/Sarah Everard vigil – latest: Cressida Dick under pressure to resign after ‘disturbing’ police response

Sarah Everard vigil – latest: Cressida Dick under pressure to resign after ‘disturbing’ police response

Protesters and police scuffle at Sarah Everard vigil

Calling the scenes from last night “very upsetting,” Home Office minister Victoria Atkins said on Sunday that the Home Office has asked for a report from Met police on the violence. She also said police need to “explain” what led to scenes of women being pinned down by officers.

In the meantime, others have said Ms Dick should step down immediately, with Liberal Democrat Leader Ed Davey accusing the Met police commissioner of having “lost the confidence of women in London”.

Hundreds of people had gathered peacefully in Clapham Common to pay their respects to Sarah and to demand an end to male violence against women when Met police officers began to crack down on the event.

Video livestreamed from the vigil showed police officers forcibly removing women from a bandstand in the park, while officers could also be seen pushing back demonstrators at the event.

Responding to the scenes from the event, Labour leader Keir Starmer called the crackdown “deeply disturbing”.

“Women came together to mourn Sarah Everard – they should have been able to do so peacefully,” he said.

Meanwhile London Mayor Sadiq Khan said the scenes were “unacceptable” said he was “urgently seeking an explanation” from the commissioner.

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West Midlands Police say they had a ‘low-key’ presence at vigil

West Midlands Police have said they had a”low-key” presence at vigils held in Sarah Everard’s memory in Coventry and Birmingham on Saturday in an effort to “balance the desire for people to express their feelings” against the risk of the spread of Covid-19.

In a statement published on Sunday, the police force said officers were present at the vigils to “explain, engage and encourage and only use enforcement as a last resort”.

“We did not have to take any enforcement action last night,” the department said.

“We understand the strength of feeling and people’s desire to come together to mourn and show respect to Sarah Everard as well as to make a statement and organiser on the issue of women’s safety,” it said. “We will continue to balance the desire for people to express their feelings against the very real risks of the spread of this deadly virus.”

The statement suggests a different approach than the one Met Police officers took at the vigil in Clapham Common on Saturday, with officers seen forcibly removing protesters from the event and multiple protesters being detained.

Chantal Da Silva14 March 2021 13:06

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Residents continue to pay tribute to Sarah Everard in Clapham Common on Sunday

Londoners are continuing to make their way to Clapham Common to pay their respects to Sarah Everard.

Fresh flowers were laid at a bandstand in the park, where just hours before clashes between police officers and demonstrators hadunfolded after officers cracked down on a vigil held in Everard’s memory, citing Covid-19 concerns.

Police officers were seen forcibly removing vigil attendees from the bandstand, with demonstrators being pushed and forced to the ground.

Met Police Commissioner Cressida Dick has faced widespread calls to resign over the incident, which many say could have been avoided had police allowed a socially distanced outdoor vigil to move forward.

Women and allies gather in Clapham Common on Sunday, 14 March, 2021, to pay their respects to Sarah Everard.

Women and allies gather in Clapham Common on Sunday, 14 March, 2021, to pay their respects to Sarah Everard.

(AFP via Getty Images)

Chantal Da Silva14 March 2021 12:50

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Labour MP says government wants harsher penalties ‘for damaging a statue than attacking a woman’

Labour MP Jack Dromey has condemned the Met Police’s response to Saturday’s vigil for Sarah Everard as “utterly shameful”.

“The policing of the Clapham Common vigil for Sarah Everard was utterly shameful,” Mr Dromey said in a tweet.

He also took aim at the government’s new policing bill, criticising “the Government’s proposal for harsher penalties for damaging a statue than attacking a woman”.

Chantal Da Silva14 March 2021 12:29

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Labour to vote against ‘disproportionate’ policing bill curbing right to protest

Labour will vote against the government’s new policing bill, David Lammy has announced.

Asserting that the measure seeks to impose “disproportionate controls” on the right to protest, Mr Lammy said: “This is no time to be rushing through poorly thought-out measures to impose disproportionate controls on free expression and the right to protest”.

The announcement comes as MPs prepare to debate the government’s bill, which contains new powers for officers and for the home secretary to impose conditions on protests and public processions.

Political correspondent Ashley Cowburn has the full story:

Chantal Da Silva14 March 2021 11:52

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‘We do all worry it could have been us’: Sarah Everard vigil attendees express grief and outrage

Hundreds of women and allies attended the vigil held for Sarah Everard yesterday in Clapham Common, with many telling The Independent’s Women’s Correspondent Maya Oppenheim why they felt it was vital to be there.

