Skip to content
Search

Latest Stories

British police face struggle to clean up sexist culture after scandals

British police face struggle to clean up sexist culture after scandals

BRITAIN's police force is under unprecedented pressure to reform after the conviction of officers for murder and rape, alongside evidence of widespread sexism and misogyny in its ranks.

London's Metropolitan Police has been hardest hit: After years of saying serious misconduct cases were isolated incidents, it now says it must change its culture.


In the last year, an officer was convicted of murdering and raping a woman he abducted using his police badge, another was jailed for more than 30 years for 24 rapes and two officers were sacked for sharing photos of two murdered sisters.

The crimes turned a focus onto the broader work culture, with a separate investigation into officers at a central London police station finding a culture of bullying, racial discrimination, misogyny and sexual harassment.

"We have failed and I'm sorry," Mark Rowley, the Met's new chief and Britain's most senior officer, said in January.

Rowley took over from Cressida Dick who was pushed out in February 2022 after London's Mayor, Sadiq Khan, said he did not believe she would root out the racism and sexism in the force.

The task he faces is significant. A team has been set up to review the force's handling of previously closed complaints made against nearly 1,100 officers and staff over the last decade, complaints that range from the use of inappropriate language to allegations of sexual assault.

Rowley has said that the process to rid the force of corrupt officers will not be rapid as it takes time for cases to go to court, and that more "painful" stories are likely to emerge.

Police figures show a record number of allegations of sexual offences were made against police in 2021, with 190 of the 251 total coming internally from colleagues or staff.

Diana Johnson, an opposition Labour lawmaker who chairs parliament's Home Affairs Committee, said in January that the police were guilty of institutional sexism.

For those trying to address the issue, like Detective Superintendent Miles Ockwell who has championed diversity throughout his 20-year career and instigated British police's involvement with the UN's HeForShe gender equality programme in 2017, the situation is desperate.

He wants the police to be angry about the revelations. "But to channel that anger in a positive way ... to say this is unacceptable," Ockwell told Reuters.

Those police officers who are dismayed by the current situation have a lot to be angry about.

Among the most shocking revelations regarding the culture of the police came from an investigation that showed officers exchanging offensive messages in which they discussed sexually assaulting their female colleagues and beating women.

"I would happily rape you", one officer wrote to a colleague, while they referred to another male constable as "mcrapey raperson" due to a rumour he liked to bring women back to the police station for sex, the investigation found.

According to an official report, officers had passed off the conversations as 'banter'. Two officers were sacked last year.

A police watchdog report last November cited a survey of 11,000 officers and staff as showing "an alarming number" faced "appalling behaviour by male colleagues".

Among its findings were male officers stopping cars driven by women they regarded as pretty in a practice they called "booty patrol", senior officers pestering junior ranked women for sex and officers watching pornography at work.

"We concluded that far too many women had, at some stage in their career, experienced unwanted sexual behaviour towards them," the report said, finding major problems in the vetting of officers and how complaints of misogyny were dealt with.

England and Wales now has more than 50,000 female police officers, almost 35 per cent of the total, and there are more women in senior leadership roles. But some are having second thoughts.

Detective Inspector Frankie Westoby, chair of the Women's Network for Hertfordshire Police, north of London, wrote in October that two to three women went to her every week looking for support, over an array of issues: "If things don't change, policing will lose more women."

Britain's home secretary Suella Braverman has told police chiefs that those ill-suited need to be "weeded out, and quickly".

College of Policing figures show 257 officers were dismissed in the year to March 2021, broadly in keeping with recent years, but up from the 70 sacked in 2017-18.

(Reuters)

More For You

uk-home-buyers

For most first-time buyers, the exemption will drop from £425,000 to £300,000. (Photo credit: iStock)

Home buyers rush to complete purchases before stamp duty increase

HOME BUYERS in England and Northern Ireland are racing to complete their purchases before 1 April, when stamp duty thresholds will change, potentially costing them thousands of pounds.

Currently, home purchases under £250,000 are exempt from stamp duty, but this threshold will revert to £125,000.

Keep ReadingShow less
London Court Sentences Chinese Student for Drugging & Rape

Zhenhao Zou, 28, lived in south London and used online platforms and dating apps to meet women, according to London’s Metropolitan Police. (Photo: Reuters)

London court convicts Chinese student of drugging, raping women

A CHINESE student has been found guilty by a London court of drugging and raping 10 women in the UK and China. British police suspect he may have attacked more than 50 other women.

Zhenhao Zou, 28, lived in south London and used online platforms and dating apps to meet women, according to London’s Metropolitan Police (MPS).

Keep ReadingShow less
Sadiq Khan: ‘I’m a grumpy so and so in Ramadan’

Sadiq Khan during the Ramadan light switch on in Picadilly Circus in London last Wednesday (26)

Sadiq Khan: ‘I’m a grumpy so and so in Ramadan’

Noah Vickers

SIR SADIQ KHAN has said as a “caffeine addict”, he particularly struggles to deprive himself of coffee during the holy month of Ramadan when he fasts.

The London mayor confessed he will be “a grumpy so and so” to the BBC’s ‘Not Even Water: Ramadan Unearthed’ podcast.

Keep ReadingShow less
IMF warns Sri Lanka’s recovery at risk amid looming public sector strikes

Anura Kumara Dissanayake

IMF warns Sri Lanka’s recovery at risk amid looming public sector strikes

SRI LANKA’S fragile economic recovery could be hampered by threatened trade union strikes over reduced benefits for government employees in this year’s budget, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) warned on Tuesday (4).

President Anura Kumara Dissanayake’s maiden budget raised public sector salaries but also cut longstanding perks to repair the country’s tattered finances.

Keep ReadingShow less
New Political Party Emerges as Bangladesh Student Leaders Unite

Nahid Islam, convener of the newly formed Jatiya Nagarik Party, addresses supporters as students shout slogans during the party’s launch in Dhaka last Friday (28)

Bangladesh student leaders unveil new political party

BANGLADESHI students who played a key role in overthrowing the government last year unveiled a new political party last Friday (28), the latest outfit to join the fray ahead of expected elections.

The party includes key organisers from the powerful Students Against Discrimination (SAD) group that spearheaded the uprising which ousted former prime minister Sheikh Hasina in August.

Keep ReadingShow less