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Sir Ian seems, to me,
to be almost as removed from the ethnic
minority communities that he seems to want
to champion. Although there may be "institutionalised
racism" in the media industry, the
area of crime reporting is not one I would
have chosen. Indeed the media coverage of
the murders of Damilola Taylor, Toni-Ann
Byfield, Jeshma Raithatha, Anthony Walker
and Kieran Rodney-Davies, to name a few
speak volumes to the contrary. I agree that
the media devotes more column inches to
certain murder cases more than others, but
this often as a launch pad to campaign about
poor levels care in the Public Sector. The
recent murder of Tom Ap Rhys Price has highlighted
the poor level of security at Train Stations.
The Victoria Climbie case highlighted the
catalogue of errors in the handling of 'at
risk' cases by the Social Services and the
Stephen Lawrence case has shown the failures
of policing and the justice system. The
press has also devoted considerable attention
to the murder of Zahid Mubarek, killed by
a racist inmate in prison, highlighting
weaknesses in the Prison Service.
JEAN CHARLES DE MENEZES
SHOOTING
The one case that Sir
Ian Blair has failed to discuss satisfactorily
is the shooting of Jean Charles de Menezes,
the Brazilian mistakenly identified as terrorist,
who was shot in the head seven times in
July 2005. I recall attending an Asian Awards
ceremony in November last year with Sir
Ian as chief guest - smiling and handing
out awards -only weeks after he was accused
of "cover up" by the Jean Charles
de Menezes Family Campaign . The Menezes
family maintains that Sir Ian Blair, as
head of the Metropolitan Police, bears ultimate
responsibility for the Menezes killing and
that he deliberately tried to cover up what
really happened after Jean's death. Would
Sir Ian have been as welcome into the heart
of the Asian community if Jean Charles had
been Asian? Those attending might have wondered
when the "assassinate without a trial"
policy had come into effect.
The police already
have significant powers to stop and search
and detain terrorist suspects and yet the
Menezes case highlights a series of communication
failures in the enforcement of any of these.
It seems Jean Charles's crime was merely
to look Asian. The Asian community is already
bearing the brunt of the new raft of anti-terror
legislation, so it would be more helpful
to have faith in the standards of policing.
This brings me to the issue of "institutionalised
racism". Although many might agree
with Sir Ian about "institutionalised
racism" in the media, more would agree
that the same exists in the Police Service
and that the eradication of racism in the
Police Service would be far more in the
interests of ethnic minority communities
than any reporting of crimes.
MPS MEDIA POLICY
Asked about what he
would like the media to do, Sir Ian replied
"What I want the media to do is to
understand the dynamics of how different
minority communities feel about the coverage
that is given to events in their communities".
One could argue that this should be a goal
for the Metropolitan Police Service (MPS)
too. In their own media policy the MPS states
"We need to refresh our approach to
working with the media by developing effective
and positive relationships with journalists
from the wide range of news organisations
that cover our work. This remains a job
for everyone, not just the Directorate of
Public Affairs (DPA) and should encompass
the national, local, minority-ethnic and
specialist media that serve the capital
and its residents.
It is recognised that
some people are cautious about dealing with
the media, but over-caution can breed suspicion
and contempt, while an open approach tends
to encourage confidence and respect. If
we are to gain the goodwill, confidence
and support of the public we serve and achieve
our vision of making London the safest major
city in the world, we need to engage with
the media and seize every opportunity to
be far more proactive."
This media policy then
lays out often contradictory guidelines
about disclosure of information to journalists
including "withholding putting certain
information into the public domain"
if the officer feels it may disadvantage
an investigation, sticking to the facts
when speaking "off the record",
advising the DPA after speaking to reporters,
guidance on 'the official line' to take
and filtering all approaches from TV documentary
of drama programmes through the DPA. Not
surprising that the same policy ends by
stating "relations between the police
and media in London are inevitably complex
and at times difficult"! Any police
officer able to circumnavigate these guidelines
with confidence would be fortunate indeed.
INSTITUTIONAL RACISM
Eradicating "institutionalised
racism" in the media is an interesting
dilemma. Firstly the media does not act
singly like an "institution",
each publication acts independently and
in competition with each other. Stories
are generated by individuals who may have
their own viewpoint. The overall editorial
policy may be guided by yet another individual
and finally it will come down to what the
readers of want to read. We all know that
page after page of death, murder and mayhem
palls on the attention span so it is important
to achieve the right balance in reporting
the salient points of a case in a meaningful
way. Most of that will depend on the evidence
available like photographs, CCTV footage,
witnesses etc and the information pipe-line
about progress on the case by the police
service. The speed of the information pipe-line
will also determine the level of continued
coverage of a case.
The MPS media policy
states, that "there is more to be done,
because there are so many good news stories
that still fail to reach the viewers, listeners
and readers or those who report on the MPS."
To attain the best level of coverage between
good news and bad news stories, a consistent
approach is needed.
SUGGESTIONS
Lest I be accused of
not coming up with suggestions to eradicate
"institutionalised racism" in
media myself, here's a wish list of what
I would like: 'US-Style' media briefings
on all murder cases with all necessary images
and information immediately available via
Intranet, availability of knowledgeable
spokespeople 24x7 via telephone, cultural
awareness training for all Police Officers
(not just defined spokespeople), Ethnic
Minority police spokespeople for every minority
community in the UK, greater access to senior
police officer and an open dialogue between
the Metropolitan Police Service and the
media. For coverage of long term "good
news" stories, the MPS also needs to
maintain a consistent approach in the reporting
of individual cases; perhaps going back
and periodically reviewing progress for
the benefit of journalists.
In the mean time, it
might be better if Sir Ian Blair said as
little as possible about "institutionalised
racism in the media" as it really isn't
helping.
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