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Police (I)
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★ Police (I)

From its first location of Great Scotland Yard the Metropolitan police headquarters has moved twice.  But it kept the name that became famous around the world.  Inside Scotland Yard with Trevor McDonald I, ITV 2016  

 

The Met has eighteen homicide squads around London dealing with around a hundred murders each year.  ibid. 

 

1829 a new police force was introduced into an overcrowded and crime-ridden London ... Today there are over 31,000.  ibid.

 

 

Scotland Yard: the internationally famous symbol of police is moving to a new home, taking with it nearly two hundred years of history and a record of London’s most ghastly crimes.  Inside Scotland Yard with Trevor McDonald II

 

Several bribery and corruption scandals involving Flying Squad officers were revealed.  In 1977 thirteen were convicted on charges of corruption including the Squad’s commander.  ibid.

 

1967 was the year Norwell Roberts [first black constable] started to change the face of the police force.  ibid.

 

 

Tottenham, August 2011: ‘There is intelligence to suggest that Mark Duggan is currently in possession or control of about three firearms and is looking to take possession of a firearm at the scene.’  Lawful Killing: Mark Duggan, rozzers’ briefing, BBC 2016

 

The police shooting of Mark Duggan in August 2011 triggered the worst riots in modern British history.  People died in those riots … There is still no agreement about what actually happened when Duggan was stopped by armed police on that summer’s day.  ibid.   

 

The story is wrapped up in secret intelligence … leading to a suspicion that the truth is being hidden.  ibid.  

 

‘Something’s not quite right here.  So what is the truth?’  ibid.  Mark’s brother

 

Trident: a Metropolitan police unit tasked with tackling gun crime.  ibid.

 

Broadwater Farm Riots in 1985: ‘vicious vicious riots.’  ibid.      

 

‘There are very few angels on Broadwater Farm … but they’re not gangsters.’  ibid.  Mark’s brother  

 

 

News outlets need to be held to account for their coverage of the headline-hitting English riots, a new report has argued.

 

Media and the Riots: A Call for Action, published on the first anniversary of the Tottenham, north London, riot which took place last August is the first report to examine the impact of the mainstream print and broadcast media’s reporting on the communities most affected.

 

The report, written by University of Leicester sociologist Dr Leah Bassel, reflects the views of those people who attended the Media and the Riots conference held by the Citizen Journalism Educational Trust and The-Latest.com in November.

 

The event brought young people and community members from riot-stricken areas face-to-face with reporters and media scholars.  The report draws on views expressed by the more than 150 participants at the conference as well as the findings of current reports, journalistic reporting and research.

 

It recommends holding the media to account, engaging with journalists, communicating with decision-makers, promoting citizen journalism and social media and ensuring wider access to journalism.

 

Dr Bassel said: It is hard to be balanced when speaking about media coverage of the events of August 2011.  We were all exposed to images of burning buildings, masked youths and shattered shop windows that repeatedly flashed across our screens and pages, and shaped the way we understood these events and our communities.

 

There is a lot to say about what the mainstream media did wrong which this report explores in detail including how media coverage was stigmatising, too moralising, overly reliant on official sources in reporting [police shooting victim] Mark Duggan’s death, and may even have incited rioting by disinhibiting looters.  What I want to insist on, though, is that when we take a closer look across different media there are opportunities as well as challenges.

 

She added: This is not just a report on what went wrong, but also identifies what needs to be done and who needs to do it.  Media actors can be held to account and citizen journalists’ stories can be heard more widely. We need to engage better with decision makers.  And of course our journalists need to be more representative of society.  Let’s break the cycle of unhelpful coverage and let more voices be heard.

 

Brunel University journalism professor Sarah Niblock, a conference speaker, said: There was too much emphasis (in the riots news coverage) on law and order and an authoritarian stance, driven by too much reliance on official sources [there is a strong section in the report about this] and the binary notions of good versus bad and us versus them.

 

John Pilger has been quoted as saying at the Rebellious Media conference last year that the language used in the news coverage of the riots by some newspapers and broadcasters was akin to war reporting, with the rioters and looters treated as the enemy.

 

In its introduction, the report says: Conference participants were angry and dismayed by unbalanced, unhelpful media coverage of the events of August 2011.  This anger began with the reporting of the initial events that triggered the mass disturbances of August 2011, ‘This was the most recent example of how the machinery of the state and the media can work together to misrepresent facts surrounding a death at the hands of the police and the profile of the victim.

 

A description is given in the report about how the misreporting of Duggan’s death, fed by the police and Independent Police Complaints Commission, played out.

 

Conference participants felt that big media tended to portray the disturbances largely as a conflict between black people against white business owners and that the voices of black business people who were affected by the riots were underrepresented in the mainstream media.

 

They also criticised what they perceived to be the racialisation of the riots by mainstream media like BBC TV that gave a platform to David Starkey’s controversial negative view of white young people becoming black and getting involved in the riots.

 

There are lots of positive practical plans in the report for the community and journalists to improve future coverage of such disturbances.  These include community rapid response to correct bad reporting and contact bases to be sent to news media to avoid the same ‘rent a quote’ individuals always being interviewed, who may not in fact speak for the community they claim to represent.’  Huffington Post article Deborah Hobson 22 October 2012

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