The intense, annual war of words before the Notting Hill Carnival began when a retired Detective Inspector received huge media coverage when he weighed in with allegations, so often heard these days, of two- tier policing. It would seem that what is tolerated at Carnival, whose attendance over two days is around a million and half, wouldn’t be tolerated at Millwall; average attendance 16,650. In fact, last season Millwall played 48 games which resulted in just 47 of their supporters being arrested.
He also spoke of female officers being sexually assaulted whilst dancing which probably refers to an incident of ‘twerking’ involving a female officer which took place at a previous carnival, the footage of which is re-shown every year. Twerking was known as ‘bump and grind’ when I worked out in Jamaica and was a common sight at every musical event involving all age groups. In fairness, there is an allegation in relation to a female officer being indecently assaulted during this Carnival.
Two-tier policing normally includes police being accused of being ‘soft’ on minority groups unless the allegation comes from the left when police are accused of unfairly victimising those from minority groups.
The retired officer also accuses police of ignoring drug use and tolerating being abused. Incidentally, those who police football state that prevalent cocaine use is making policing of rival fans more difficult.
Consideration of these and other issues, such as officers suffering abuse, will be discussed later but let’s return to the event itself.
Having been involved in an uncomfortable crowd incident last year, I thought long and hard before attending this Afro-Caribbean celebration. Eventually, like a ‘moth to a flame,’ I attended on both days but studiously avoided placing myself in the midst of dense crowds which meant that my ability to move around Carnival was restricted and I never did find my way to the vantage point on Ladbroke Grove which I used last year.
Children’s Day.
It seemed that the numbers attending were greater on ‘Children’s Day Sunday,’ than in previous years and large crowds followed the various sound systems that could be found on the backs of articulated trucks or on the tops of open deck buses. There seemed to be a lack of children but as I didn’t arrive until gone 3PM, many may have been and gone. I did observe a children’s samba band however. The only incident of what didn’t quite add up to abuse involved a white, skinny male clutching a near empty Hennessy brandy bottle who was demanding his right to pass through a police cordon on Ladbroke Grove.
Entering the Carnival footprint meant passing through detection arches which were placed across the road and it was good to see a familiar TSG unit deployed to those arches at the Westbourne Grove entrance to carnival.
One challenging role for a Met police serial was at a crossing point where the Westbourne Grove parade route met Ledbury Road. Those wishing to cross the road into the heart of Carnival had to wait until stewards lifted the rope during a gap in the parade or they could turn left to walk alongside the parade on a crowded footway. Amidst the chaos was a Met serial with a Met Inspector who deployed himself to the middle of the road and whose eyes, were, as I quoted on ‘X,’ everywhere. Under his direction his officers somehow brought a degree of order to the above-mentioned chaos.
It was also interesting to see the use of a group of ‘bike cops’ who patrolled the outer areas of the Carnival footprint in order to prevent any potential extension of criminal activity.
Later that evening, on deciding enough was enough, I returned to the main parade where I saw officers tending to a female who’d collapsed and who was surrounded by anxious friends and relatives. Police medics then arrived and after several minutes, it was decided to move her using a blanket stretcher. All the officers assisted and they were followed by the family and friends.
Paddington chaos and Children’s Day stats
The journey home via Paddington station, however, was not uneventful. Large queues could be seen at the Elizabeth Line entrance and the main concourse was packed. BTP officers including the esteemed OSU (Operational Support Unit) were being deployed as it became clear there were two issues. The first was a trespasser ‘on the line,’ and the second, carnival bunting that had become entangled in the overhead electric wires.
A circuitous route using the Bakerloo Line and a change at Oxford Circus to the Central Line saw my first day at Carnival concluded without incident.
Overnight, however, some worrying statistics were produced by the Met; with three stabbings including that of a woman who was with her children. 15 officers were assaulted and there were 102 arrests. Brief footage on social media saw officers rushing to the aid of the above- mentioned female stabbing victim and they were soon joined by police medics. During children’s day !8 arrests were also made for possession of an offensive weapon.
Carnival Monday, Section 60 and Serial 421B
These incidents clearly prompted the Met’s ‘Gold’ commander to introduce a Section 60 order across Carnival for the Monday which meant stop and searches could be carried out without the normal requirement of ‘reasonable grounds.’ The increase in ‘person searches’ was immediately evident on approaching Carnival. This may attract allegations from activist observers of ‘disproportionality’ but it also paid dividends with 54 arrests for possession of offensive weapons most of which were for ‘bladed/pointed’ articles, in other words knives and machetes. Those critical of stop and search should, perhaps ask themselves how much injury, misery and death those interventions prevented.
I made my way back to that demanding crossing point at Ledbury Road and Westbourne Grove and found it was the same serial of officers led by the same inspector, who were again bringing about a degree of order to the chaos with both skill and good humour. They were designated the call-sign of serial 421B. Like officers across Carnival, they must have been exhausted by the days end.
Section 60 pays dividends
What was clear was that the numbers of boisterous, youthful Carnival revellers in their teens and twenties had increased; thousands were following the various sound systems that were moving around the ‘circular’ parade route.
Whilst five stabbings are five too many, the feared ‘stab fest’ on the Monday did not materialise thanks almost certainly to the increased levels of stop and search. What was perhaps more disturbing was the seizure of two firearms (some reports said three); one was within the Carnival footprint while the other, in Harrow, was linked to Carnival. Whether any of the firearms and weapons seized or the stabbings that took place, were linked to gang rivalries remains to be seen.
Certainly, the gang related fatal shooting last month, of a 15-year-old in a park that is within the Carnival footprint will have featured in the Met’s planning for this event.
Carnival casualties.
