British police forces are under scrutiny for hiring high-salary diversity officers amid public backlash over the Henry Nowak scandal and rising crime rates.
| PULSE POINTS |
❓ WHAT HAPPENED: Police forces across the United Kingdom are actively hiring diversity officers with salaries as high as £75,000 (~$100,000), despite rising crime rates in their jurisdictions. Reports from late 2024 previously found that British police forces were spending at least £15 million (~$20 million) on such roles. This has sparked criticism from politicians and the public, who argue that resources should be focused on crime prevention and public safety. 📰 DETAIL: The hiring of diversity officers comes amid a backdrop of increasing crime rates, with London experiencing a rise from 83.3 crimes per 1,000 people in 2020-2021 to 106.4 in 2024-2025. The murder of Henry Nowak has intensified the debate over police race training and diversity initiatives, with the white British-Polish teenager having been handcuffed instead of helped by police because they refused to believe that his Sikh killer, who accused him of racism, had stabbed him. 💬 KEY QUOTE: “It is unacceptable that British people’s taxes are paying for yet more diversity officers. Police officers should be focused on detecting crime, arresting criminals, and keeping streets safe. Nothing else.” – Zia Yusuf, Shadow Home Secretary for Nigel Farage’s Reform UK party 🎯 IMPACT: British law enforcement’s focus on Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) at the expense of public safety and policing “without fear or favor” is fostering growing public anger as perverse outcomes like Nowak’s treatment as he was dying build up. Notably, the Police Anti-Racism Commitment specifically states that ethnic groups should be treated differently, not equally, in order to achieve “equality of policing outcomes” and “racial equity.” Nowak’s murder and wrongful arrest have become an international scandal, with both Vice President J.D. Vance and the U.S. State Department weighing in on the dangers of two-tier policing. |
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