London police termed racist, misogynist and homophobic

Published March 22, 2023
New Scotland Yard, the headquarters of the Metropolitan Police Service (MPS), is pictured in central London on March 21, 2023, following the release of the review into the standards of behaviour and internal culture of the MPS, commissioned in the wake of the murder of Sarah Everard. — AFP
New Scotland Yard, the headquarters of the Metropolitan Police Service (MPS), is pictured in central London on March 21, 2023, following the release of the review into the standards of behaviour and internal culture of the MPS, commissioned in the wake of the murder of Sarah Everard. — AFP

LONDON: London’s Metropolitan Police is institutionally racist, sexist and homophobic and could still be employing rapists and murderers, a scathing independent review of Britain’s largest force concluded on Tuesday.

The report, written by government official Louise Casey, was commissioned after the kidnap, rape and murder two years ago of a London woman, Sarah Everard, by serving Metropolitan Police officer Wayne Couzens.

Since then another officer, David Carrick, was also jailed for life for dozens of rapes and sexual assaults stretching back two decades, and several other Met scandals have emerged.

Casey found those shocking crimes were perpetrated in a pervasive culture of “deep-seated homophobia” and predatory behaviour, in which female officers and staff “routinely face sexism and misogyny”.

Officers from minorities suffer widespread bullying, while violence against women and girls has not been treated seriously enough by the majority white and male force, she said.

A Muslim officer reported finding bacon left in boots inside a locker, a Sikh said his beard was cut because a colleague “thought it was funny”, and sex toys were placed in coffee mugs as pranks.

“I make a finding of institutional racism, sexism and homophobia in the Met,” Casey stated in the foreword to her damning 363-page report, adding that the force “has to change itself”.

“It is the police’s job to keep us safe as the public. Far too many Londoners have now lost faith in policing to do that,” she wrote.

Casey’s conclusions come nearly 25 years after the Macpherson Report — which probed Met failures after the murder of black teenager Stephen Lawrence in 1993 — also found the force institutionally racist and recommended dozens of reforms.

Yet a quarter-century on, she discovered that internal discrimination is “tolerated”, with complaints “likely to be turned against Black, Asian and ethnic minority officers”.

Prime Minister Rishi Sunak said that what had been happening inside the Met was “simply shocking and unacceptable” and that “there needs to be a change in culture and leadership”.

But he backed its chief Mark Rowley, who was appointed after Cressida Dick was forced out last April, to “restore confidence and trust” through a draft overhaul unveiled in January. Rowley called Casey’s report “a very upsetting read”.

“We have a real problem here. We have misogyny, homophobia and racism in the organisation and we’re going to root it out,” he told Sky News.

The review, which identified “systemic and fundamental problems” within the Met including “inadequate management”, made 16 recommendations that would constitute a “complete overhaul”.

London Mayor Sadiq Khan, who has responsibility for the force and initiated the review, said he expected all of them to be fully implemented quickly. He described Tuesday as “one of the darkest days” in the Met’s history.

Failure to reform could mean the force, which polices more than eight million people over 1,605 square kilometres in the British capital, is dismantled, Casey warned.

“This is the first report that lays bare in total… the failings to black Londoners, the failings to women, the failings to their own staff,” she told BBC Radio.

Published in Dawn, March 22nd, 2023

Opinion

Editorial

Energy shock
Updated 05 May, 2026

Energy shock

The longer the crisis persists, the more profound its consequences will be.
Unchecked HIV
05 May, 2026

Unchecked HIV

PAKISTAN’S HIV surge is no longer a slow-burning public health concern. It is now a system failure unfolding in...
PSL thrills
05 May, 2026

PSL thrills

BY the end of it all, in front of fans who had been absent for almost the entire 11th season of the Pakistan Super...
Interlinked crises
Updated 04 May, 2026

Interlinked crises

The situation vis-à-vis the US-Israeli war on Iran remains tense, with hostilities likely to resume if the diplomatic process fails.
Climate readiness
04 May, 2026

Climate readiness

AS policymakers gather for the Breathe Pakistan conference this week, the urgency is hard to miss. Each year, such...
Kalash preservation
04 May, 2026

Kalash preservation

FOR centuries, the Kalash people have maintained a culture, way of life, language and belief system that is uniquely...