FORZE DI POLIZIA UK IN ‘SOCCORSO’ DELLA PSNI NEI MOMENTI DI CRISI

Officers from Britain may aid PSNI in Northern Ireland in times of crisis (Belfast Telegraph)

Police officers from Scotland and the rest of Britain will be asked to volunteer for seven-day emergency tours in Northern Ireland if there is an upsurge of violence or civil disorder.
However, the Scottish Police Federation has issued a warning that its officers could become targets for dissident republicans if they are called up.
Officers will be provided with secure accommodation guarded by an armed response unit, which would also protect them while they travel in Northern Ireland.
Most volunteers are expected to come from Scotland.
The Association of Chief Police Officers (ACPO) is currently working on joint protocols through its public order and public safety working group.
The Belfast Telegraph has obtained minutes of the last meeting, on August 14, when Assistant Chief Constable Alistair Finlay represented the PSNI. The minutes show that a number of issues have still to be resolved.
These include safety protocols, training and financial arrangements if a police officer is injured here, or targeted on his/her return home as a result of an incident here.
While such details remain unresolved, police federations across the UK are opposing any deployment.
In a letter, these federations say that “it is unacceptable to deploy police officers from the mainland UK to frontline duties in Northern Ireland… because of the very volatile and demanding circumstances which characterise that policing environment”.
However, the federations are attending meetings to see if their issues can be resolved.
“The bottom line is that, as a staff association, we would never see our colleagues in Northern Ireland left in a situation where nobody is going to go and give them a hand,” Brian Docherty, the chairman of the Scottish Police Federation, told this paper.
Mr Docherty added: “We have identified a number of risk areas. Officers in the PSNI routinely carry firearms, but very few of our boys and girls are firearms-trained. Right away you would have folks going across there who could become a target by any dissident group who wanted to make a name for themselves.”
Another major problem is what is termed “residual threat”.
Mr Docherty pointed out that there were strong links between extremists in the west of Scotland and Northern Ireland.
He explained that if a Scottish officer “was involved in an incident where a civilian was injured or even died as a result of police activity in Northern Ireland”, then this could cause serious implications for the officer’s family.
He added: “Very quickly officers could be identified. You then have to consider rehousing, relocating etc etc. Who pays for that?”
Last night Terry Spence of the NI Police Federation said: “We will take mutual aid from wherever we can get it but there must be the proper mechanisms in place to ensure police officers’ lives are not in danger if they come here.”
Background
Police numbers have been dramatically cut from 12,500, with 13,000 troops in support in 1998, to around 6,500 today. That figure is still seen as high when taking into account our relatively small population, but the dissident threat and the marching season can still leave our Police Service stretched. So far, the PSNI has attempted to fill the gap through overtime, by bringing back retired officers to do office duties, by civilianising many posts and by relying on specialist undercover military back-up in bomb disposal and surveillance.

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