Metropolitan Police Faces Criticism Over Changes to Anti-Racism Strategy
In Brief
The Metropolitan Police's plan to merge its anti-racism strategy into a wider anti-discrimination program has drawn criticism.
Key Facts
- The Metropolitan Police plans to integrate its anti-racism strategy into a broader anti-discrimination scheme.
- Academic Shereen Daniels criticized the move, calling it an insult to black people.
- The Met stated the new scheme will also address gender and sexual orientation discrimination.
What Happened
The Metropolitan Police announced plans to absorb its anti-racism strategy into a wider anti-discrimination program. This move has been criticized by academic Shereen Daniels, who described it as a backward step.
Why It Matters
The change has sparked debate about how best to address discrimination within the police force and whether combining policies dilutes focus on specific issues such as racism. Based on a single source report
What's Next
Further responses from community groups, stakeholders, or the Metropolitan Police may follow as the plan is discussed and potentially implemented.
Sources
- The Guardian — Met accused of insulting black people with shake-up of anti-racism strategy(1d ago)
