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Police in London attacked for "victim-blaming" post addressing cyclists on Twitter

Image of smashed car windscreen warned cyclists to obey rules of the road

Police in London have been accused of victim-blaming and branding all cyclist as law-breakers after a picture of a car with a smashed windscreen appeared on Twitter with the caption, “Cyclists: Stop ignoring the rules or you could end up in an incident like this.” The tweet has since been deleted, and police have told road.cc they did not mean to cause offence.

The picture was tweeted from the account of the Metropolitan Police in Hammersmith & Fulham at 2.55am on Saturday morning.

The tweet was deleted shortly after road.cc contacted the Metropolitan Police at lunchtime today whether there was a specific incident that prompted the tweet - they say there wasn't - as well as whether they considered it appropriate. Before it was deleted, Twitter user Alex Oates took a screengrab.

A subsequent tweet on the borough policing team’s Twitter feed, sent at 4.57am, read, “Advice for drunk people: cycling the wrong way along a road or sleeping in buses or just being a general nuisance isn't a good idea.”

That tweet has also been deleted.

The first tweet attracted strong criticism from cyclists on Twitter. Here’s a selection, beginning with Alex Ingram, co-ordinator and vice-chair of hfcyclists, the Hammersmith & Fulham branch of the London Cycling Campaign.

 

 

 

 

 

 

In a statement issued this afternoon, the Metropolitan Police told road.cc:

Hammersmith and Fulham Police are working to keep all road users and pedestrians safe.

Officers from Hammersmith and Fulham would like to assure the community that crime prevention and safety messages are not aimed at any particular group but are a general reminder provided purely to keep them safe on both roads and footways.

Any offence caused to cyclists by the tweets posted by Hammersmith and Fulham Police last night was not intended. Our focus is always to ensure that those living, working, visiting and travelling through our borough can do so in safety and with confidence.

The image shown in the picture does not relate to a particular incident reported on the borough.

The tweet concerning behaviour following alcohol consumption was not directed at cyclists but general advice to anyone planning to drink alcohol.

Twitter users have noted that the assertion that road safety advice isn't directed at a particular group conflicts with the tweet sent in the early hours of this morning.

 

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34 comments

Avatar
velodinho | 9 years ago
0 likes

Its not a fucking outrage. Its stupid and thoughtless. Keep "fucking outrage" in its proper context.

Avatar
mike the bike replied to velodinho | 9 years ago
0 likes
velodinho wrote:

Its not a fucking outrage. Its stupid and thoughtless. Keep "fucking outrage" in its proper context.

I'm with you sir. Some folk seem determined to be offended and the language they use to describe quite ordinary, commonplace events has escalated to ridiculous levels. Never a news bulletin goes by without someone declaring their "devastation" in response to some minor difficulty in their sheltered life.

If they want to see devastation they should pop over to Nepal and help clear up the effects of an earthquake, not rail against some hapless copper who may have got it ever-so-slightly wrong.

Avatar
pamplemoose replied to mike the bike | 9 years ago
0 likes
mike the bike wrote:

not rail against some hapless copper who may have got it ever-so-slightly wrong.

It's not about a hapless copper getting it ever-so-slightly wrong though. It's about a moronic copper who clearly has an axe to grind when it comes to cyclists. Something that's all too common.

Avatar
pants | 9 years ago
0 likes

A fucking outrage, I wish the person who tweeted that will be fired, but of course nothing will happen.

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