Like the overwhelming number of ‘carnival goers’ I didn’t actually witness any violent scenes during my time within the Carnival area although I saw several arrests. What I did notice was a preponderance of Carnival casualties. Most had become ill due to ‘over-indulgence’ but others had suffered physical injury.
One man, according to a witness, had tripped and hit his head on the concrete balustrade of an imposing house causing a nasty, bloody head injury. Two officers came to his aid and I was able to assist with a bandage which was amongst the first kit I carry. The dazed man told officers he lived in Hackney at which point two police medics arrived and, as I left, they were considering the next course of action.
In all the cases I witnessed where assistance was being given to those stricken, it was being carried out with both skill, kindness and compassion. Hopefully the actions of all the officers who assisted the ill and injured across the carnival weekend will mitigate against activists with their unremitting mantra of ‘racist police.’
It would be interesting to note how many medical interventions were carried out by police during Carnival weekend. Not all will be recorded however; this would apply if officers felt that the stricken individual could be safely left in the hands of friends and/or relatives. I would enquire via the Met’s Press Bureau but I appear to be PNG at present.
Positive engagement
The other noticeable and observable point of interest was the interaction between officers and members of the public given the fact that the constant above-mentioned mantra of activists is that police are, to all intents and purposes, ‘at war’ with the black community.
From my own observations there was no sign of this animosity whatsoever at Carnival. Officers were frequently approached for directions, advice, selfies of just a chat. The public were compliant when being given directions and once again relations were excellent although doubtless this would be interpreted by some as illustrating ‘woke, two tier’ policing.
Facts and myths.
Whilst those on the left will complain about racist ‘disproportionality’ those on the right, who dislike the term, far-right, insist that Carnival epitomises ‘two-tier’ policing. A search on ‘X’ using the parameters ‘two tier’ and ‘carnival’ produces numerous interesting responses. In relation to ‘soft’ policing: the 350 persons arrested over the weekend would perhaps beg to differ.
The Mail reported 8 stabbings over the Carnival weekend as compared to 10 in 2023, 7 in 2022 but that included one death and 18 in 2019; the 2020 and 2021 events were cancelled due to Covid. Detectives investigating the stabbing of the 32-year-old woman on Sunday confirmed on Tuesday that they have arrested three men. The latest update is that the victim is in a coma and may lose her leg.
Those on the ‘we’re not right, we’re just right,’ side of the argument speak of wholesale abuse of officers and open drug taking during Carnival. As stated above, relations that I’ve seen have been amicable; I’ve seen no abuse of officers and such smoking of weed that I’ve observed has been carried out discreetly, out of sight of officers. This is in total contrast to the 4/20 Cannabis festival in Hyde Park which, this year was attended mainly by white men and women.
The Carnival and the riots.
Comparisons are being made on social media between the riots and Carnival with suggestions that the level of violence at Carnival can be compared to that seen during the riots. The Federation stated that during carnival, 75 officers were assaulted with one taken to hospital, two were bitten and a female officer sexually assaulted. Precise figures are always difficult to calculate post-event. The Met said the total was 61 and that “The assaults mostly involved kicks, punches or pushes. There were four incidents where officers were spat at, two where officers were headbutted and two where officers had glass bottles thrown at them.”
We’re not told how many of those responsible were arrested on the day. Hopefully, with the use of body-worn cameras and CCTV, any violent individuals who were not apprehended will be receiving an early morning wake-up call and be before the courts in the near future. The Met have stated that they have teams of detectives looking to make further arrests.
Comparisons between the riots and events at Notting Hill over two days can be erroneous but there is no doubt that at present, it appears to be ‘open season,’ upon police officers and, at the risk of repeating myself, allegations that those officers are engaged in woke, two tier policing or are vile, brutal racist, oppressors only emboldens those who wish to abuse and harm officers. This constant denigration from the far, sorry, extreme right surely played its part during those recent riots.
At Southport, the riot began at just after 8PM and continued for just over three hours with sustained attacks on officers. Despite this relatively short period of time, the results as far as police are concerned were shocking with no less 27 officers of the 53 who were injured, being conveyed to hospital by ambulance. Three police dogs were also injured.
Officers performing duty at Rotherham and Tamworth thought they might die such was the ferocity of the attacks on them while at both venues, protesters attempted to literally burn people alive in hotels used to house migrants.
The life-threatening level of violence seen during the riots is now being effectively ‘airbrushed out’ by those on the extreme right whose arguments are boosted by implications that Carnival violence was somehow every bit as bad if not worse than that seen across the country a short time ago. Their emphasis is now on the ‘unjustifiable,’ sentences being meted out to the rioters. Doubtless exemplary sentences imposed on those arrested for violence at Carnival will be criticised by certain activist groups albeit from the left of the political spectrum.
As stated above, after an experience last year with a densely packed Carnival crowd, I’m still of the view that the Carnival is a ticking time bomb. Disaster by crushing was narrowly averted in 2022 and there only needs to be a trigger, such as gunshots, in the vicinity of a densely packed crowd that becomes panicked, and you have a scenario that makes headlines around the world.
A change to a more open venue would be safer and easier to police with the Met hopefully being able to reduce the staggering costs that impact upon its routine policing.
Meanwhile, officers from the Met, the City of London and the BTP deserve huge praise for their balanced approach and their ‘above and beyond’ efforts during Carnival. I suspect we won’t see any such praise either from hard-left, anti-racist activists or the extreme right; perhaps I also missed effusive public praise from the hierarchy of the Met.
Despite the lack of appreciation from right across the board, Met officers together with their colleagues from the City police and BTP can look back on an exhausting and challenging two days with both pride and satisfaction. They showed compassion, humour and great engagement but when push came to shove and violence occurred, they responded with both courage and professionalism.