Weather Tonight: 5°c Partly Cloudy Night Morning: 9°c Cloudy

News

To save our kids, we must turn them over

Yasmin Alibhai-Brown
15 May 2008


In the Eighties, I was out on the streets of London protesting against stop-and-search police operations. The Met harboured overtly racist officers and the sus laws were used to intimidate and demean young black men. The thought of handing such powers back to the police makes many black Britons deeply fearful. Yet today that absolute injunction against stop-and-search make less and less sense.

Talk to families whose own have been killed or have become vicious street killers - or indeed terrorists - and they ruefully accept that we must return to more pro-active, pre-emptive policing.

My friend Stan, a Caribbean musician, says to me: "I know the history but to save our kids we must empty their pockets, turn them over. These knives and guns are now part of their uniform, their mark of identity. It's a catastrophe. Is this why I left my homeland?"

Times have changed. Race is no longer as clear a marker between victim and perpetrator or criminal and law enforcer.

However, if sus is reinstated, there must be proper monitoring of the behaviour of policemen and women to ensure racial fairness and - more importantly - that the civil liberties of suspects are never violated.

But with those safeguards in place, it seems stop-and-search could actually help a disproportionate number of black and mixed-race families whose children are over-represented in gun and knife crimes, either as victims or perpetrators. Asian families, too, would feel more protected.

The Met has just set up sus units in the capital.

Sure, the innocent who are stopped and interrogated will be angered. But support is emerging among people you would expect to be most resistant, such as Ptrhys Bryant, a black teenager from Hackney whose friend was stabbed in the legs, and Stella Aina, a black social worker from Essex who knows her children will be six times more likely to be searched than white kids.

My friend Gloria, a teacher married to an African, says she gets her son - who has been in trouble with the law - to empty his rucksack and his jacket pockets when he goes out and returns. She wants the police to take over as the boy grows up. Like many black parents, she is prepared to suffer humiliation to stop a greater evil. But the police must behave impeccably, otherwise mistrust will return to our streets, and with it more violence.

Reader views (5)

 Add your view

You can not expect that the Metropolitan Police will be fair in the manner with which these ‘stop and search’ or ‘sus’ laws are used. The Met are indeed the most institutionally racist police force in the country and they don’t like to be reminded of numerous reports, the most popular being; the Lord Scarman Report, the Macpherson Report as regards this endemic institutional racism. If you have a group of people entrusted with upholding the law, who blatantly, overtly break the law with indifference and impunity, by treating Blackmen as ‘token people’ a second, even third class human being – the mistrust which comes from this ‘institutional racism’, what the Met see as a war ‘on-crime’, war on ‘Blackmen’ will not go away just like that! Blackmen are denied jobs or jobs which pay reasonable wages and see no future for them selves or their children in the UK. If you feel you have no future, no identity, no role - then young Blackmen and now even Blackwomen will begin to want to create an identity by literally, pushing the ‘self-destruct button’ and doing harm to themselves and others with impunity.

- Warren Alexander-Dean, London, England, 10/08/2008 20:01
Report abuse

You can not expect that the Metropolitan Police will be fair in the manner with which these ‘stop and search’ or ‘sus’ laws are used. The Met are indeed the most institutionally racist police force in the country and they don’t like to be reminded of numerous reports, the most popular be; the Lord Scarman Report, the Macpherson Report as regards this endemic institutional racism. If you have a group of people entrusted with upholding the law, who blatantly, overtly break the law with indifference and impunity, by treating Blackmen as ‘token people’ a second, even third class human being – the mistrust which comes from this ‘institutional racism’, what the Met see as a war ‘on-crime’, war on ‘Blackmen’ will not go away just like that! Blackmen are denied jobs or jobs which pay reasonable wages and see no future for them selves or their children in the UK. If you feel you have no future, no identity, no role - then young Blackmen and now even women will begin to want to create an identity by literally, pushing the ‘self-destruct button’ and doing harm to themselves and others with impunity.