Myrna Williamson, a 74-year-old who lives in the area, told The Independent: “Ever since I heard what happened to Sarah, I’ve been crying. I’m part of the Women’s Institute and women in the WI have also been crying.

“I walk around the whole time here for my exercise. I leave for work really early and go home really late at night as I work as a film extra so I do long shoots. I feel anxious walking around the streets as an old person. I can’t run or defend myself,” she said.

Meanwhile, Hannah Smith, 19, criticised the Met Police’s efforts to shut the event down over Covid-19 concerns, saying: “I’m more likely to be killed by a man than Covid. An average of two women are killed by a former or current partner a week in the UK.”

“As someone who experienced sexual assault and sexual harassment, who am I supposed to talk to? It does not feel like the police will take it seriously,” she said.

Read more from Maya on why demonstrators felt it was important to be at the vigil, despite efforts from Met Police to shut the event down:

Chantal Da Silva14 March 2021 11:40

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Watch: Jess Phillips says Met Police ‘got it wrong’ over response to vigil

Shadow Minister for Domestic Violence Jess Phillips says Metropolitan Police ‘got it wrong at every single turn” in their response to the vigil held for Sarah Everard yesterday.

“I think that the police got it wrong at every single turn – not just the final image that we see but all day yesterday and the day before, the police did not try and find a way for a peaceful protest, not a protest, actually, a vigil,” she said.

Watch Ms Phillips’ full comments below:

Jess Phillips says police ‘got it wrong’ over response to vigil

Chantal Da Silva14 March 2021 11:27

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Reform UK joins calls for Cressida Dick to resign ‘or be sacked’

Reform UK, the rebranded Brexit party, has called joined calls for Met Police Commissioner Cressida Dick to resign immediately following “the disgraceful arrest scenes at the peaceful vigil for Sarah Everard”.

In a statement, Richard Tice, who recently replaced Nigel Farage as the party’s leader, demanded that London Mayor Sadiq Khan fire Ms Dick if she refuses to step down.

“There really is only one action Cressida Dick can take – that is to step down immediately. If she does not, Sadiq Khan needs to sack her without hesitation,” Mr Tice said.

“Londoners have lost any confidence they had in Cressida Dick’s leadership of the Metropolitan Police following its handling of the Black Lives Matter and Extinction Rebellion protests,” he continued.

“Last night’s scenes in Clapham Common were disgraceful and leave a stain on the Met Police. Other police forces around the country enabled dignified vigils to take place by working closely with organisers,” he said.

Noting the chaotic scenes from the vigil, which saw police forcibly pull protesters from a bandstand in Clapham Common and push demonstrators, Mr Tice said that “under Cressida Dick’s leadership the Met Police got this badly wrong”.

“The police’s handling of a peaceful gathering by women wishing to remember Sarah Everard and protest over the safety of women on the streets of London just defies belief,” he said.

Referring to protests that unfolded last year in the wake of George Floyd’s death, the Reform UK leader said: “It was abhorrent behaviour by a police force which we must remember has stood idly by in the face of war monuments being vandalized and taken the knee with Black Lives Matter protestors.”

“The vigil for Sarah Everard should have been allowed to progress without intervention. What were the frontline officers thinking? It signals a complete catastrophic failure in leadership and a disconnect with real world under Cressida Dick’s watch,” he said.

Chantal Da Silva14 March 2021 11:20

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Cressida Dick has ‘lost the confidence of women’, Ed Davey says in call for resignation

Liberal Democrat Leader Ed Davey has called for Met Police Commissioner Cressida Dick to resign from her role after having “lost the confidence of women in London”.

Addressing the police response to the vigil held for Sarah Everard in Clapham Common last night, Mr Davey said: “It’s already crystal clear that what happened last night was a complete tactical and moral failure by the Met police.”

“Cressida Dick has lost the confidence of women in London and she must now resign,” he said, responding to comments from Home Office Minister Victoria Atkins made on The Andrew Marr Show this morning.

Demonstrators “deserved the opportunity to collectively grieve in a peaceful open air vigil,” he said.

“Yet from start to finish the Met Police got this wrong. They refused to cooperate with organisers trying to put on a Covid-safe event. Then used inappropriate and disproportionate force against women standing peacefully in a park,” he said.

Chantal Da Silva14 March 2021 10:59

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Met Police Assistant Commissioner says officers were faced with ‘very difficult decision’

Met Police Assistant Commissioner Helen Ball defended officers’ response to the vigil in Clapham Common yesterday, asserting that officers had been faced with a “very difficult decision”.

