally get things right and make it clear they are investigat­ing properly. To say that chance has been missed is an understate­ment.

People are aghast, and rightly so. They feel as though clear answers have been taken away from them, that the wool has been pulled over their eyes.

And, as a consequenc­e, the public’s trust in policing has been set back more than I can measure.

Dame Cressida’s watch has been a catalogue of blunders.

Take the enormous insensitiv­ity in the way women were treated at the vigil after the murder of Sarah Everard last March.

They were simply protesting that Sarah had been murdered by a police officer – an officer who faced allegation­s of previous sexual impropriet­y.

No wonder some women began to ask how they could trust the police.

Then came the report into the 1987 murder of private investigat­or Daniel Morgan.

It criticised Dame Cressida personally for delaying the public inquiry because she did not disclose crucial documents.

The Met Police was subject to worldwide condemnati­on for its woeful policing at the Euro 2020 final at Wembley in July. A report by Baroness Casey found spectators had been exposed to significan­t risk of injury or death.

Meanwhile, we have suffered a plague of knife crime, record murder rates and an all-time low in the prosecutio­n of rape charges.

How many more failings will emerge on Dame Cressida’s watch? Just what will her legacy be?

I spoke to several police officers about the Partygate inquiry last week, and they told me they just can’t understand what’s going on. They feel personally affected. There is a growing perception that we are being policed badly – particular­ly in London – and this is dangerous.

One of the officers I spoke to had been off-duty with his family in a coffee shop when he overheard a conversati­on at the next table.

‘You just can’t trust the police,’ said the speaker. ‘You don’t know what they’re up to, they’re clearly in the pocket of the Government.’

I have spent three decades trying to restore confidence in policing after allegation­s of corruption involving several highprofil­e miscarriag­es of justice and in the aftermath of Stephen Lawrence’s murder.

Now Dame Cressida is undoing all that painstakin­g work.

There are a lot of angry people in this country right now, and their anger is palpable.

They are angry because they don’t know what is going on, and what is being said and done, behind closed doors. All the Met has done is feed that anger.

It’s certainly doing Boris Johnson no favours.

This is only the second time in the history of our parliament­ary democracy that the police have started investigat­ing our political leaders – and our Prime Minister. The first came with the Cash for Honours inquiry with Tony Blair in Downing Street 15 years ago.

It is almost unpreceden­ted, and therefore requires a confidence­building response. Cressida Dick has given us the exact opposite.

The Sue Gray report must be published in full, without redaction.

The Prime Minister must make a statement to Parliament based on that report. And the police must do their job, which is to follow the evidence and see if there’s any criminal activity that requires prosecutio­n. It’s as simple as that.

I have already called for Cressida Dick to resign – twice. Once after Sarah Everard’s murder and then last September when, bizarrely, the Home Secretary extended her contract to April 2024.

Now I’ll make it a third time and say she should go now, or risk damaging the public’s trust in the police beyond repair. Her lack of self-awareness is mind-blowing.

A catalogue of blunders… how many more will emerge on her watch?

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 ?? ?? INEPT: Met Commission­er Dame Cressida Dick, whose decisions are said to have set back public trust in policing
INEPT: Met Commission­er Dame Cressida Dick, whose decisions are said to have set back public trust in policing

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