tv [untitled] July 23, 2021 7:30am-8:01am +03
7:30 am
sure, the company is trying to is not, can continue to do what they're doing. did try to stop communication. as soon as you go, we are in charge where, where the, the lead country in space, you switch everyone else off and you fail to get an agreement on with no geopolitical trust for now it's market forces that govern space. she advertise, see al jazeera washington. ah, don't forget, check out the headlines here on now to 0. 3 more athletes of tested positive cove. at 19 of the tokyo olympics, the city itself, as recorded a 6 month high of new cases just a day before it host the opening ceremony of the games. nearly 2000 and positive tests are recorded over the past 24 hours. the highest since mid january body selim has moved from tokyo. people here and i've been waiting for you since 2013 when
7:31 am
it was announced as the whole city for the next 2020. so people were very anxious to see the limbic and their city about the, as you can see behind me, this is an event that's without being attended by 1000. now there is only thousands of people, and most of them are relative of the body. are the people who are going to hold the source book, you know, they think about raising a number of the picture of coffee infection and people are what it could be a credit for the virus, not money and book you in japan, but also in the world in the us, the number of daily new cove at 900 infections has nearly tripled in the past 2 weeks. the average is $37000.00. that's not from less than $14000.00 a fortnight. to go. nearly all corona virus, patients in the hospital are unvaccinated. south africa is also struggling with a surge infections, but the vaccination drive that is making progress. reco 250000 people, got the job and just one day,
7:32 am
but only around 7 percent of the population has received at least one dose rescued . people in china say they spend 3 days with no food, water, or electricity after being trapped by historic flooding. the military has been deployed to her non province. 800000 people have been displaced. frances president has held an urgent security meeting to discuss allegations and israeli firms surveillance technology is being used as spyware. list of 50000 potential targets, including heads of state was late. and if a group says it's peg as a software is a use for spying on criminals. and terrorists, afraid to emergency has been declared in ecuador prisons after fighting among rival gangs inside 2 separate jails. left 22 dead. and he said they've regained control and branded dozens of prisoners who tried to escape so those were the headlines and who's continues here now to 0 off of a stream statement. thanks watching bye for now. me.
7:33 am
ah, i'll give you all the i asked me okay, you're watching the stream. today's episode he's looking at u. k. police forces and what efforts they're making to address a racism. i mean, on this week, we ask our london bureau at algae sierra to go out into the streets and all the black and brown people, what they experiences were in connection with interacting with the place. and what they told us bumped into
7:34 am
a few times. what way they can not themselves you know right away they. ready they just sometimes of the things you out of a day before the lot donald lifted, i was walking past iceland here and they stopped us to be in a get free. those mitchie and white people on the other side of the road for full and then stopped the ox stem and the go to us. we're doing our job is to you 1st. i was like common you try to explain, go try to explain. see more side, gentlemen. to dave's outside my house visiting me. and i'm a cara, a somebody, cuz he's got a facebook and sunglasses and instruct you on. he's a working managed to come to visit me. he goes stopped by for a policeman in a vain. if you're watching on youtube, help me with a discussion today. is it possible for you k police to get rid of racism?
