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Emergency services facing ‘capacity pressures’ that could impact response to major terrorist incident

By Noah Vickers, Local Democracy Reporter

London’s emergency services are facing “capacity pressures” that could have a major impact on their ability to respond to a major terrorist incident, City Hall politicians have said.

The warning is issued in a new report published this week by the London Assembly’s police and crime committee.

The cross-party group said that although improvements have been made to how blue-light services work together to prepare for and respond to a terror attack, the London Ambulance Service and London Fire Brigade are facing significant pressures – related to staffing, funding and capacity – that could impede their response to a major incident.

They also found that the Metropolitan Police faces challenges in recruiting and retaining digital specialists into counter-terror policing – and that its anti-radicalisation strategy, Prevent, “is negatively perceived by many”.

The capital’s emergency services each offered assurances that they are working hard to ensure they are continually able to protect the public in the event of a terror attack, and that they had robust plans in place.

Just weeks after taking office in 2016, Mayor Sadiq Khan appointed Lord Harris of Haringey to conduct a “full and independent review to ensure London is as prepared as possible to respond to a major terrorist incident”.

A spokesman for Mr Khan said the Mayor is “supporting the capital’s emergency services so that they are properly funded and better equipped to deal with specific types of attacks”.

He added: “Sadiq is clear that we must always be ready and prepared for the constantly evolving threat of terrorism, and that is why he is continuing to invest record amounts in the Met and funding community-led grassroots projects across London to tackle extremism, hate and radicalisation so that we can build a safer London for everyone.

“The Mayor is continuing to call on the Government to support City Hall with long-term funding to support our key emergency services and to follow his lead by investing in programmes and new technology which can help reduce the risks of young people becoming radicalised.”

London’s emergency services each said that they welcomed the committee’s report and noted its recommendations.

Jonathan Smith, Deputy Commissioner of the London Fire Brigade, said: “The Brigade has made good progress on meeting the recommendations from Lord Harris’s most recent review, which found that very substantial progress has been made by the emergency services since 2016 in counter-terror preparedness, and we welcome the opportunity to report on our progress to the London Assembly later this year.”

He was joined by a spokeswoman for the London Ambulance Service, who said the organisation had “robust plans in place that allow us to respond rapidly during major incidents, including terrorist attacks”.

She added that the Ambulance Service “will be happy to provide assurance to the Mayor around our contingency plans and respond formally to the [committee’s] document in full”.

Commander Dominic Murphy, who leads the Met’s Counter Terrorism Command said: “We continue to work hard on implementing the many recommendations made by Lord Harris to make us even better prepared to respond with our partners to a terrorist attack here in London.

“We also share many of the concerns highlighted by the report that are linked to the increasingly complex nature of radicalisation and how it is affecting more and more young people.”

Pictured top: Ambulances parked outside London Ambulance Service NHS Trust control room in Waterloo (Picture: PA)


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