Latest in the long line of Whizzo Wheezes from London’s
occasional Mayor Alexander Boris de Pfeffel Johnson is the idea of “getting Medieval” on all those jolly
rotten people who want to exercise their right to protest. Bozza isn’t at all
happy about the idea of all those oiks taking to the streets in order to
demonstrate their discontent, and so wants the Metropolitan Police to be duly
prepared.
Cripes chaps, rumbled again! Oo-er!! Yikes!!!
And the gizmo he wants to introduce into mainland Britain is
the water cannon. But here a problem enters: Home Secretary Theresa May has
decided she is not going to be bounced into making a decision, and has made it
clear that she will weigh the evidence before giving the nod. So Bozza has gone
ahead and committed to buying the things anyway, because they’re a bargain.
The BBC duly reported the
good news: “The mayor's office said: ‘By
purchasing them now we are able to save over £2.3m compared to buying new
devices’ ... The cannon will be purchased for £30,000 each, as opposed to the
cost of a single new one at £870,000.An additional cost of £127,000 will also
be incurred to make them "fit for purpose" for use in London”.
So that’s that, is it? Well, no it isn’t: there were good
reasons not to go along with the latest Bozza euphoria, as Adam Bienkov at
politics.co.uk observed: water cannon would not have made any difference
during the 2011 disturbances, they would deter peaceful protests, we’re not
being told how or when they would be used, and at 28 tonnes all up, they aren’t
the easiest fit for London’s road network.
But the main objection is that the things are dangerous:
water cannon are not some kind of benign crowd control instrument, and here the
deeply subversive Guardian has
unearthed a disturbing fact. The reason the things are on offer at a
knock-down price (as it were) is that the authorities in Germany deem them too
dangerous. They are being replaced by newer and more sophisticated equipment.
After one protester was stunned and fatally run over by one
of the devices, the investigation “revealed
several flaws in the design of the water cannon had contributed to the
accident: according to police officers, directing the jet of water at a specific
target was ‘a matter of luck’, while undimmed engine noise and a cockpit layout
meant those inside had only a limited sense of what was happening outside”.
Londoners are, surprise surprise, not being told of these
shortcomings by Bozza and his pals. One cannot blame the Met for wanting to get
its hands on the kit: ask the coppers if they would like more of any kind of
power, and they’re not likely to say no. But, not for the first time, it seems
that a Mayor whose only commitment to the job is photo opportunities and
foolery has come up short.
Once again, he’s spending money before engaging brain. That’s not good enough.
Of course the cheapest (and in every sense) option for the Met would be to use rolled up free editions of Boris's fav (news)paper, although they (the unfree ones)have been used in the past to bang unwanted things into peoples' heads.
ReplyDeleteThe only cost - employing Benji the Binman and his mates to collect them all up, other than those returned via Royal Mail marked "gullible readers not known at this address".
£127K to make them fit for purpose! What the hell are they doing, converting them to right hand drive???
ReplyDeletesome new stickers and new radios would be reasonable, what's the rest for?