7:35 am
the comment section is right here. i'll do my best to get your comments into the show. let's meet the guest hollow tea leroy camilla and sal funds for making time for being on the stream. leroy acceptable. introduce yourself. tell our audience who you are and what you do. yeah, i'm a retired superintendent 30 years in the met and i was one of the found a members of the black police association. and i'm also having wrote a book recently compose my biography, closing ranks. my license a call. frank, being with us can welcome to the stream, introduce yourself to international viewers. my name is kevin garza. i am the mother of santa mon garza and i live in the 3 sienna campaign campaigning for just the for a crying that she did not. thank you so much for being with us and south. welcome to the stream. hello. it is you are what you do. why you important today's
7:36 am
discussion. hi everybody. i'm in the scene. i'm the regional director for london i o p. c. i also lead on our organization's walk and our discrimination. i'm here to explain who we are, what we to, and the role that we play, and u. k. policing. i'm going to start right here on my laptop, looking at racial disparities in policing compared to white people. black people in the u. k. are $8.00 times more likely to be searched $5.00 times more likely to face forth by police. now, anyone who's lacking bradley's been growing up in u. k for the past couple of decades, which you could easily think whereas that ages ago. that's not now. but if you look at the very bottom of that source, it's 2021. levi. what he's going on with a police right now and interactions with the public, particularly black and brown, and my ne, while at the moment, the topic policing,
7:37 am
lack of minority ethnic communities are experiencing, especially young people, is causing a lot of attention. because as you've shown the disparities around stuff such and the use of force, that includes how cases are use, et cetera. it gives the impression that police are like an occupying force and not a service. and that's a result of that trust and confidence is the lowest. it's been for a good decade. in fact, it was an improvement after the macpherson inquiry into the death of steven lawrence and the subsequent recommendations and monitor please progress around these issues externally as well as internally and that independent oversight on the steven ernst, their group held the commissioner and all the chief principles to account.
7:38 am
unfortunately with this new government in 2010, 10 years after we pull, the independent oversight is gone. on the scrutiny, i've been literally eroded and so you've got this heavy handy tub policing that's not being monitors of it should be. there's not the supervision, a leadership that if necessary, and young people are saying the other police and protected. i've been running a charge for voice you the last 20 years. and that's what those young people say. and they're 1415 year olds, and they're saying things have to improve independence over fight has gone south jumping that so i just want to take us back to mac fashion or a 2nd. i'm point out that we exist only because of the racist month. people, lawrence up like 18 year old school by 28 years ago now is widely believed that the police investigate to this martyr. definitely because stephen was black and i
7:39 am
didn't quite answer, smart talk, lead to the best in quality. and one of the recommendations led to the creation, the p. c, the, and the 1st concept of independent oversight of the police and the u. k. that were dependent of government for independent of the police crash and community. and we him to improve public confidence in policing by ensuring the people that came civil father action and lessons allowed. and we do that by providing independent scrutiny of the police on behalf of the public. and it's our job to hold please to a kind of investigations and oversight of the pizza complaint. this isn't the over fight the failing or the police fighting or both. so why to the come to was actually those stocks that you spoke about. those show concerns around discrimination, name the response from the haven't gone away. black people are disproportionately
7:40 am
affected by stop and such as you've said, but also other tactics like cheese or the use of cheese or black people, or 8 times more likely to have either teeth deployed or drawn against them than the white pass it. and you've talked about the other use of force as well and i want to bring it back to placing shows no force. and the yuki can why they have the level of racial disparity that they do until they can start to i'm sure that's funny to mental question. they will not stop can they can roach and to community competence south you might, you might, you might such a good point and we just let me just bring in clovis, page, cuz this is on youtube. i'm just gonna bring this in here, clovis has to stamp out racism. one has knowledge to start with finding structure, racism and corruption, many recommendations with given in a public inquire report less than fun. life were adult page. so
7:41 am
anyway, pick up and then i, i want to make sure that we, we get away from reports and inquiries and we talk about real people and we don't have an 8.9 percent. what person, right. you don't have that in that you have real people and camilla is our real person in this conversation. we will go ahead briefly. i'm bringing in committee next. yeah. as i said to you, i've been running charged school boy cheese. and those young people say that police and under protected and as i said that the regional young people, 1415 year old doing a huge leadership program called young leaders for that for me says a lot about their perceptions of please. i think the other thing is the central focus on citizens. i've been eroded by you're losing a lot of front citizens focused cups. lexi and they've been teams and faces those offices. so let me disconnect, you know, form
