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Written Question
Police
Monday 1st February 2016

Asked by: Gerald Jones (Labour - Merthyr Tydfil and Rhymney)

Question to the Home Office:

To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, what steps she has taken to ensure that police forces have sufficient numbers and adequate powers to deal with incidents similar to which took place during New Year celebrations in Cologne.

Answered by Mike Penning

Enforcement of the law and decisions on how resources are deployed, are responsibilities of individual Chief Officers and Police and Crime Commissioners, taking into account the specific local issues and demands which they face.

Since the disorders seen in summer 2011 and the issue by the Home Secretary in 2012 of the first Strategic Policing Requirement, the police in England and Wales have taken significant steps to strengthen their capability to manage the risk of disorder. These steps include:

• ensuring sufficient public order trained officers are available to respond to local and national strategic threat and risk assessments;

• enabling the quick and effective deployment of police officers across the country, through the National Police Coordination Centre and the National Mobilisation Plan;

• ensuring the effective use of public order powers and tactics;

• ensuring the early detection of, and effective mitigation against, any issues through an improved national capability to intelligently monitor open source media.

The police have a range of powers they can use across a broad canvas of criminal offences enabling them to proactively prepare for, and provide, a coordinated and proportionate response to disorder incidents, similar to those seen in the New Year celebrations in Cologne.

With regards to the sexual violence seen in Cologne, the key message must be that anyone who disrupts the communities and livelihoods of our citizens will face the full force of justice, because it is the victims who matter most. This includes those seeking asylum and we are clear we will remove asylum eligibility from those who commit serious crime. I am also clear that every incident of sexual violence and rape need to be treated seriously, every victim needs to be treated with dignity and every investigation and every prosecution needs to be conducted thoroughly and professionally.


Written Question
National Wildlife Crime Unit: Finance
Wednesday 18th November 2015

Asked by: Gerald Jones (Labour - Merthyr Tydfil and Rhymney)

Question to the Home Office:

To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, what plans the Government has to renew funding of the National Wildlife Crime Unit after March 2016.

Answered by Mike Penning

Decisions on future funding of the National Wildlife Crime Unit will be made as part of the current Spending Review process.