Saturday, December 11, 2010

Charles and Camilla attack at student fees protest must face inquiry says Tory

Student fees protest incident where Charles and Camilla car was attacked must be investigated says Tory MP Mark Pritchard

The failures that exposed Prince Charles and his wife to the full wrath of a rioting crowd in one of the worst royal security breaches for decades must be investigated by a full independent inquiry, an MP said in the aftermath of the tuition fees protest.

Tory backbencher Mark Pritchard said: "This was an incident that was so very serious ? and could have been even more serious. There needs to be an independent inquiry, given the many questions that need to be answered about why the royals took that route."

Images of a cowering Camilla and Charles, stranded in their vintage Rolls Royce Phantom VI as demonstrators rocked the car, smashed their window and hurled paintbombs, dominated media across the globe today. Ensuring the safety of the couple was the responsibility of the Met's Royalty Protection Specialist Operations unit.

Key to any inquest will be explanations from the Special Escort Group (SEG), the armed motorcyclists who travel as outriders providing protection for travelling royals. Riding ahead, looking for trouble, several were accompanying the couple as they made their way to the London Palladium for the Royal Variety Performance on Thursday. Other SEG officers were in a Jaguar back-up vehicle behind the royals' car.

They were reportedly summoned to a briefing yesterday as the Met Police Commissioner Sir Paul Stephenson defended the route, saying it had been "recced" minutes before and was clear. He blamed an "unpredictable movement of some numbers of demonstrators" for the resulting chaos in which the state limousine got stuck at 7.15pm in Regent Street. And he praised protection officers, who were armed, for their "restraint".

Keith Vaz, chairman of the commons home affairs select committee, said MPs intended to quiz the home secretary, Theresa May, over whether a breakdown in communications between riot police and protection officers had contributed to the incident.

Any inquiry will also question why protection officers did not choose an alternative route, which should be mapped out ahead of royal engagements for the express purpose of avoiding trouble.

"One of the principles of protection is to have alternative routes," Dai Davies, former head of royal protection told the BBC.

"I would expect there to be at least three different routes. I'm surprised, and clearly the commissioner is embarrassed and surprised, there wasn't better co-ordination between those in charge of protection and those marshalling and dealing with the riots we saw."

There will also be questions over the choice of vehicle. Designed with especially large windows to display royals at events such as the Royal Variety Performance, it draws attention.

"Was it wise to take a car that was so distinctive through the middle of London during the aftermath of the biggest demonstration seen for years?" asked Vaz.

It was an irresistible target for the students, thought to have been heading to target Topshop in Oxford Circus, and who could clearly see its occupants. Protestors chanted "Off with their heads" and "Tory scum"; reports that one protester poked Camilla in the ribs with a stick through an open window were neither confirmed nor denied by Clarence House.

Though clearly alarmed, she swiftly regained her composure, telling well-wishers at the Royal Variety Performance: "I'm fine. There is a first time for everything".

The prime minister's spokesman insisted: "We have full confidence in the police and the job that they are doing." He added: "But clearly there was a specific issue about what happened to the Prince of Wales and the Duchess of Cornwall yesterday and that is being looked at and we are not going to prejudge it."

It hints that any security lapse will haunt Stephenson, who took control of the Met two years ago, for some time. His predecessor, Lord Stevens, considered resigning in 2003 when "comedy terrorist" Aaron Barschak managed to bypass security at Prince William's 21st birthday party at Windsor Castle.

It costs the Met around �50m a year to protect 22 members of the royal family. Pritchard said: "While I applaud the professionalism and bravery of the frontline police officers protecting the royals, there are serious questions to be asked at the most senior levels of the Metropolitan police about why they were allowed to take that route.

"It's not rocket science to know that that part of London would at least be chock-a-block with displaced traffic."


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Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2010/dec/10/student-fees-charles-camilla-inquiry

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