“I recognise that the decision by the organisers to cancel the Reclaim These Streets vigil in Clapham Common was deeply unwelcome news. Even so, given the ever present threat of Coronavirus, this was the right decision to make,” the assistant commissioner said in a statement on Saturday, referring to organisers cancelling a formal vigil after police vowed to crack down on the event and issue fines to organisers and attendees.

“Today, for over six hours hundreds of people came to lay flowers and pay their respects to Sarah in Clapham Common in a safe and lawful way,” Ms Ball said.

“Around 6pm, more people began to gather close to the bandstand within the Common. Some started to make speeches from the bandstand. These speeches then attracted more people to gather closer together,” she continued. “At this point, officers on the ground were faced with a very difficult decision. Hundreds of people were packed tightly together, posing a very real risk of easily transmitting Covid-19.”

“Police must act for people’s safety, this is the only responsible thing to do. The pandemic is not over and gatherings of people from right across London and beyond, are still not safe,” she said.

“Those who gathered were spoken to by officers on a number of occasions and over an extended period of time. We repeatedly encouraged those who were there to comply with the law and leave. Regrettably, a small minority of people began chanting at officers, pushing and throwing items,” Ms Ball said, adding: “After speaking with officers, the vast majority of people quickly left.”

The assistant commissioner said four arrests had been made for public order offences and for breaches of the Health Protection Regulations”.

Images and video from the event show police forcibly removing demonstrators from a bandstand in Clapham Common, in addition to pushing demonstrators standing in the park and holding protesters down on the ground.

“Part of the reason I am speaking to you tonight is because we accept that the actions of our officers have been questioned,” Ms Ball said.

“We absolutely did not want to be in a position where enforcement action was necessary. But we were placed in this position because of the overriding need to protect people’s safety,” she asserted, adding: “Let me end by saying that across the Met, we review every single event that we police to see if there are lessons that can be learnt. This one will be no different.”

Assistant Commissioner defends response to Sarah Everard vigil

Chantal Da Silva14 March 2021 10:41

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Demonstrators vow to ‘Reclaim the Fight’ with Sunday march to Met police station

Organisers are planning a march on Sunday that will lead demonstrators to the Met police station, where a sit-in is expected to be held.

According to social media posts, a “Reclaim the Fight” march will be held following outrage over the police force’s response to the Sarah Everard vigil in Clapham Common on Saturday.

Demonstrators are expected to meet in Trafalgar Square at 6pm. They will then make their way to Downing Street and the Met police station, where they will “sit together in solidarity and observe social distancing”.

Attendees have been asked to wear face masks to prevent the spread of Covid-19 and to dress in black or white.

“We will be seen. We will be heard,” organisers wrote in a social media post.

Chantal Da Silva14 March 2021 10:23

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Victoria Atkins refuses to give ‘yes or no’ answer on whether PM’s Cabinet needs more women

Speaking on The Andrew Marr Show on Sunday, safeguarding minister Victoria Atkins refused to give a “yes or no” answer to the question of whether Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s Cabinet needs more women in senior positions.

“I think the prime minister is very committed to ensuring that his government represents society,” Ms Atkins said. “I think if we look at the government as a whole, we have a 50-50 split.”

Pushed to give a “yes or no” response, Ms Atkins did not do so.

Instead, she said “what I am very mindful of as a junior minister is that I am listened to and I have the privilege of working on, I think, one of the most important briefs in government and that’s not because I’m female. That’s because the prime minister has appointed me”.

Chantal Da Silva14 March 2021 10:10

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As the Met police face heightened scrutiny not only over one of their own officers being charged in the Sarah Everard case, but also over the department’s response to a vigil organised in her memory, another case from last year has also come back under the spotlight: that of Nicole Smallman and Bibaa Henry.

Last year, two Met police constables were arrested on suspicion of misconduct in public office after being accused of taking inappropriate photos with the bodies of Smallman and Henry, two sisters who were found slain in a park.

In recent days, the case has risen to the fore as another example of a toxic culture that many say exists within the Met police force and within police departments across the country and around the world.

You can read more on the case here:

Chantal Da Silva14 March 2021 10:04

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Police taking images with bodies of Nicole Smallman and Bibaa Henry was ‘utterly abhorrent’

Speaking on The Andrew Marr Show on Sunday safeguarding minister Victoria Atkins appeared to avoid responding directly on whether there is a toxic culture within the Met police force. However, she acknowledged that there are issues in policing that need to be addressed.

