October 2, 2008: Met Commissioner Sir Ian Blair Resigns
Metropolitan Police
Commissioner Sir Ian Blair has resigned. The Commissioner is the head of the
Metropolitan Police Service in London and its chief police officer. The Met
Police Commissioner is generally viewed as the top police officer in England
and Wales, although his remit extends solely to the London area and his own
force.
He denied that he was resigning due to any failures by the
Met Police. The Commissioner said he had lost the support of the new chair
of the police authority, London mayor Boris Johnson. The Commissioner said he
was:
"resigning not because of any failures by my Service and not
because the pressures of the office and the many stories that surround it
are too much. I am resigning in the best interests of the people of London
and the Metropolitan Police Service."
During the period of Sir Ian's leadership of the Met, there
was considerable controversy and concern focused on the shooting of the
Brazilian electrician Jean Charles de Menezes at Stockwell underground
station, in south London, in 2005. He had been mistaken for a terrorist.
Home Secretary Jacqui Smith made the following statement
after the resignation of Sir Ian Blair as Commissioner of the Metropolitan
Police:
"Sir Ian Blair told me this morning of his decision to tender
his resignation in two months time. With regret, I have accepted his
decision. Sir Ian has always had my support for the vital and difficult
tasks demanded of the Met. They go well beyond the effective policing of
London – a big enough job in itself – to the commissioner’s national role in
policing and tackling terrorism."
"I pay tribute to Sir Ian for the massive reductions in crime the Met has
achieved in London over the last few year and his continuing efforts to
tackle the issues of guns, gangs and knives. His pioneering work to
introduce neighbourhood policing to London has made a huge impact on the
safety and confidence of Londoners."
"He has transformed the police’s capacity to prevent and deal with terrorism
throughout Britain, including his leadership during terrorist outrages on
London streets. 'Sir Ian can be proud of his contribution nationally and
locally."
This is Sir Ian Blair's full resignation statement:
"I was appointed as the 24th Metropolitan Police Commissioner
in February 2005. Since that time, it has been the proudest task of my life
to lead the men and women of the Metropolitan Police. I believe that the
record of the Met under my command in relation to the expansion of
neighbourhood policing, reduced crime, increased detection, improved public
confidence and our response to terrorism has been a worthy one."
"It is the duty of the Commissioner to lead the Met through good times and
bad: to accept the burdens and pressures of office and, above all, to be a
steward of the Service he commands. However, I have today offered my
resignation as Commissioner to the Home Secretary, which she has reluctantly
but graciously accepted."
"I am resigning not because of any failures by my Service and not because
the pressures of the office and the many stories that surround it are too
much. I am resigning in the best interests of the people of London and the
Metropolitan Police Service. I would have wished to continue to serve
Londoners until my term of office expired in February 2010. However, at a
meeting yesterday, the new Mayor made clear, in a very pleasant but
determined way, that he wished there to be a change of leadership at the
Met. I understand that to serve effectively the Commissioner must have the
confidence of both the Mayor and the Home Secretary. Without the Mayor’s
backing, I do not consider that I can continue in the job. Personally I see
no bar to working effectively with the new Mayor, but it is there that we
differ and hence I am unable to continue."
"The Home Secretary has asked that I should stay for enough time for the
process of appointing my successor to be got underway. I will therefore
leave office on 1 December 2008, giving the Home Secretary and the MPA time
to make plans for the appointment of my successor."
"I offer Boris Johnson and his team at City Hall and at the Police Authority
the very best of fortune. I say to the people of London that I believe that,
in the Metropolitan Police Service, they have a quite wonderful institution
made up of extraordinary men and women, who daily risk their lives on your
behalf. I say to those men and women and those staff who support them that
they are part of one of the greatest police services in the world. This
great institution, which I have served for 28 out of my 34 years as a police
officer, will always have a central place of affection in my heart."
Sir Paul Stephenson will become acting commissioner when the
current commissioner steps down on December 1st.
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