MPA Civil Liberties Panel : G20 six months on
November 05, 2009 09:30
Tagged as: g20 mpa police policing repressionCivil Liberties Panel open meeting - come and have your say!
As part of the review of the events surrounding the G20 demonstrations there is an open meeting from 09.30-12.30 on 5 November 2009, in London's Living Room, City Hall, The Queen's Walk, London, SE1 2AA.
http://www.mpa.gov.uk/clp/#h2001
Places:
If you would like to be involved, please complete the registration form and return it to PPO@mpa.gov.uk by email or by hand (to avoid the problems with the postal strike) to MPA Scrutiny and Oversight, 10 Dean Farrar Street, London SW1H 0NY.
If you are unable to attend, we will be happy to receive written submissions. These should again be emailed or delivered to the addresses provided above and ideally should be no more than 2 pages.
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Civil Liberties Panel
The MPA Civil Liberties Panel was introduced in the MPA's mission statement for London's police, Met Forward, as a means of securing public confidence in policing tactics in the capital and ensuring the Met maintains public trust.
Met Forward
‘Our duty, as London's police authority, is to ensure the Met restores and maintains public trust. In order to support this, we will establish a Civil Liberties Panel of Authority members that will begin its work with a formal civil liberties scrutiny of the Met's public order policing of violent disorder. Once the initial scrutiny is complete, the panel will continue both to monitor the situation and hear specific concerns from the public and human rights organisations.'
It is proposed that the panel will convene to consider issues on a priority basis as agreed by the MPA. It will be a standing panel, and will meet as the need arises.
Due to the public concern over events surrounding the policing of G20, the first priority for the panel is a review of the HMIC report on the policing of G20. This will reflect the issues raised by members at the full authority meeting on 30 April 2009. As other priorities emerge, additional terms of reference will be agreed.
Panel hearings will be held in open session except if there are extraordinary and compelling reasons to meet in private.
The panel met for the first time on 9 July 2009. At this meeting Victoria Borwick was elected chair, membership of the panel was confirmed and terms of reference were discussed and agreed. The terms of reference were ratified at the full Authority meeting on 23 July 2009.
Public meeting: 5 November 2009
Civil Liberties Panel open meeting - come and have your say!
As part of our review of the events surrounding the G20 demonstrations we are holding an open meeting from 09.30-12.30 on 5 November 2009, in London's Living Room, City Hall, The Queen's Walk, London, SE1 2AA.
We are keen to engage with as many individuals and groups as possible who would like to comment on the events which took place on 1 and 2 April 2009. We would particularly welcome firsthand accounts from those who were actually there.
In order to cover the range of topics we plan to group the morning into three broad areas for discussion as detailed below. Our aim is to gather as much information as possible from the maximum number of people, and to do this in the time available we need to limit submissions to a maximum of 3 minutes each. Topics will also be grouped together to avoid repetition.
Comments, submissions received and points raised in discussion will be used to inform the report of the Civil Liberties Panel to the Metropolitan Police in the New Year. The report will be widely circulated within the Metropolitan Police Service, the Mayor's office, HMIC and other bodies concerned with civil liberties.
The session will be recorded and the webcast will be available after the meeting.
I look forward to seeing you.
Victoria Borwick
Chair, Civil Liberties Panel.
Agenda - 5 November
08:45 Doors open at City Hall
Please allow time to get through City Hall security
09:00-09:25 Coffee and tea available
09:30-09:35 Welcome from the Chair
9:35-10:15 Planning for the Event
This section will cover pre-event planning between organisers, the police, the public, the local businesses, and the media
10:15-11:15 Policing on the day (various marches/demonstrations)
This section will cover the various events and demonstrations that took place, and how they were policed
11:15-11:30 Tea/coffee break
11:30-12:15 Communications (before, during and after G20)
This section will cover communications: prior to the event, during and afterwards from the public, police, organisers, media and local businesses perspective.
12:15-12:25 Summation
Covering the key points made during the discussions
12:30 Close
Members of the panel
* Victoria Borwick (Chair)
* Valerie Brasse
* Dee Doocey
* Kirsten Hearn
* Jenny Jones
* Clive Lawton
* Joanne McCartney
* Richard Tracey
Terms of reference
To develop an ongoing understanding of civil liberties and human rights and the consequences this has for policing in relation to all the areas considered by this panel.
* the panel may investigate any topics which in their view are relevant to civil liberties
* within each area of review, develop a clear understanding of the full range of policies and tactics, including training, supervision and communication; the situations within which various tactics are deployed and how decisions about proportionality are made. The panel will consider the wider impact of these on civil liberties and human rights.
* scrutinise the MPS's work to retain public trust and confidence in balancing civil liberties with the need to maintain public safety and public order through proportionate policing. This should include scrutinising how the MPS communicates with the public, key stakeholders and the MPA.
* the panel will consider how lessons learned from previous investigations impact on current MPS practice, training regimes and organisational culture.
* understand the potential equalities and diversity issues arising out of all areas of service delivery being addressed by this panel.
* engage with the MPS, the public, relevant groups and civil liberty and human rights organisations to ensure that members gain a comprehensive understanding of the issues involved.
* the monitoring of the implementation of any recommendations by this panel and any other relevant reviews (e.g. the HMIC review of G20 and public order) on behalf of the Authority may be undertaken by the panel or another MPA committee as appropriate.
* provide regular reports to full Authority and other committees where relevant, updating them on the progress being made against the panel's work programme and make recommendations to the Authority and the MPS.
There are potentially significant equality and diversity issues arising out of any scrutiny in this area. The equality objectives outlined above aim to ensure that they are addressed as the work of the panel develops.






