Parts of Met Police are still ‘racist’ says Stephen Lawrence’s mum

Lady Doreen Lawrence said those out on the beat have ‘no relation’ to the community they are policing 

Part of the Metropolitan police are still institutionally racist, the mother of murdered teenager Stephen Lawrence has said.

Some officers ‘still don’t get it’ and those out on the beat have ‘no relation’ to the community they are policing, Doreen Lawrence has claimed 25 years after the forced faced criticism in the wake of her son’s death.

Her 18-year-old son was fatally stabbed by a gang of racists in Eltham, south-east London, on April 22 1993.

It was a watershed moment in modern race relations in the UK after the subsequent Macpherson Report concluded the police made mistakes and were guilty of institutional racism.

Asked if it was still the case, she told The House magazine: ‘I think there’s elements still there because they still don’t understand – they still don’t get it – that you cannot treat people like that.’

Baroness Lawrence said stop and search powers have a place but must be ‘intelligence-led’.

‘I think senior officers probably get it, they understand that’s what they need to do,’ she added.

‘I feel that officers on the beat, they have no relation to the community that they’re policing.

‘They think because they’ve got the power they should be able to do what they like – no, you’re not.

‘I just feel that those sorts of conversations and that sort of training does not happen in the way in which it should.

 18-year-old Stephen Lawrence was fatally stabbed by a gang of racists in Eltham, south-east London, on April 22 1993

 18-year-old Stephen Lawrence was fatally stabbed by a gang of racists in Eltham, south-east London, on April 22 1993

‘That’s why we have the discourse between the young people and the police officers because they think they can speak down to them, which the kids are not going to put up with.

‘So, you have this confrontation all the time.

‘The police need to understand that you need the community’s consent to police you.

‘If they understood that and had a proper rapport with young people, I don’t think we’d have the problems that we do have with young people and the police.’

Young people are still being ‘victimised’ by the police, she said.

The peer also hit back at comments made by former Met detective Bill Mellish in a BBC documentary, The Murder That Changed Britain, when he accused her of not smiling as a ‘gimmick’.

She said: ‘At the end of the day, what did I have to smile about when my son was murdered and you were being idiots … What did I have to smile about?

‘Every time I hear when they speak, it was like during the court case. One officer said that he wasn’t even offered a cup of tea when he came to my house. Get real.

‘So, when you hear those little bit of things, you just think what are we supposed to be doing? Are we supposed to be having a party because my son has been murdered? ‘Come in and have a drink, let me share things with you’.

‘It’s like we have no feelings. We, from the black community, things like this should happen to us because you’ve got no feelings whatsoever and we can do what we want, we can say what we like to you and that’s it.’



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