7:42 am
a police officer. so you have an inside track can inside view. i'm going to share this, this headline, and this is that i can't think of a was headline for a mom to be involved in. my daughter was jealous for fighting off a racist attack. free c under campaign launched camilla, that's your daughter. and up until that point up until the point way, you and your daughter was involved in a huge fight that the n d tragically because she's now doing prison time. and your family in the campaign is and that was wrong. this is a miscarriage of justice. what did you think of police before you got involved with the police? well, i've never been involved with police before. my family husbands and but my perception of the police, the fact they did not work black and bryan people and it was a case to stay away from them. don't speak to them. don't get in any kind of
7:43 am
situation where police is involved or not your door. and because of the black can brian person, you would be the one that to be accused. and that was my thought was not always been my perception of the police before this happened to see under so seattle, when on a camping trip, when ugly, very quickly, a fight broke out police record. and then what happened while the fight. wow. people say a fight, but my daughter was brutally attacked. she was brutally attacked by 3 people. my daughter with 20 at the time. and these people that attacked her. 2 of them were men in their forties and one of them with a woman the next 30. so these were current adults according to you know, compared to c, h. she was not from conscious re stumped on her head. she was kicked, she was brutally beaten, and she managed to get away with the help of her partner,
7:44 am
a partner with unfortunately not the time of the incident. and the end when he allowed her to get away once she regained consciousness. and when she managed to find the clever enough that com site, one police officer was already there on the police record because these people had said that my daughter for, for hadn't disabled daughter. he could not ruin because she had major reconstruct the surgery, 8 weeks prior to the pac had deliberately smashed the glass in the face of the woman. so to me and that was not the case. camilla, what was wrong with the way the police treat your daughter situation because she's now doing time for what she accused the people who are fighting her of doing so. she serving prison time. what to do wrong the what the police did wrong was not infest. investigate her race, hate crime allegation, not one
7:45 am
b. and there were 2 allegations made that night and they didn't bother looking to see unders height, crunchy, poor teeth agree. and i provided racial assaults. i mean, teach reported one. and they did not bother to be investigated to call, you know, her considerable injuries, you know, heading up the free slander partition. and you are asking for what, because of why connected? well, well, what we, what we are asking for, we've raise the petition because we've shared the under side of the story. because as, as, as previously mentioned, the police did not investigate young allegations which was c v allegation she made . and we've right, the right, the petition sharing the under story in the hope that we can, you know, type base right through to appeal stage before with the countries to stages of appeal already. and we've managed to prove already the non independent weaknesses
7:46 am
wrong. we've already proved their life and we're trying to overturn her conviction, and we galvanizing as much support as possible on we've got tens of thousands of people supporting us that have the common sense to see that something is not right to breathe. what the under has been sent to prison for just by reading the story. it's not right. let us talk guests about that. and these are just a couple of examples here of agree jesus issues with the place where we're actually disconnecting adults and saying this is racism. i want to bring in here, leroy, some thoughts about stuff and such. and then let's talk about how we fix this. is it fixable? 7 look. so in the 1st, not in march, in july of 2020 in london. but men and boys are stocked. 22000 times by the police
7:47 am
22000 stopping searches, a concert that's enough of action across the police force in women. hercules, both if not institution races, will i think those stats suggest otherwise. there's often a strong focus on the efficacy of stuff. it's in terms of whether it's useful for firing crime, whether it's uncovered bathrooms that actually get strengths of the straight release side of the human cost. and that is that black asian ethnic minority mouth predominant lays up the in stopped by the much higher than their white count. and searches undermine in the social fabric of our communities in our society, which is police officers are rash, b profiling communities. natal. i feel like a broken record because we've had this conversation multiple times. so now what do
7:48 am
we do when we're in 2021? this disparity with the way police treat black and brown people. how to get, how do you address that? well, it's been a real acknowledgment by the police and the police planning commissions, wherever they are in the country technologies they have a problem. and then start to ensure that offices who are prone to racial profiling and not stopping people through intelligence has the supervision and leadership. and so the supervisors should be holding them to account because what gets measured gets done. i mean, need to make sure that those offices are being held to account. i think the other things that needs to be a truth that there is no correlation between stop and search and knife crime. there's a lot of times they say, oh, you stop in search because it's to protect your lives. but there's never been a correlation. in fact, the home office, the company, the police, the data analysis,
