Nick Gargan, chief constable of Avon and Somerset Police, admitted the city had “failed” to protect Mr Ebrahimi, who was beaten and set alight in July.
‘The city’? What,
all of it? Oh, spare me! ‘The city’ didn't fail him at all…
Mr Gargan echoed many local voices when he said he found it “hard to understand how such an event can happen in such a tolerant city” .
Well, clearly, because ‘a city’ isn't tolerant. A city is made up of
people, and some of them are tolerant and some are not, and the latter are why we employ – at great expense – a system of uniformed guardians to keep the peace.
Sound familiar to you, Gargan? Sound a bit like it might be your job description?
Mr Ebrahimi rarely left his council house on Capgrave Crescent in the Brislington suburb of the city.
“He was terribly misunderstood by the community and something should have been done to put this right,” Mr Gargan said.
“Who can say why he was being picked on? He was different, disabled and Iranian.”
‘Who can say’..? Why,
I can say, Gargan. He was picked on because there were
absolutely no consequences for doing so, and that’s
your failing.
Oh, sure, some of it is down to the courts and what they laughably consider punishment these days, but it’s hard to say that they wouldn't have stepped up to the plate
this time because no-one from your command did anything other than arrest him.
Yes,
him. The
victim! Not the howling mob!
The block in which Mr Ebrahimi lived is made up of around 100 maisonettes and flats facing towards a central courtyard.
Unable to work, he spent his days tending to his flowers and looking after his cat. But there were no flower pots outside Mr Ebrahimi’s empty home and the few neighbours who agreed to talk to The Independent spoke of their sense of shock and disgust.
One local resident, who wished not to be named, said: “It was disgusting. The whole community is in shock, we just want the whole thing to go away.”
Yes, I expect you do. But it shouldn't. At the very least, you know the identities of the others in that mob, and you’d sleep easier at night if you publicised them. To Facebook and Twitter.
Don’t waste time with Gargan, or the other backpedalling authorities desperate to avoid the blame or to insist that they aren't the
only ones to blame. These vigilantes want to
live by the sword, time they had a taste of the flip side of that...
The crime would have been visible to the whole courtyard but another resident, who admitted “emotions were high”, thought that threats of violence were “all talk” after the Iranian’s arrest and said few residents saw anything.
*hollow laughter*
Speaking to BBC Radio Bristol, Mr Gargan said: “When all the dust has settled down on this case we need to sit back as a community and reflect on what went wrong and why wasn't that poor man better served.”
Here, have a mirror. Take a look.
More frightening than anything else you'll see this Hallowe'en...
That’s why. He wasn't ‘better served’ because
you aren't fit for the position you hold, you weasel-faced excuse for a police man..
This call was echoed by the city’s Mayor George Ferguson, who told the Bristol Post he was “proud of Bristol” as a “tolerant place to live” but that “it is vitally important for everyone involved to sit down and look at what could have been done differently”.
Try sacking your chief constable.
That might help!
In a statement released via solicitors, Mr Ebrahimi’s family said that he had been the victim of hate crimes for several years and it hoped all those who “failed” him would face justice.
So do I. And I know who should be at the top of that list. It’s the man whose resume reads like a bad joke about 'shiny arse graduate entrants who've never done a day's coppering in their lives' :
”Nick began his career in 1988 as a police constable with Leicestershire Constabulary under the Graduate Entry Scheme, after studying Politics and French at Leicester University.
Soon after joining, he attended the Accelerated Promotion Course.
In 1995 he was seconded to the National Criminal Intelligence Service, working at the London bureau of Interpol and then at the British Embassy in Paris where he was heavily involved in the investigation into the deaths of Diana, Princess of Wales, Mr Dodi Al Fayed and Mr Henri Paul.
He gave evidence at the eventual inquest in London.
Nick returned to Leicester in 1998 and rose through the ranks to become chief-superintendent.”
It’s about time his rise was brought to a halt. Or we might see this man’s features presiding over yet more of these cases, maybe as head of the Metropolitan Police next time.