UK’s top police officer storms out of Cobra meeting about riots and grabs mic
This is the awkward moment the head of the Metropolitan Police stormed out of the government’s Cobra emergency response meeting at Downing Street.
Footage shows Sir Mark Rowley’s snatching a journalist’s microphone cover as he rushes out of Number 10.
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He was being asked about the police response to the violence that has swept over Britain in the last week
‘Are we going to end two-tier policing sir?’ one of the reporters quizzes him at the entrance.
In response, Sir Mark takes hold of the mic, which then appeared to fall to the ground.
Prime minister Sir Keir Starmer had chaired the Cobra meeting following all the ‘racist and Islamophobic’ riots in the last week.
Ministers and police chiefs descended on Downing Street for the meeting, which will set out a plan to clamp down on further unrest.
Judging from Sir Mark’s dramatic reaction, not all attendees have agreed on one response.
But a spokesperson from the Met Police said the commissioner was simply ‘in a hurry’.
They said: ‘The commissioner had a positive and constructive meeting with the PM and partners across government and policing.
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‘He was in a hurry to return to New Scotland Yard to take action on the agreed next steps.’
Speaking after the meeting, Sir Keir said a ‘standing army’ of specialist police officers would be set up to deal with rioting and unrest.
He said: ‘There are a number of actions that came out of the meeting. The first is we will have a standing army of specialist public duty officers so that we will have enough officers to deal with this where we need them.
‘The second is we will ramp up criminal justice. There have already been hundreds of arrests, some have appeared in court this morning.
‘I have asked for early consideration of the earliest naming and identification of those involved in the process who will feel the full force of the law.’
The rise of the far-right has so far been the biggest challenge the PM has had to face in the last one month in the post.
Addressed the nation on Sunday, he told ‘thugs’ they would ‘regret’ engaging in ‘far-right thuggery’.
He promised that those involved in unrest would ‘face the full force of the law’.
Meanwhile, home secretary Yvette Cooper said the courts are on ‘stand-by’ to ensure ‘swift justice’.
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