UK Prime
Minister, Boris Johnson, has defended the use of ‘stop and search’ by British
Police amid suggestions that it is disproportionately used against black
people.
Speaking at a
Parliamentary session on Wednesday afternoon, the Prime Minister insisted that
he understood the ‘strong and legitimate’ feelings of people in the UK over the
‘appalling’ death of George Floyd in the USA, but that the searching technique
was necessary in combating knife crime prevalent in the UK.
Johnson also
refused to condemn the response of Trump to the Floyd incident, which saw a
white policeman kneel on Mr Floyd’s neck for more than eight minutes till he
died. Instead he praised the US as a ‘bastion of peace and freedom’.
Johnson was
challenged by acting Liberal Democrat leader Sir Ed Davey, who said black
people were 47 times more likely than white people to be stopped by police
using stop and search powers.
He said: ‘On
too many occasions, stop and search seems to mean being black is enough to be
suspected of being a criminal.’
Johnson in
response acknowledged the powers should be used ‘sensitively and in accordance
with the law’ but said they were an important tool in combating violent crime.
“What has
been happening in London with knife crime has been completely unacceptable.”
‘I do believe
that stop and search, amongst many other things, can be a very important
utensil in fighting knife crime. It does work. It worked for us when I was
running London and it must work now. It is not the whole answer but it is part
of the mix.’
Challenged by
the SNP’s Kirsty Blackman to condemn Mr Trump’s ‘horrendous’ response to the
death of Mr Floyd, Johnson replied;
“He (Mr
Trump) is president of the United States, which is our most important ally in
the world today. ‘Whatever those on the left may say about it, the United
States is a bastion of peace and freedom and has been for most of my lifetime.’

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