7:49 am
you actually says that there is no correlation. sometimes they picked and trust similarly, but what you need a, a objected intelligence, that stuff and such and working with the community, if you could, you can do on your own. communities needs to be working with you, especially young people. and so you've got to treat them right. you cost on one hand, please, can you work with us and then the other dave, you then start searching them in a heavy handed way, not intelligence lead. so they asked to be proper supervision and leadership. you need to have police crime commission is holding chief constable and the commissioner to account and making sure that it's independent oversight. you call the police to do it. and so i've been if the 30th i know district and let me just i'm fine. most offices will do that job without fear of favor, but there are some rogue offs. the weather very, very heavy influence influence,
7:50 am
but that's the argument of police everywhere as a few bad apples. a few wrote police committee. you are you shaking your head, you nodding your head to doing go ahead, go ahead. no, i think i think the feedback, the apples. i mean, the majority on the starts from the top on the nightly rates that you know, these higher police officers need to hold people to times on the needs to be a decent independence organization, but also police the police. and that he's not there that he's not in place. and this is why we have the, the not police the police effectively. no, i mean i hear that challenge and i recognize we have more work to do to build awareness of what we do with communities. i just like, i want to come back to stop and church because i, i agree with the roy saying around the effect that has on communities. we did a piece of work last year where we looked cities of our investigations. they all
7:51 am
features black men. and we looked at it to see well, what the things that communities are telling us. do we see evidence of park and we did and we made you, we used our legal powers, can make 11 recommendations to change a policing practice to the metropolitan police and syria. they were all accepted and were following up to make sure that those recommendations of one because often this conversation turns into recommendations and inquiries and investigations and give me one, give me one solid. why would you like this is going to work isn't going to change racism in the metropolitan police, which is the police force that the overseas london go ahead. 1111, that's what they're, what are i'm going to give you one recommendation that we made. so one of the things that we seen where officers were routine the handcuffing individuals and i
7:52 am
use hancock, there's a use of force and it has to be justified in law. it cannot be just customer practice to routinely slap cuts on young black men. but that's what we were seeing . so we made a recommendation to the police. the need to address the need to address the guidance and the culture and practice that had become embedded. and the foster, the evidence that we see they've accepted that they've published their plan to address that through a new policy. now obviously the challenges for communities to see the change we work with others and assess them to deliver that change. the deputy mayor of london that focuses on policing and crime, we're working with hard to make sure that the recommendation we've made it's actually implement. i'm not committed to see the change. so i, he, that i have the, the commitment in your voice and your efforts. i want to play something though, to you commit. this is christina dick. precedent take the commission out of the
7:53 am
metropolitan police service. she's talking about stop and search in a way that made me square in my chair. and i'm wondering how many black and brown people she has conversations with. that was my takeaway, have listened to her and then react immediately. let's take the time. the important thing is an eye for observers on the streets. most of the time the offices are extremely professional. they deal with it extremely well. they're on their body. one video, they explain themselves, they keep usually young people chatting and laughing and joking a lot of the time if that's appropriate and sending people away knowing why they've been stopped and searched. and in the main, i think understanding that and, and feeling feeling as, as good as they could. no, i just don't think she has an understanding at all. and you know, i think, you know, when some police officers don't wear the party warned for teaching my daughters
7:54 am
case, the arresting police officer didn't weigh the party one foot teach. and you know, when they talking to the youth in a friendly manner, to try and trick them to try and get information i to them. and this is the consensus of most, but i can brian people that is no trust with the police a call. and you know, she needs to be in the community, she needs to be speaking to brock and brian people. and she needs to be listening to the words that come out of the nice and stop giving this service because that's all she's giving leave i'm, i'm going to share this thought with you from youtube. and then i'm going to go to a comment that takes us into a much broader area because i know this is some of the work that you're doing, say, margaret, is watching right now. margaret says it's disgusting. how you opinions don't want to face up to the colonial history as impact. it's left on black lives to this day, all over europe and america. the police are racism, the u. k. this is margaret tate. i'm gonna, i'm gonna add, perhaps some people, some belief. does that seem fat and less generic?
