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Sarah Everard was murdered by serving police officer Wayne Couzens. Everard family handout/PA
Sarah Everard

Johnson says UK police system needs fixing over complaints by women and girls

The UK Prime Minister says women are ‘finding their lives lost to this system’ while police do not take their complaints seriously enough.

BORIS JOHNSON SAYS it is “infuriating” that cases involving violence against women and girls are not being taken seriously enough by police and take too long to process through the criminal justice system.

The UK Prime Minister also said too many women are “finding their lives lost to this system” while waiting and hoping for their cases to be taken seriously.

Johnson made his comments after talks with Metropolitan Police Commissioner Cressida Dick amid a crisis in the public’s trust of the police following the life conviction given to serving officer Wayne Couzens this week for the kidnap, rape and murder of London woman Sarah Everard.

His remarks were echoed by Home Secretary Priti Patel, who said police must “raise the bar” by taking harassment and flashing of women more seriously.

Speaking to The Times, Johnson insisted the public could and should still trust the police but work needed to be done to “fix” how the criminal justice system handled complaints of violence against women and girls.

He said such cases were being compromised by the long time it took courts to process them, which meant police did not take them seriously enough.

Saying he had spoken to Commissioner Dick about how to boost prosecutions and convictions for rape cases, he said: “But there’s another problem, which is partly caused by the failure of the criminal justice system to dispose of these (cases). Are the police taking this issue seriously enough? It’s infuriating. I think the public feel that they aren’t and they’re not wrong.

“Do I fundamentally believe the police are on our side? Yes, absolutely they are. Can you trust the police? Yes you can. But there is an issue about how we handle sexual violence, domestic violence, the sensitivity, the diligence, the time, the delay, the confusion about your mobile phone. That’s the thing we need to fix.”

Johnson said many women abandoned their attempts to find justice over violent crimes against them because of “victim attrition” and said “far too many women are basically finding their lives lost to this system” while waiting for their complaint to be “taken seriously, waiting for their case to be heard”.

“You’re seeing victim attrition, you’re seeing people giving up, it’s utterly miserable for them. It’s infuriating,” he told the paper.

wayne-couzens-court-case Wayne Couzens was a serving policeman at the time and he used his warrant card to falsely arrest Ms Everard to abduct her (Met Police/PA) PA PA

The UK Prime Minister said police were realising that when they made arrests in such cases “they’re not getting through the system fast enough” and that this “may well be one of the reasons why they’re not doing enough to help the victims that report”.

In an earlier interview with broadcasters, Johnson said the Government was examining how the criminal justice system could be improved to ensure swifter processing of complaints of sexual violence, and spoke of the need to recruit more female officers.

“I do believe in the police. I do think that we can trust the police. And I think the police do a wonderful, wonderful job,” he said.

But he added there were “too few prosecutions for rape and too few successful prosecutions, too few convictions”, adding: “What you’re seeing is the whole system snarled up with evidential problems, with data issues, with mobile phones disclosure, all that kind of stuff, and it’s a nightmare for the women concerned. So we’ve got to fix it.”

Patel told The Daily Telegraph: “I would say to all women: give voice to these issues, please… There is something so corrosive in society if people think that it’s OK to harass women verbally, physically, and in an abusive way on the street and all that kind of stuff.

“I want women to have the confidence to call it out. I don’t see all of this as low level.

“I don’t want to see postcode lotteries around the country. This is a very clear message to police to raise the bar: treat everybody in the right way. Make sure that when these crimes or concerns are reported, people are treated with respect, dignity and seriously.”

Health Secretary Sajid Javid said there are lessons to be learned, telling BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: “There definitely needs to be reform to rebuild that confidence (in the police).

wayne-couzens-court-case Wayne Couzens was captured on CCTV stopping Sarah Everard and making a false arrest to kidnap her (Met Police/PA) PA PA

“At this stage I couldn’t jump to what is the best way to do that reform. I think it is right to take a bit of time rather than some kind of kneejerk reaction and call for an inquiry because that’s what people do.

“I do think there needs to be reform and that clearly needs to the police themselves but there is also a role for government.”

Meanwhile, police have also come under fire for suggesting women should flag down a bus, amid other advice, if they have concerns when stopped by an officer.

Government ministers and Scotland Yard were accused of having a tone-deaf response to violence against women and girls after a string of suggestions over what action the public should take if they fear an officer is not acting legitimately.

Other advice – including shouting to a passer-by, running to a house, knocking on a door, or calling 999 – was also met with heavy criticism, with one MP branding it “derisory”.

Scotland’s First Minister Nicola Sturgeon tweeted: “It’s not up to women to fix this. It’s not us who need to change.

“The problem is male violence, not women’s ‘failure’ to find ever more inventive ways to protect ourselves against it. For change to happen, this needs to be accepted by everyone.”

Labour MP Bell Ribeiro-Addy said on Twitter: “We want to know what the Met are doing to address the deeply rooted problems with violence against women within the force.

“This completely derisory advice shows they’re still not taking it seriously.”

The Met stressed the advice was given for specific, and rare, scenarios in which people doubted the identity of any solo plain clothes police officer engaging with them.

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