Action for Race Equality

Joint statement: BBC Panorama exposes the Met’s failure to change

Panorama’s ‘Undercover in the Police’ investigation has exposed what communities have long known: the Metropolitan Police Service has failed to change.  

The BBC documentary revealed an ongoing rampant culture of racism, misogyny, and Islamophobia in the Charing Cross police station, the same station that was investigated under Operation Hotton three years ago. 

Despite repeated inquiries, the Casey Review, and public commitments to reform, Panorama shows that little has changed. Unacceptable conduct persists under the same leadership, undermining trust and confidence in policing among Black, Muslim, and ethnic minority communities across London.   

Staffing remains to be an issue within the Met, with Panorama highlighting some officers who uphold decent values and provide a service for everyone but struggle to challenge senior leaders due to a toxic culture and working environment. As a result, young Black, Asian, and Mixed Heritage young people will continue to be deterred from joining the Met Police, and the force will never reflect London’s ethnic diversity until meaningful change occurs.  

Current equalities legislation, including the Public Sector Equality Duty, are not enough to tackle the Met’s deep-rooted problems, and programmes like the Police Race Action Plan will have little effect until the Met commits to the urgent, systemic reforms it has long avoided.  

We are clear: the Met cannot reform itself. Without stronger equalities legislation, independent oversight, political accountability, and the courage to name institutional racism, promises of change will continue to ring hollow. Public trust in policing is already at crisis point, and the stakes for our communities could not be higher.  

The cycle of scandal, reviews, broken promises of reform, and failure to change must end. 

For more information, please contact, Head of Policy, Meka Beresford


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