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Javid says racism in the police or elsewhere should ‘never ever be tolerated’

The Health Secretary says the UK is ‘the most successful multiracial democracy on Earth’, but that is not to say racism does not exist in society.

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Health Secretary Sajid Javid has said racism should “never ever be tolerated”, whether in the police or elsewhere.

In an interview with the PA news agency, Mr Javid said the UK is “the most successful multiracial democracy on Earth”, but that is not to say racism does not exist in society.

His comments come after his brother, Metropolitan Police deputy assistant commissioner Bas Javid, admitted earlier this week that racism is a problem in the country’s largest force.

Asked what the next Met commissioner needs to do to reassure people of colour that the force has changed, the Health Secretary told PA: “I think we’re all very lucky to live in what I think is the most successful multiracial democracy on Earth.

Earlier on Thursday, the Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan, said the Met has “deep cultural issues”, including “overt racism, sexism, misogyny, homophobia, discrimination”.

He suggested on LBC that there had been improvements at the force since he was a child, saying: “There are so many decent dedicated, brave officers.”

But he said “there has got to be an acknowledgement that there are deep cultural issues”.

“We are not talking about unconscious bias, we’re not talking about unwitting prejudice,” he said.

“We’re talking about overt racism, sexism, misogyny, homophobia, discrimination and the like.”

Asked on BBC Newsnight on Monday if he accepted racism “is a problem in the Metropolitan Police”, Bas Javid replied: “Yes, I do.”

But he later added: “Now, what I would say is there are people who have racist views and are racist, and they are in the police.

“But what I won’t do is describe all of the organisation as a racist organisation. I think that’s extremely unfair to so many people who work extremely hard to do what I talked about today, which is rooting out racism and other forms of discrimination.”

Outgoing Met commissioner Dame Cressida Dick denied the force was institutionally racist in August 2020, stating it adopts a zero tolerance approach to the issue.

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