- My Account
- Logout
- Register
- Login
Asian police officer wins THIRD race prejudice payout
Related Articles
04 June 2008
An Asian police officer who was twice paid compensation for racial discrimination has won another five-figure sum for more mistreatment.
Detective Sergeant Gurpal Virdi has been awarded £70,400 after being passed over for promotion for having exposed racial discrimination at Scotland Yard.
Today the 49-year-old Sikh called on Met Commissioner Sir Ian Blair to bring in tough new measures to stamp out discrimination because 'no amount of training appeared to be working'.
Victory: Detective Sergeant Gurpal Virdi, who has won more than £300,000 in payouts
The payout means he has received more than £300,000 from the Met in compensation for racial persecution.
An industrial tribunal heard that Sgt Virdi was told he could not become a detective inspector because members of a promotion panel had been prejudiced against him by his previous victories.
In August 2000, Sgt Virdi was awarded £150,000 by a tribunal for racial discrimination by the Met when he was unfairly dismissed from the force.
He had been sacked after being wrongly accused of sending racist hate mail to black and Asian officers at Hanwell police station.
He was reinstated in 2002 and an internal investigation found major failings in what was seen as a landmark case in race relations inside the police service.
Sir John Stevens, then Commissioner, apologised and agreed Sgt Virdi should be paid another £90,000 compensation by the force for 'injury to his feelings'.
On his return to duty he worked for assistant commissioner Tarique Ghaffur, the Met's most senior Asian officer, on community issues and policy.
In 2005 Sgt Virdi was presented by Sir Ian with the Police Long Service and Good Conduct Medal.
Encouraged by senior officers, he applied for promotion to detective inspector at a time when the Met had a shortage.
He was endorsed by his line manager and it was agreed that he satisfied all the official criteria.
However, he was turned down by a review panel and his appeal was rejected.
The employment tribunal stated: 'The appeal panel, at the very least subconsciously, was affected by their knowledge of the claimant and the action he had taken.'
Sgt Virdi said: 'If Sir Ian Blair is serious about tackling victimisation and discrimination, then he must take some form of disciplinary action.
'Having spent nearly 10 years fighting discrimination in the Met, I am delighted that the tribunal has once again decided in my favour.
'With four years left to serve I am looking forward to continuing my career with an unblemished record.'
Solicitor Arpita Dutt, of Russell, Jones and Walker, added: 'Following a record race discrimination payout to Mr Virdi and having been subject to three inquiries it is disconcerting that the Met has failed to properly implement recommendations and learn lessons to prevent the repeat victimisation of him.
'Mr Virdi's career progression has been blocked by the actions of senior officers in the Metropolitan Police Service.
'The tribunal considered not only future earnings but also the pension payments he would have received if he had retired as a detective inspector. I am delighted he has received just compensation.'
Sgt Virdi joined the Met as a constable in May 1982 and is set to retire having completed 30 years' service in 2012.
Sarah Drury, vice chairman of the Metropolitan Police Federation, said: 'We hope the Met will learn the lessons and treat all officers in a fair and transparent manner.'
A Met spokesman said it was appealing against the tribunal's decision.
Comments
Top stories in News
Top stories in News
-
British housewife facing FIRING SQUAD over Bali drugs smuggling charge was 'neighbour from hell' -
They attacked "like a pack" raining fists on a defenceless legal secretary. Yesterday they walked free from court. No wonder their victim says she has been denied justice.
-
Mayor demands report from Transport for London into Jubilee Line nightmare that left hundreds of commuters trapped for hours underground
-
Video: Intruder bursts into Leveson Inquiry to brand Tony Blair a war criminal -
Baroness Warsi calls in Lords watchdog to clear name over expenses
The O2
Check out the cool stuff happening under our tent such as the hottest gigs, comedy, sport, films, clubs, bars, restaurants and much more.
Can you imagine a career in teaching?
Be inspired to teach - let real teachers show you how rewarding the job can be.
Playing a game-changing role during the Games
Cisco is providing the solutions for London 2012's complex IT needs.
Win a Silverstone track day with Zantac 75
Feel the burn of a different kind - 20 Silverstone motoring experiences to be won
Reader Offers email A fantastic selection of
offers, giveaways and
promotions.
Chelsea close in on £62m swoop for Eden Hazard and Hulk
TV Baftas - in pictures
Eden Hazard: What makes the Chelsea and Arsenal target tick?
News pictures of the day
Drum'n'bass pioneer Goldie creates ‘rose’ portrait of the Queen
Video: South east London factory fire - 'Air raid siren' wakes Greenwich residents
The London best: Yoga classes
Man v Woman v Food: the big burger challenge