- Warren Alexander-Dean, London, England, 16/05/2008 12:37
Report abuse

Typical media hypocrite - what was wrong when she was a young trendy rebel, is suddenly alright now that she has become a middle-aged, conservative member of the establishment. I would rather risk being stabbed or shot than allow any police officer to stop me against my will with no reason, let alone search my person. I am a free man, and my freedom is not there to be compromised just to placate the paranoia of the likes of Ms Alibhai-Brown, who are more likely to die in their Chelsea Tractors or of heart disease than to ever be stabbed, let alone shot.

- R. Sole, Oxford, UK, 16/05/2008 07:56
Report abuse

Yasmin, yes it appears the uneasy trade-off is that relatively more black kids will get "sussed" but relatively more black kids may get saved from knife crime as a result. First though, you have to get more coppers out on the streets and the legal liberals aren't giving up on the form filling. I read of a barrister member on the MPLA (name escapes me) who was up in arms at the fact that scanners were being introduced without consultation via the MPLA. I expect that this person will passionately resist any reduction in the admin overhead on the police related to sus. There is no point tying down good coppers in the station for hours a day, they need to be on the streets and buses and trains. Finally, what good is it arresting the knife boys and girls then tagging them or letting them out on bail?

- Stephen, London. England, 15/05/2008 18:27
Report abuse

The more you conform to classic bell-curve distribution, the more you fit in. Outsiders of any sort in any group of people stick out and cause themselves to be noticed. I'm a conforming person, but with lots of individuality. I don't attract attention, and I obey the law. I don't get stopped and searched, but, if I acted in any way likely to cause me to be singled out, I'd EXPECT to be singled out. If I resembled a member of a suspect group I'd EXPECT to be singled out.

- Martin H. Watson, Teddington, 15/05/2008 15:21
Report abuse


Add your comment

 

Terms and conditions Make text area bigger You have  characters left.

We welcome your opinions. This is a public forum. Libellous and abusive comments are not allowed. Please read our House Rules.

For information about privacy and cookies please read our Privacy Policy.


 

 

  • MPs spend £400,000 of taxpayers' cash on 12 fig trees for their offices Fig Trees EXCLUSIVE: Taxpayers are footing a bill of almost £400,000 to rent 12 fig trees to shade MPs in the glass-roofed atrium of their...
  • 10 million Tube passengers fail to claim money back for delays Tube train More than 10 million Tube users are missing out on refunds worth more than £20 million when their trains are delayed
  • The final reckoning: how Boris and Ken measure up in election battle Ken Boris split London goes to the polls on May 3 with the election battle between Boris Johnson and Ken Livingstone set to be the capital's closest mayoral...
  • Commuters' favourite swaps busking for the big time with recording deal Tristan Mackay Busker Tristan Mackay has hit the jackpot after landing a record deal with an award-winning producer
  • What a smoothie! Eight-year-old Valentine gives Kate roses and a heart-shaped cupcake Kate Smoothie The Duchess of Cambridge's first Valentine's Day as a married woman was marked with roses, a card and a cupcake - but not from Prince...
  • Kercher family launch appeal over decision to clear Knox of murder Meredith Kercher Meredith Kercher's family today launched an appeal to overturn the decision to clear Amanda Knox and Raffaele Sollecito of her murder
  • PM urged to deport Qatada as he hides in north London safe house Abu Qatada David Cameron was under pressure today to defy European judges by ordering the deportation of extremist cleric Abu Qatada as he holed up in...
  • Now jailed Dizaei could be forced to repay his £1million legal aid bill Ali Dizaei Met commander Ali Dizaei is facing the prospect of paying back tens of thousand of pounds of legal aid as Scotland Yard prepared to sack him...
  • Osborne defends his cuts strategy as inflation falls George Osborne Chancellor George Osborne defended his economic strategy as a fall in inflation finally brought mild relief to some from the tight squeeze...
  • Royal College students to receive scholarships courtesy of Burberry Rosie Huntington-Whitely At the luxury brand Burberry, Christopher Bailey has transformed a designer classic into must-have cool, as epitomised by the models Rosie...
  •  

    Don't Miss