Canterbury Cathedral and Lakeside
to get armed police patrols
I was able to find this story on
the BBC News web page. It is written regarding the topic of how police armed
with guns are to patrol routinely in Kent, in locations including Canterbury
Cathedral, Dover port and the Bluewater shopping centre.
The
move follows recent terrorist attacks in Europe, but is not in response to
specific intelligence.
The
armed presence is intended as a deterrent and to allow an immediate response in
an emergency, police said.
The
Kent force's approach has been criticised as being likely to worry people
rather than reassure them.
The
force shares a joint taskforce with Essex Police and armed patrols will also be
instigated at London Southend Airport and the Lakeside shopping centre.
The
move comes amid high national threat levels and Kent Deputy Chief Constable
Paul Brandon said it would enable police to react quickly if necessary.
"Tragically,
what we have
seen in France and other areas that it's in the first hour that
there is large numbers of casualties," he said.
But
Frank Furedi, professor of sociology at the University of Kent, said there were
better ways to police the county.
"I
have been to Belgium recently where there are armed police everywhere, but when
you talk to Belgians they are far more scared than previously.
"I
would rather Kent Police had a more low-key approach. The real deterrent is
always behind-the-scenes, intelligence-led policing."
Mr
Brandon, who has described the terror threat facing the
Kent
Police has not said how many armed officers it will deploy but the government
announced in April there would be an extra 1,500 across England and Wales
and the Metropolitan Police has said the number of armed officers will go up in London by 600 to 2,800.
Kent
Police Federation said the deployment was an unprecedented increase for the
county.

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