London gets armed police
WIELDING submachine guns and pistols, British police are making rare armed patrols in crime-blighted London neighborhoods -- a change in law enforcement tactics that may prompt calls for the wider use of weapons by the country's traditionally unarmed Bobbies.
London's police said yesterday that a new armed unit is carrying out regular sweeps of districts riven by gun battles between rival drug gangs.
Unlike typical police procedure, the team of about 20 officers actively seeks out criminals carrying or storing guns -- rather than waiting to respond to emergency calls about incidents involving weapons.
Chief Inspector Neil Sharman said the unit began work in June to tackle pockets of rising gun crime, and will double in size from November amid concerns over the increasing use of weapons in Britain's capital.
In contrast to the United States and many European nations, British police have never routinely carried firearms on patrol, with only a limited number of specialist officers trained to use guns.
Britain's Home Office said being unarmed is part of the "character of the police" in the UK.
"In the past the police were authority figures dealing primarily with people who respected the police. However, as terrorism and crime increases in the UK the traditional icon of the Bobby on the beat is becoming incapable of dealing with terrorists and violent crime," said Bob Ayers, a London-based former US intelligence officer.
The British public has traditionally been resistant to the routine arming of police -- a skepticism heightened by the 2005 shooting death of an innocent Brazilian electrician, mistaken by police marksmen for a suicide bomber.
Yet, some argue Britain is now naive to believe that police can tackle rising levels of gun crime without weapons of their own.
London's police said yesterday that a new armed unit is carrying out regular sweeps of districts riven by gun battles between rival drug gangs.
Unlike typical police procedure, the team of about 20 officers actively seeks out criminals carrying or storing guns -- rather than waiting to respond to emergency calls about incidents involving weapons.
Chief Inspector Neil Sharman said the unit began work in June to tackle pockets of rising gun crime, and will double in size from November amid concerns over the increasing use of weapons in Britain's capital.
In contrast to the United States and many European nations, British police have never routinely carried firearms on patrol, with only a limited number of specialist officers trained to use guns.
Britain's Home Office said being unarmed is part of the "character of the police" in the UK.
"In the past the police were authority figures dealing primarily with people who respected the police. However, as terrorism and crime increases in the UK the traditional icon of the Bobby on the beat is becoming incapable of dealing with terrorists and violent crime," said Bob Ayers, a London-based former US intelligence officer.
The British public has traditionally been resistant to the routine arming of police -- a skepticism heightened by the 2005 shooting death of an innocent Brazilian electrician, mistaken by police marksmen for a suicide bomber.
Yet, some argue Britain is now naive to believe that police can tackle rising levels of gun crime without weapons of their own.
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