Sir Mark Rowley said the Metropolitan Police is ‘on a big reform plan’ following the Baroness Casey report, published in March.

Metropolitan Police Commissioner Sir Mark Rowley said he has not “shirked away from anything” found in a report which said the force was “institutionally racist”.

Following the report, led by Baroness Louise Casey and published in March, Sir Mark said he would not use the term “institutional” and told reporters that he needed to use language “that’s unambiguous and is apolitical”.

It comes as Mina Smallman, mother to two daughters murdered in Wembley, north London, called for more black officers to be deployed by the Metropolitan Police in local communities.

Ms Smallman also told the PA news agency that it was a “huge disappointment” that Sir Mark refused to accept  “institutional racism” in the force.

New Met Police recruitment ad campaign
Sir Mark Rowley (second left) in Hackney, east London, to publicise his force’s new Pc recruitment ad campaign (Jordan Pettitt/PA)

Ms Smallman’s daughters, Nicole Smallman and Bibaa Henry, were stabbed to death while in a park in Wembley in June 2020.

Former Met constables Deniz Jaffer and Jamie Lewis shared photographs of the women’s bodies on WhatsApp and were subsequently jailed for two years and nine months each in December 2021.

Asked about Ms Smallman’s disappointment, Sir Mark told PA: “I completely understand Mina’s view.

New Met Police recruitment ad campaign
Metropolitan Police Commissioner Sir Mark Rowley speaks to the media (Jordan Pettitt/PA)

“I haven’t shirked away from anything that Baroness Casey has said.

“I completely accept her diagnosis and that’s why we’re on a big reform plan.”

On Monday the Met announced plans to overhaul the force with a £366 million two-year scheme, dubbed A New Met for London.

The plan includes a recruitment campaign which Sir Mark says is encouraging diversity through advertisements that showcase ordinary frontline officers.

The campaign has launched in the same week as the newly formed independent Alliance For Police Accountability (APA) organisation which aims to tackle racist, misogynistic and homophobic policing.

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