Northern Ireland

Policing Board meeting dominated by Derry car bomb attack

PSNI Chief Constable George Hamilton at the PSNI headquarters in Belfast. Picture: Lesley-Anne McKeown/PA
PSNI Chief Constable George Hamilton at the PSNI headquarters in Belfast. Picture: Lesley-Anne McKeown/PA PSNI Chief Constable George Hamilton at the PSNI headquarters in Belfast. Picture: Lesley-Anne McKeown/PA

THE first meeting of the newly reconstituted Northern Ireland Policing Board was dominated by last weekend's car bomb attack in Derry.

The body has not met in a fully constituted form in almost two years following the collapse of powersharing government at Stormont and absence of government ministers.

The Policing Board acts in an oversight role for the PSNI and consists of 19 members including 10 political representatives.

The politicians had not been appointed since the last Assembly election in March 2017.

Secretary of State Karen Bradley brought forward legislation last autumn to enable the appointment of political representatives last year.

It has been almost two years since the collapse of powersharing government at Stormont
It has been almost two years since the collapse of powersharing government at Stormont It has been almost two years since the collapse of powersharing government at Stormont

Last November, Ms Bradley confirmed the political appointments of Keith Buchanan, Joanne Bunting, Gary Middleton, Mervyn Storey from the DUP, Gerry Kelly, Linda Dillon, Philip McGuigan for Sinn Féin, John Blair for Alliance, Dolores Kelly for the SDLP and Alan Chambers for the UUP.

It came after Chief Constable George Hamilton raised concerns there was no mechanism to make temporary appointments to his senior command team permanent.

Since it last met in February 2017, a number of key decisions have arisen such as appointing a permanent successor for the former deputy chief constable Drew Harris, who went on to become the Republic of Ireland's new Garda commissioner.

At Thursday's meeting, members unanimously recorded thanks to the police for their work in responding to the bomb attack on the court house in Derry and the subsequent series of hoax devices.

They also formally appointed Anne Connolly as chair and Debbie Watters as vice chair.

DUP members of the board welcomed the meeting as a "positive step forward".

Mr Storey said: "It should have happened immediately after the 2017 Assembly election but Sinn Féin's boycott of the Assembly and Executive prevented the appointment of political members.

"The Policing Board has a key role in holding the Police Service of Northern Ireland to account.

"But, it is equally important that the work of our schools and hospitals is scrutinised."

East Derry MLA Mr Middleton added: "There is an obvious threat posed by the activities of dissident republican terrorists.

"We have witnessed that in just the last few days.

"It is important the police have the capacity and resources to deal with that."

The next public meeting of the Policing Board is set to be held on February 7.