7:55 am
and then the bigger picture, the bigger story, have a nice novel leasing is not the answer to all of society sales. and we know that we have policing around for centuries for system designed from colonial times, inherently racist because that's it's origins trying to change it and reform in small steps when work because the system itself is problematic and, and that's what needs to change the one sure far away, we can show that lack of asian and other minority ethnic people, a less likely to expect police brutality is by putting in the kind of social infrastructure, an investment to make them less likely to come into the context of the police in the 1st place. this means youth provision, mental health institutions, community lead services for survivors of domestic violence and child abuse. strong wednesday, unions and trade unions that people have better housing and more secure jobs. you
7:56 am
are much better program than regulating, overseeing the place is mostly probably and that's why i've been doing a lot of work on the no parliamentary commission on youth balance from 2016 to 2020 . and in fact, in today's even standard to highlight in the fact that the math and the police crime commission of the deputy math basin crime, sophie linden, are not holding the commissioner to account. and as a result, but these things are continuing. so we have a lot, i think that was the last speaker said adam very well. he is actually highlighted the public health approach. we got to ensure that police only called to the certain areas where the data, but inforcement and ensuring that, that dealing with the right people intelligence lead and not into fishing
7:57 am
expeditions because that's what upsets people. and then you've got to ensure they're not going to dealing with issues really like mental health, because a lot of times police officers escalate everything. they're not deescalate. and especially when dealing with black men who may have a mental condition of one form or another. and so they treat them badly. and then i think the other thing is we need to understand that clearly police officers, it's not, it's not gonna solve all of public ills or society so it has to be done in partnership . so once we start to get that narrative that yes, please have a problem and they're going to be held to account a pre frying commission to doing it. and the i o t c a doing their work with through south. and i must admit the i b c as improve for it was 10 years ago. and i really want to make sure they do the things this most camilla and sal. thank you so much for bringing a real personal face onto. can the u. k. police,
7:58 am
can they get rid of racism in the police force? it is a complicated, complex conversation and you helped us have it youtube. oh thank you for your comments or questions. always appreciate the next time. take everybody. ah, ah, they're the young virtuoso racing constant hold and dominating international competition . 1018, south korea musical prodigy, one out to 0. talk to al jazeera. we did you want the un to take and who stop to we listen. you see the whole infrastructure being totally destroyed. we meet with global news makers and talk about the stories that matter on our sierra to start to cheerfully in front of the
7:59 am
next museum in amsterdam. hundreds of protesters scattered to demand. the government is locked down restrictions and lift the curfew. the 1st in the country since world war 2, the threat is that we lose our freedoms. the protesters who are not following social distances rules are repeatedly ordered to disperse by police. police is trying very hard friends. the scenario that happened last week when thousands were rioting and sitting across the latter, after some protest started throwing stones. and that's enough for your work. police on horseback moved in to clear the area award winning programming from international. so make it one quick, so it's right on the back global discussion. what guarantee that will be the right to take the fide life giving voice to the voice here in california, almost everybody's a paycheck away from being on house program,
8:00 am
but open your eyes to view the world today. this is what the picture looks like. the, the world from a different perspective on our nearest oh, i depend, demik continues to overshadow the limpid gains of japan registers. i 6 months, hide infections before the opening ceremony. ah, hello, i'm down. jordan, this is out of the or a lie from also coming up thousands of people struggling central china. they try and cope with the worst flooding in decades. we look at how smaller communities in south africa are suffering in the wake of recent unrest plus.
30 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on