Met chief 'baffled' by lack of Covid vaccines for police

  • 1/19/2021
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Britain’s most senior police chief has said she is “baffled” by the government’s decision not to prioritise frontline police officers for Covid vaccines despite her repeated requests to ministers. The Metropolitan police commissioner, Dame Cressida Dick, pointed out that in London almost 150 officers have been spat or coughed at by people who claimed they had Covid. In a phone-in on LBC, Dick expressed her frustration that frontline officers in the UK were not on the priority list for vaccines. She said: “In many other countries, police officers and law enforcement colleagues are being prioritised and I want my officers to get the vaccine. I am baffled really.” Answering a call from the father of a police officer who contracted Covid, Dick revealed she had been lobbying the government for police vaccinations for “many, many weeks”. She said: “I have had many conversations with the home secretary. She is very supportive on this subject. These are difficult decisions, but I think there is a very strong case for the frontline officers.” She pointed out that “disgusting” and “awful” incidents of police being coughed and spat at were “quite widespread”. Dick said: “We’ve had 97 occasions where somebody has either mentioned or threatened Covid, and then coughed. We’ve had 48 [occasions] where they’ve spat. We’ve charged 126 people with that and nearly two-thirds of them have got custodial sentences.” Dick said every day officers were also being coughed and spat at by people who may have Covid but did not say so. She said: “It certainly makes the point that we’re dealing with very unpredictable, sometimes violent, often spitting, shouting, people who are just spraying unwittingly, because they’re very upset.” She said three members of staff from the Met had died of Covid since the pandemic began, including a community support officer last week. She said: “This is a critical service, and to keep other people safe, we need to keep the police safe. Frontline officers are in and out of people’s houses, they’re helping people who are sick on the street or collapse behind locked doors, they are dealing with sometimes very aggressive people and to arrest people they have to get up close and personal. They don’t have very long to risk assess all that. They certainly can’t be dressed top to toe in heavy PPE.” Dick said ministers had expressed “warm words” that in the in second wave of the vaccination programme frontline workers, including police officers, may be given priority for jabs. But she suggested this was too late: “Phase 2 we won’t come to, as I understand, until spring, whatever that means, whereas we will end the first four cohorts for the very vulnerable in the middle of February.” Under the current vaccination programme, 60-year-olds, including Dick, are due to get the vaccine before frontline officers. “The frontlines should be getting it before people like me and I’m very clear about that … This is a decision that’s the government has made so far on the basis of the JCVI, who are the experts,” she said.

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