Asked to comment on a scandal last year that saw officers take pictures with the bodies of two sisters, Nicole Smallman, 27, and Bibaa Henry, 46, after they were found slain in a park, Ms Atkins said the incident was “utterly abhorrent”.

She further said that  Met Police Commissioner Cressida Dick had also been “as appalled” as many others.

Overall, she said, however, that she believed “there is good work going on in policing”.

She said that she believed that new measures, including those being introduced through the Domestic Abuse Bill, would “really improve the reaction”.

Chantal Da Silva14 March 2021 09:57

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Diane Abbott condemns ‘appalling’ scenes at Sarah Everard vigil

Hackney MP Diane Abbott has condemned the “appalling” scenes of clashes between Met police officers and women attending a peaceful vigil for Sarah Everard.

Sharing video of the clashes in a tweet on Sunday morning, Ms Abbott wrote: “Appalling scenes at Clapham Common last night. Women at a peaceful vigil about male violence being violently manhandled and hand cuffed by police officers.”

The Hackney MP shared the #ReclaimTheseStreets hashtag that was used in support of the vigil and to call for an end to sexual harassment and violence against women in the wake of Everard’s death.

Chantal Da Silva14 March 2021 09:43

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If Cressida Dick is replaced, it must be with someone with less ‘heavy-handed’ approach, Diane Abbott says

If Met Police Commissioner Cressida Dick is replaced over her department’s response to last night’s vigil, it must be with someone with less ‘heavy-handed’ approach, Hackney MP Diane Abbott has said.

Speaking on Sophy Ridge on Sunday, Ms Abbott said: “We would hope that if she goes, that she’s actually replaced with somebody better… Someone who doesn’t deny that institutional racism exists int he police force and someone with a much less heavy-handed approach.”

Chantal Da Silva14 March 2021 09:38

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Cressida Dick must ‘explain’ police actions, as Home Office minister dodges question on Met chief’s position

Cressida Dick must “explain” the police response to the vigil for Sarah Everard last night a Home Office minister has insisted.

It comes after Home Secretary Priti Patel demanded a full report from the Met police on the handling of the vigil.

Political Correspondent Ashley Cowburn has more:

Chantal Da Silva14 March 2021 09:27

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Government needs ‘political will’ to address ‘serious trouble’ in justice system, Dame Vera Baird says

The British government needs to find the “political will” to address the “serious trouble” in the UK’s justice system, victims’ commissioner for England and Wales Dame Vera Baird QC has said.

Speaking on Sophy Ridge on Sunday, she said that the UK needed “active leadership” to address the pervasive issue of sexual harassment and assault against women.

“It’s about how active that leadership is, isn’t it? And how much it sees what is happening and how much it drives that agenda,” she said.

The victims’ commissioner said she believed government leaders had been “taken by surprise” by the “outpouring, indeed, the uproar” that has been sparked in the wake of Sarah Everard’s death.

Whether it represents a “turning point”, she said, will largely be up to the government.

“Very few people are prosecuted for sexual offences,” she said.

Chantal Da Silva14 March 2021 09:23

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The situation for women has ‘got worse,’ victims’ commissioner says

Victims’ commissioner for England and Wales Dame Vera Baird QC says the situation for women in the UK has “got worse” when it comes to facing the threat of sexual harassment and assault.

Asked whether the situation has improved, the victims’ commissioner said: “I think things have got worse”.

Comparing the situation now to the 1970s, she said that women have continued to face threats to their safety and said it should not be up to women to call for an end to harassment and violence.

“It’s about men’s violence,” she said.

Chantal Da Silva14 March 2021 09:17

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Victims’ Commissioner questions whether ‘quasi-military’ response helped prevent spread of Covid-19

Victims’ commissioner for England and Wales Dame Vera Baird QC has questioned how the Met police’s actions last night helped to prevent the spread of Covid-19.

Calling the police response “quasi-military”, the victims’ commissioner says the handling of the vigil for Sarah Everard was “a dreadful piece of misjudgment.”

“Are they really improving the chances of Covid not spreading byputting their knees in the middle of the backs of young women?”, she questioned.

Chantal Da Silva14 March 2021 09:12

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The government is failing women ‘in every single metric’, Jess Phillips says

The government is failing women “in every single metric,” Labour shadow domestic violence minister Jess Phillips has said.

Speaking on Sophy Ridge on Sunday, Ms Phillips said the government has a “responsibility” to educate boys and girls early on to prevent sexual harassment and sexual violence.

The shadow domestic violence minister said as it stands, children are still being taught that “boys should be the ones to instigate sex” in some schools.

That needs to change, she said.

Chantal Da Silva14 March 2021 09:05