EuropeSouth AsiaAsia PacificAmericasMiddle EastAfricaBBC HomepageWorld ServiceEducation



Front Page

World

UK

UK Politics

Business

Sci/Tech

Health

Education

Sport

Entertainment

Talking Point

In Depth

On Air

Archive
Feedback
Low Graphics
Help

Thursday, October 21, 1999 Published at 21:08 GMT 22:08 UK


UK Politics

Straw 'rumbled' on police numbers

Jack Straw promised 5,000 new police recruits

The Tories have claimed Home Secretary Jack Straw's pledge to recruit 5,000 more police has been "rumbled" after official figures revealed that more officers than that are being lost every year.

Metropolitan Police Commissioner Sir Paul Condon has also made an attack on police funding, claiming lack of cash had seen his force lose more than 2,000 officers during his time in charge.

Mr Straw has been embroiled in controversy since telling the Labour party conference he would provide cash to recruit 5,000 extra officers, over and above existing hiring plans.

A leaked Treasury memo warned him the net effect of this would be to keep total police levels constant - contrary to the impression given by his announcement that officer levels would rise.

But in a parliamentary written answer released on Thursday night, Mr Straw said the total "wastage rate" - officers resigning, retiring or being dismissed - across England and Wales was 5,343 in 1996/97, 5,885 in 1997/98 and 5,569 in 1998/99, a total of 16,797.


[ image: Ann Widdecombe: Labour's promise is worthless]
Ann Widdecombe: Labour's promise is worthless
Police forces are already planning to recruit 11,000 officers over the next three years - which together with the 5,000 announced by Mr Straw would make a total of 16,000.

But if current trends continue, the 16,000 new recruits would not replace the almost 17,000 who leave over that period - leading to a net fall in police numbers.

Shadow home secretary Ann Widdecombe said: "This substantiates what we have been saying, which is that the rate of recruitment, even with the 5,000 officers, is not going to keep pace with the numbers leaving.

"In other words, there will be another fall in police numbers and that has been thoroughly rumbled by his own figures."

'Fundamentally flawed funding'

Sir Paul criticised the "fundamentally flawed" funding system had hit his force hard.


[ image: Police warn that the thin blue line is getting thinner]
Police warn that the thin blue line is getting thinner
He told Mr Straw at an meeting of rank-and-file officers that the current system of financing forces could not continue and had affected murder inquiries in the capital.

Speaking at a Metropolitan Police Federation meeting, Sir Paul said when he took over the force seven years ago, the Met had 28,400 officers but when he leaves in January there will be only 26,200.

Sir Paul said his force had emerged badly from the national funding formula and told Mr Straw: "This cannot go on.

"It means we cannot devote the resources to murder inquiries that other forces do. It means we have fewer bobbies on the beat than we or the public would like."

Mr Straw, speaking at the same meeting, stood by his pledge, insisting it represented "new money" to recruit extra manpower.

But he said he could not predict how many police officers there would be at the end of the three years of extra funding, because home secretaries no longer had the power to set police force numbers.

"What I can say, and this is what makes our pledge different, is that all of our new money will be ringfenced so that chief officers can only spend it on new officers who they would not otherwise have recruited."





Advanced options | Search tips




Back to top | BBC News Home | BBC Homepage |


UK Politics Contents

A-Z of Parliament
Talking Politics
Vote 2001

Relevant Stories

20 Oct 99�|�UK Politics
Blair uged to be 'tough on lies'

18 Oct 99�|�UK Politics
Straw: I told the whole truth

01 Oct 99�|�UK Politics
Extra police to fight crime





Internet Links


The Metropolitan Police

The Home Office


The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.




In this section

Livingstone hits back

Catholic monarchy ban 'to continue'

Hamilton 'would sell mother'

Straw on trial over jury reform

Blairs' surprise over baby

Conceived by a spin doctor?

Baby cynics question timing

Blair in new attack on Livingstone

Week in Westminster

Chris Smith answers your questions

Reid quits PR job

Children take over the Assembly

Two sword lengths

Industry misses new trains target





Trending Now